The World of Chinese

All Is Well

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- PHOTOGRAPH­Y BY LI GUOCHAO (李国潮) TEXT BY HATTY LIU

在福安建徽武绩平溪县­古,客法家铸传锅统,“奏洗响古中井国”是感恩烹也饪是的祝序­福曲

Photograph­er Li Guochao digs deep in order to understand the history of his native Wuping county. The predominan­tly Hakka cultural region of southern Fujian province is dotted with ancient stone wells that used to serve as the main water source for isolated villages. “Every well has a different story,” he says.

No tradition exemplifie­s the historic importance of Wuping’s wells like the annual “change of well” ritual. In this 250-year-old ceremony, each village drains their well, gives it a thorough scrub-down, and spruces up its surroundin­gs. The date of the ceremony varies—villages in Wuping county observe it on the birthday of the original well-digger or the dates of significan­t events in local history; whereas neighborin­g regions, such as Hua’an county, celebrate it alongside the Dragon Boat Festival in the fifth lunar month. Preparatio­ns begin a month ahead, with a different household leading the ceremonies each year. An elder from the organizing household collects donations to fund the clean-up and assigns duties to each family, and leads the villagers in lighting incense beside the well before the cleaning begins.

An itinerant people that migrated southward to Fujian in the 12th century to escape the advancing Mongol armies, the Hakka place strong emphasis on community. Their iconic dwellings, the circular tulou of Fujian and square weilongwu of Guangdong, are miniature fortresses that protected each clan against hostile neighbors that often persecuted the Hakka newcomers. Wells were often the center of each tulou or village—a (literal) watering-hole where villagers held meetings and gossiped as they drew water up from the depths.

“Though in Wuping and surroundin­g counties, tap water has already replaced well-water, and this centuries-old well-changing custom is on the decline, those who grew up drinking from the ancient wells will never forget the sound of women beating their laundry by the well each morning, or going for ‘story time’ beside the well,” says Li. “The well is a masterpiec­e from our ancestors.”

 ??  ?? HONGDONG VILLAGE IN WUPING CHANGES ITS TWO WELLS ON THE SEVENTH DAY OF THE SEVENTH LUNAR MONTH AND THE EIGHTH DAY OF THE EIGHTH LUNAR MONTH
HONGDONG VILLAGE IN WUPING CHANGES ITS TWO WELLS ON THE SEVENTH DAY OF THE SEVENTH LUNAR MONTH AND THE EIGHTH DAY OF THE EIGHTH LUNAR MONTH

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