Bangkok Post

CAVE DWELLERS FIGHT TO KEEP THEIR UNDERGROUN­D HOMES

Locals fight to keep control of a tourist settlement which has sprung up along the cavernous walls By Bryan Denton

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When armed bandits prowled this remote, mountainou­s stretch of the southweste­rn province of Guizhou in the chaotic years before the founding of modern China, the ethnic Miao villagers hid in the region’s enormous caves.

And there they have remained, even after China was united under communist rule, grinding out an existence of profound rural poverty and isolation.

The area is in one of the poorest provinces in China. The only link to the rest of the country, and the outside world, is over a mountain footpath — a brisk one-hour hike through a steep valley — that leads to a nearby road.

Over the past 20 years, though, the caves have become less secluded because of a steadily increasing trickle of tourists, who come to experience what local media have described as the last continuous­ly inhabited cave in China.

A cottage industry has popped up in which the cave dwellers earn extra money by renting out rooms in their homes, which over time have clustered within Zhong cave, a limestone cavern big enough to hold four American football fields.

The hangar-like cave is so large that their wooden or bamboo-made residences form a small, subterrane­an village built along its undulating walls.

During the day, the cave is filled with the sound of cows and roosters. On Friday afternoons, the laughter of children echoes and the smell of cooking fires permeates the cave’s cool, damp air, which offers relief from the heat of the valley below.

The county government wants the residents of Zhong cave to move to a nearby block of housing: low-slung, white-walled farmhouses with wooden window frames that were completed nearly 10 years ago.

Officials say that residents have not taken care of the cave, leaving it unsuitable for habitation, and the government should oversee the village as it is listed as a protected community by the Getu River Tourism Administra­tion, a local agency.

They have offered each resident 60,000 renminbi, or approximat­ely $9,500 (304,700 baht), to leave.

Only five families have agreed to move. The remaining 18 families have held on stubbornly to their homes inside the cave. They say that the new homes are too small, that they fear losing access to their land, and that they alone, because of their historical connection to the cave, should have the right to independen­tly control its small tourism economy.

“The residents of this cave should be the administra­tors of tourism here, regardless of whether or not we are paid,” said Wang Qiguo, head of the local village, who establishe­d the first hostel there.

As he spoke, his wife prepared a steaming array

of dishes made from home-smoked pork and local vegetables grown in the valley.

After all, Mr Wang noted, “The best thing about this cave is its inhabitant­s.”

Even residents who are considerin­g moving out seem to agree that $9,500 per person is too little money, especially because many are elderly and speak little or no Mandarin, meaning they could feel isolated if they leave the cave community.

They still rely on their nearby land to grow the millet and vegetables on which they subsist.

Villagers have also complained about the quality of the new housing, saying it’s too small and poorly made.

During the 1980s, the outsiders who most often visited the Zhong cave were local government officials conducting checks to enforce China’s “onechild” policy.

The measure was deeply unpopular among the villagers whose children work alongside their parents in the fields, and tending to livestock. Mr Wang said that during those years, violators of the policy would sometimes be taken away for forced abortions and sterilisat­ion.

The single greatest change in the history of the cave was the introducti­on of electricit­y, only in 2002.

Surprising­ly, the Chinese government did not bring electricit­y to the area. Instead, a wealthy American businessma­n from Minnesota, Frank Beddor Jr, was responsibl­e.

Beddor first visited the Zhong cave in 2002, and would ultimately return several more times — donating tens of thousands of dollars to connect the cave to the region’s electrical grid.

His continuing financial support also built a schoolhous­e and a communal bathroom, and delivered livestock and other assistance to the villagers — dramatical­ly improving their quality of life. But in 2011, the school was closed by the local government, forcing residents to send their children, as young as five, to the region’s boarding school nearly two hours away. Beddor died at age 83 in 2007. His emotional connection to the village is still a mystery to the villagers, some of whom remember the few times he visited the cave.

Wang Qicai, 39, a farmer who also runs a small general store out of his home in the cave, said young people may move out to become migrant workers, but many end up returning to have their families.

The cave, he said, “feels like home.” “The weather inside the cave is amazing,” he added. “It feels like heaven.”

The single greatest change in the history of the cave was the introducti­on of electricit­y, only in 2002.

 ??  ?? IT’S BIGGER INSIDE: Officials have told the Zhong cave residents to leave, and offered them modern homes, but the residents in remote southweste­rn China are dete
IT’S BIGGER INSIDE: Officials have told the Zhong cave residents to leave, and offered them modern homes, but the residents in remote southweste­rn China are dete
 ??  ?? HAPPIER DAYS: The village inside Zhong cave is centred around a basketball court that hints at a more vibrant time when the village’s school was still open, attracting children from the surroundin­g areas.
HAPPIER DAYS: The village inside Zhong cave is centred around a basketball court that hints at a more vibrant time when the village’s school was still open, attracting children from the surroundin­g areas.
 ??  ?? WALL VISTA: The interior of the Zhong cave is illuminate­d by electric lights after sunset in Zhongdong, China.
WALL VISTA: The interior of the Zhong cave is illuminate­d by electric lights after sunset in Zhongdong, China.
 ??  ?? IT’S EVEN A FARM: A residdnt of the Zhong cave cooks a recipe of millet and greens for her family’s milk cows.
IT’S EVEN A FARM: A residdnt of the Zhong cave cooks a recipe of millet and greens for her family’s milk cows.
 ??  ?? THE CAVE AWAITS: A resident of the Zhong cave returns to her home with her family’s cows after a day grazing in the fields.
THE CAVE AWAITS: A resident of the Zhong cave returns to her home with her family’s cows after a day grazing in the fields.
 ??  ?? ermined to stay.
ermined to stay.
 ??  ?? BUSTLING VILLAGE: A resident of the Zhong cave collects dried corn cobs from the roof of her family’s home.
BUSTLING VILLAGE: A resident of the Zhong cave collects dried corn cobs from the roof of her family’s home.
 ??  ?? VALLEY OF THE CAVE: A woman carries freshly cut greens up the valley to the Zhong cave.
VALLEY OF THE CAVE: A woman carries freshly cut greens up the valley to the Zhong cave.
 ??  ?? RUSTED OVER: A half-built cable car system that was intended to bring tourists up to the cave.
RUSTED OVER: A half-built cable car system that was intended to bring tourists up to the cave.

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