| With a population of 6,572,173, the Yi ethnic group is mainly
scattered in Yunnan, Sichuan, Guizhou and Guangxi provinces, in
which Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture in Sichuan province holds
the single largest Yi community in China.
The ancestors of the Yi ethnic group can be traced back to the Qiang
people living in northwest China. They later migrated south and
joined the local southwest aboriginal and created a new group -
the Yi ethnic group.
The Yi people have their own language, which belongs to the Yi
branch of the Zang-Mian Austronesian of Han-Zang Phylum. Yi characters,
as the earliest syllabic script in China, were formed in the 13th
century and are still used today. A number of works of history,
literature and medicine as well as genealogies of the ruling families
written in the old Yi script are still seen in most Yi areas. Due
to cultural and economic exchanges with the Han, more and more Yi
people learn to use the Han language and characters in daily life.
Most Yi people engage in agriculture and a small percentage of
them raise livestock. People living in the plains take rice, maize,
wheat and yams as their staple food while those in the frigid mountainous
areas mostly depend on maize, buckwheat and yams. Complements to
their main food source include vegetable, legume, fruits, pork,
mutton and beef.
The Yi nationality used to believe in many gods and worshiped ancestors.
Some people who lived with Han people also believe in Buddhism.
There are a great many Yi costumes with unique designs stemming
from various places. In the Liangshan Mountains and west Guizhou,
men wear black jackets with tight sleeves and right-side askew fronts
and pleated wide-bottomed trousers. Men in some other areas wear
tight-bottomed trousers. They grow a small patch of hair three or
four inches long on the pate, which is named "Zier", and
wear a turban made of a long piece of bluish cloth. The end of the
cloth is tied into the shape of a taper jutting out from the right-hand
side of the forehead. Women wear laced or embroidered jackets and
pleated long skirts hemmed with colorful multi-layer laces. Some
women wear black turbans, while middle-aged and young women prefer
embroidered square kerchiefs with the front covering the forehead
like a rim. They also wear earrings and like to pin silver flowers
on their collars. When going outdoors, both men and women wear a
kind of dark cape made of wool, hemmed with long tassels that reach
the knee.
Yi people have many traditional festivals and the most important
include the Torch Festival and the October New Year.
History
The Yi language belongs to the Tibetan-Myanmese Language Group
of the Chinese-Tibetan Language Family, and the Yis speak six dialects.
Many Yis in Yunnan, Guizhou and Guangxi know the Han (standard Chinese
or Mandarin) language. The Yis used to have a syllabic script called
the old Yi language, which was formed in the 13th century. It is
estimated that the extant old Yi script has about 10,000 words,
of which 1,000 are words of everyday use. A number of works of history,
literature and medicine as well as genealogies of the ruling families
written in the old Yi script are still seen in most Yi areas. Many
stone tablets and steles carved in the old Yi script remain intact.
Since the old Yi language is not consistent in word form and pronunciation,
it was reformed after liberation for use in books and newspapers.
Historical records written in the Han and the old Yi languages
show that the ancestors of the Yi, Bai, Naxi, Lahu and Lisu ethnic
groups were closely related with ancient Di and Qiang people in
west China. In the period between the 2nd century B.C. and the early
Christian era, the activities of the ancient Yis centered around
the areas of Dianchi in Yunnan and Qiongdou in Sichuan. After the
3rd century, the ancient Yis extended their activities from the
Anning River valley, the Jinsha River, the Dianchi Lake and the
Ailao Mountains to northeastern Yunnan, southern Yunnan, northwestern
Guizhou and northwestern Guangxi.
In the Eastern Han (25-220), Wei (220-265) and Jin (265-420) dynasties,
inhabitants in these areas came to be known as "Yi," the
character for which meant "barbarian." After the Jin Dynasty,
the Yis of the clan named Cuan became rulers of the Dianchi area,
northeastern Yunnan and the Honghe (Red) River area. Later those
places were called "Cuan areas" which fell into the east
and west parts. The inhabitants there belonged to tribes speaking
the Yi language.
In the Tang and Song dynasties, the Yis living in "East Cuan"
were called "Wumans." In different historical periods,
"Cuan" changed from the surname of a clan to the name
of a place, and further to the name of a tribe. In the Yuan and
Ming dynasties, "Cuan" was often used to refer to the
Yis. After the Yuan Dynasty, part of "Cuan" acquired the
name "Luoluo" (Ngolok), which probably originated from
"Luluman," one of the seven "Wuman" tribes in
the Tang Dynasty. From that time on, most Yis called themselves
"Luoluo," although many different appellations existed.
This name lasted from the Ming and Qing dynasties till liberation.
Ancient Yis experienced a long primitive society in the Stone
Age. Legends and records written in the old Yi script show that
the Yis went through a matriarchal age in ancient times. Annals
of the Yis in the Southwest records that the Yi people in ancient
times "only knew mothers and not fathers," and that "women
ruled for six generations in a row." Patriarchy came into being
at least 2,000 years ago.
Roughly in the 2nd and 3rd centuries B.C., the Yis living around
the Dianchi Lake in Yunnan entered class society. In the early Han
Dynasty, prefectures were set up in this area, and the chief of
the Yi people was granted the title "King of Dian" with
a seal. Around the 8th century, a slave state named "Nanzhao"
was established in the northern Ailao Mountain and the Erhai areas,
with the Yis as the main body and the Bai and Naxi nationalities
included. The head of the state was granted the title "King
of Yunnan." In the same period, "Luodian" and other
groups of slave owners and regimes appeared in the Yi areas in Guizhou.
In 937, the state of "Dali" superseded "Nanzhao,"
when it collapsed under the blows of slave and peasant uprisings.
From then on, the slave system of the Yis in Yunnan gradually disintegrated.
After the 13th century, "Dali" and "Luodian"
were conquered one after the other by the Yuan Dynasty, which set
up regional, prefectural and county governments and military and
civil administrations in the Yi areas in Yunnan, Guizhou and Sichuan,
appointing hereditary headmen to rule the local inhabitants. By
the end of the Yuan Dynasty, the feudal economy of the Yi landlords
in Yunnan had developed rapidly, but remnants of the manorial economy
and slavery still existed to varying extents in the secluded areas.
The Ming Dynasty used both administrative officials from elsewhere
and local hereditary headmen, and some of the governments consisted
of both types of administrators, expanding the influence of the
feudal landlord economy. The large number of Han immigrants also
promoted economic growth in the Li areas. The Qing Dynasty abolished
the system of appointing hereditary headmen and confirmed the appointment
of administrative officials. This enhanced its direct rule over
the Yi areas, hastened the disintegration of the manorial economy
and firmly established the feudal landlord economy.
Tradition
The Yi people have a glorious tradition of revolutionary struggle.
In the recent 100 years or more the Yis waged powerful anti-imperialist
and anti-feudal struggles as well as those against slave owners.
Influenced by the Taiping Revolution (1851-1864), the struggles
waged by the Yis and other nationalities against the Qing government
lasted more than a decade.
In 1935, the Chinese Red Army pushed north to resist the Japanese
invaders. The troops on the historic Long March passed through the
Yi areas, leaving a good and deep impression on the Yis wherever
they went. On their way through northwestern Guizhou and northeastern
Yunnan, the Red Army cracked down on local tyrants, wicked gentry
and corrupt officials, and opened their barns to relieve the starving
Yis. The Red Army distributed confiscated grain, salt, ham, clothes
and other such goods among the Yis and people of other ethnic groups,
who in return gave enthusiastic assistance to it. Many young Yis
joined the Army.
After crossing the Jinsha River, the Red Army pushed towards the
Dadu River in two prongs from Yuexi and Mianning. Supported by the
Army, the Yis and Hans in Mianning established the Worker-Peasant-Soldier
Democratic Government of the county, formed revolutionary troops,
abolished the "hostage system" imposed by the Kuomintang
government, and set free several hundred Yi headmen and their relatives
held as hostages. The Red Army strictly observed discipline, firmly
implemented the Chinese Communist Party's policy for minority groups,
declared that it aimed to emancipate the minority groups, and proclaimed
that all poor Yis and Hans were kith and kin. It called on the Yi
people to unite with the Red Army and overthrow the warlords and
fight for national equality. Inspired by the Red Army's policies,
Yuedan the Junior, the chieftain of a Yi clan in Mianning County,
entered into alliance with the Red Army General Liu Bocheng. Helped
by the Yis and the chieftain, the Red Army troops passed through
the Yi areas without a hitch and won the victory of capturing the
Luding Bridge and forcing the Dadu River.
Conditions in the Past
Socio-economic development in the Yi areas was lopsided before
liberation, due to oppression and exploitation by the reactionary
ruling class, as well as historical and geographical differences.
The socio-economic structure fell by and large into two types --
feudalism and slavery. Most of the Yis in Yunnan, Guizhou and Guangxi
had entered feudal society earlier on, and a developed landlord
economy had emerged in most areas except for remnants of the manorial
economy in some areas of northeastern Yunnan and northwestern Guizhou.
Certain elements of capitalism had appeared in the Yi areas along
the Yunnan-Vietnam Railway and the Gejiu-Bisezhai-Shiping Railway.
Slavery remained intact for a long time in the Greater Liangshan
Mountain area in Sichuan and the Lesser Liangshan Mountain area
in Yunnan.
The Yi people in Yunnan, Guizhou and Guangxi, who were under feudal
rule, were mainly engaged in agriculture and animal husbandry. The
growth of handicraft industries and commerce varied from place to
place. Generally speaking, the production level of Yis living near
cities and towns was approximate to that of local Hans, but was
much lower in mountain areas.
Landlords accounted for 5 per cent of the population in those
areas, and poor peasants and farmhands 60 to 80 per cent. The land
possessed by landlords was on the average 10 times or several dozen
times the amount owned by poor peasants, who were subjected to cruel
feudal exploitation. Land rent paid in kind reached 60 to 70 per
cent of the harvest and tenants had to bear heavy corvee and miscellaneous
levies.
Though the system of appointing hereditary headmen in northeastern
Yunnan and northwestern Guizhou was abolished in the Qing Dynasty,
some local tyrants, until liberation in 1949, used political power
and influence in their hands to bully and exploit peasants as slave
owners did, treating poor peasants as serfs.
Slavery kept production at an extremely low level for a long time
in the Greater and Lesser Liangshan Mountain areas in Sichuan and
Yunnan. While agriculture was the main line of production, land
lay waste and production declined strikingly. Slash-and-burn cultivation
was still practiced in some mountain areas. The lack of irrigation
facilities and adequate manure, coupled with heavy soil erosion,
lowered average grain output to less than a ton per hectare. Animal
husbandry was a major sideline with sheep making up a large part
of the livestock. The rate of propagation was very low due to extensive
grazing and management.
For many centuries, barter was the form of trading among the Yis
in the Liangshan Mountain areas. Goods for exchange mainly included
livestock and grain. Salt, cloth, hardware, needles and threads
and other daily necessities were available only in places where
Yis and Hans lived together. Occasionally, some Han merchants, guaranteed
safe-conduct by Yi headmen, carried goods into the Liangshan Mountain
areas. At the risk of being captured and turned into slaves, they
went and often made a net profit of more than 100 per cent. Suffering
from a severe shortage of means of production and of subsistence,
the Yis had to endure heavy exploitation in order to get a little
essential goods. One hen was worth only a needle, and a sheepskin
only a handful of salt. Many slaves had to go without salt all the
year round.
Due to complex historical reasons, the slave system of the Yis
in the Liangshan Mountains lasted till 1949.
Before 1949, the Yis in the Liangshan Mountain areas were stratified
into four different ranks -- "Nuohuo," "Qunuo,"
"Ajia" and "Xiaxi." The demarcation between
the masters and the slaves was insurmountable. The rank of "Nuohuo"
was determined by blood lineage and remained permanent, the other
ranks could never move up to the position of rulers.
"Nuohuo," meaning "black Yi," was the highest
rank of society. Being the slave-owning class, Nuohuo made up 7
per cent of the total population. The black Yis controlled people
of the other three ranks to varying degrees, and owned 60 to 70
per cent of the arable land and a large amount of other means of
production. The black Yis were born aristocrats, claiming their
blood to be "noble" and "pure," and forbidding
marriages with people of the other three ranks. They despised physical
labour, lived by exploiting the other ranks and ruled the slaves
by force.
"Qunuo," meaning "white Yi," was the highest
rank of the ruled and made up 50 per cent of the population. This
rank was an appendage to the black Yis personally and, as subjects
under the slave system, they enjoyed relative independence economically
and could control "Ajia" and "Xiaxi" who were
inferior to them. "Qunuo" lived within the areas governed
by the black Yi slave owners, had no freedom of migration, nor could
they leave the areas without the permission of their masters. They
had no complete right of ownership when disposing of their own property,
but were subjected to restrictions by their masters. They had to
pay some fees to their masters when they wanted to sell their land.
The property of a dead person who had no offspring went to his master.
Though the black Yi slave owners could not kill, sell or buy Qunuo
at will, they could transfer or present as a gift the power of control
over Qunuo. They could even give away Qunuo as the compensation
for persons they had killed and use Qunuo as stakes. So, Qunuo had
no complete personality of their own, though they were not slaves.
"Ajia" made up one third of the population, being rigidly
bound to black Yi or Qunuo slaveowners, who could freely sell, buy
and kill them.
"Xiaxi" was the lowest rank, accounting for 10 per cent
of the population. They had no property, personal rights or freedom,
and were regarded as "talking tools." They lived in damp
and dark corners in their masters' houses, and at night had to curl
up with domestic animal to keep warm. Supervised by masters, Xiaxi
did heavy housework and farm work all the year round. They wore
rags and tattered sheepskins, and lived on wild roots and leftovers.
Slave owners inflicted all sorts of torture on those who were rebellious,
fettered them with iron chains and wooden shackles to prevent them
from escaping. Like domestic animals, Xiaxi could be freely disposed
of as chattels, ordered about, insulted, beaten up, bought and sold,
or killed as sacrifices to gods.
Corvee was the basic form of exploitation by the slave owners.
Qunuo and Ajia must use their own cattle and tools to cultivate
their masters' land. Qunuo had to perform five, six or more than
10 days of corvee each year. They could send their slaves to do
it or pay a sum of money instead. Corvee performed by Ajia took
up one third to one half of their total working time. They often
had to neglect their own land because of cultivating the land of
their masters. Besides corvee, Qunuo and Ajia had to take usurious
loans imposed by their black Yi masters.
Ordered about to toil like beasts of burden, the slaves had no
interest in production at all. To win freedom, slaves in the Liangshan
Mountain areas resorted to measures like going slow, destroying
tools, maltreating animal, burning their masters' property and even
committing suicidal attacks on their masters. Though it was hard
for slaves in remote mountain areas to run away, they still tried
to escape at the risk of their lives. Spontaneous and sporadic rebellions
staged by slaves against slave owners never ceased. Organized and
collective struggle for personal rights also grew, and collective
anathema often turned into small armed insurgence.
Customs
Rigid rules were stipulated for marriages within the same rank
but outside the same clan among the black Yis, who relied on the
"mystery" of blood lineage as a spiritual pillar. Some
70,000 black Yis in the Liangshan Mountains formed nearly 100 clans,
big or small, of which there were less than 10 big clans each with
a male population of more than 1,000. Each clan's territory was
clearly demarcated by mountain ridges or rivers, and no trespass
was tolerated. There were no regular administrative bodies in the
clans, but each had some headmen called "Suyi" (seniors
in charge of public affairs) and "Degu" (seniors gifted
with a silver tongue), who were representatives of the black Yi
slave owners in exercising class dictatorship. They upheld the interests
of the black Yis as a rank, were experienced and knowledgeable about
customary law and capable of shooting trouble. "Degu,"
in particular, enjoyed high prestige inside and outside their clans.
Headmen did not enjoy privileges over and above ordinary clansmen,
nor were their positions hereditary. Important issues in the clans,
such as settling blood feud and suppressing rebellious slaves, must
be discussed at the "Jierjitie" (consultation among the
headmen) or "Mengge" (general conference of the clan membership).
While preserving some of their original characteristics, the clans
under the slave system mainly functioned as institutions to enforce
rank enslavement and exploitation, splitting and cracking down on
slave rebellions internally and plundering other clans or resisting
their pillage externally. When subordinate ranks staged a rebellion,
the black Yi clans would take collective action against it, or several
clans would join hands to suppress it. Under such circumstances,
the unanimity of interests among the black Yi slave owners fully
manifested itself. Strictly controlled by the black Yi clans, the
slaves could hardly run away from the areas administered by the
clans. On the other hand, black Yis often fought among themselves
in order to obtain more slaves, land or property. It follows that
the clan, as an institution, was a force safeguarding and supporting
the privileges of the black Yi slave owning class.
The white Yi clans, among the Qunuos and part of the Ajias, while
being similar to the black Yi clans in form, were actually subordinate
to various black Yi clans. Only a few white Yi clans were not subject
to black Yi rule and they formed what was known as the independent
white Yi area. The white Yi clans succeeded to some extent in protecting
their own members, and at times they would unite in "legitimate"
struggles to defend their own interests and win temporary concessions
from black Yi slave owners. But, under the rule of the black Yi
clans, they became an auxiliary tool of the slave owners to oppress
the slaves. Some clan chieftains of the Qunuo rank were fostered
by slave owners as proxies, called "Jiemoke" in the Yi
language, who collected rents, dunned for repayment of debts and
served as hatchet men, mouthpieces and lackeys for slave owners.
There was no written law for the Yis in the Liangshan Mountains,
but there was an unwritten customary law which was almost the same
in various places. Apart from certain remnants of the customary
law of clan society, this customary law reflected the characteristics
of morality and the social rank system. It explicitly upheld the
rank privileges and ruling position of the black Yis, claiming that
the rule of slave owners was a "perfectly justified principle."
The legal viewpoint of the customary law was clear-cut. Any personal
attacks against black Yis, encroachment on their private property,
violation of the marriage system of the rank and infringement on
the privileges of the black Yis were regarded as "crimes,"
and the offenders would be severely punished.
In most Yi areas, maize, buckwheat, oat and potato were staples.
Rice production was limited. Most poor Yi peasants lived on acorns,
banana roots, celery, flowers and wild herbs all the year round.
Salt was scarce. In the Yi areas, potatoes cooked in plain water,
pickled leaf soup, buckwheat bread and cornmeal were considered
good foods, which only the well-to-to Yis could afford. At festivals,
boiled meat with salt was the best food, which only slaveowners
could enjoy.
Cooking utensils of a distinct ethnic color, made of wood or leather,
have been preserved in some of the Yi areas. Tubs, plates, bowls
and cups, hollowed out of blocks of wood, are painted in three colors
-- black, red and yellow -- inside and outside, and with patterns
of thunderclouds, water waves, bull eyes and horse teeth. Wine cups
are hollowed out of horns or hoofs.
Yi costume is great in variety, with different designs for different
places. In the Liangshan Mountains and west Guizhou, men wear black
jackets with tight sleeves and right-side askew fronts, and pleated
wide-bottomed trousers. Men in some other areas wear tight-bottomed
trousers. They grow a small patch of hair three or four inches long
on the pate, and wear a turban made of a long piece of bluish cloth.
The end of the cloth is tied into the shape of a thin, long awl
jutting out from the right-hand side of the forehead. They also
wear on the left ear a big yellow and red pearl with a pendant of
red silk thread. Beardless men are considered handsome. Women wear
laced or embroidered jackets and pleated long skirts hemmed with
colorful multi-layer laces. Black Yi women used to wear long skirts
reaching to the ground, and women of other social ranks wore skirts
reaching only to the knee. Some women wear black turbans, while
middle-aged and young women prefer embroidered square kerchiefs
with the front covering the forehead like a rim. They also wear
earrings and like to pin silver flowers on the collar. Men and women,
when going outdoors, wear a kind of dark cape made of wool and hemmed
with long tassels reaching to the knee. In wintertime, they lined
their capes with felt. But few slaves could afford clothes of cotton
cloth, and most of them wore tattered home-spun linen.
Most Yi houses were low mud-and-wood structures without windows,
which were dark and damp. Ordinary Yi houses had double-leveled
roofs covered with small wooden planks on which stones were laid.
Interior decoration was simple and crude, with little furniture
and very few utensils, except for a fireplace consisting of three
stones. In the Liangshan Mountains, slave owners' houses and slaves'
dwellings formed a sharp contrast. Slaves lived with livestock in
the same huts that could hardly shelter them from wind and rain.
Slave owners' houses had spacious courtyards surrounded by high
walls, and some of them were protected by several or a dozen pillboxes.
The Yis are monogamous, living in nuclear families. Before liberation
in 1949, marriages were generally arranged by parents, and the bride's
family often asked for heavy betrothal gifts. In many places, married
women stayed at their own parents' home till their first children
were born. In some other places, feigned "kidnapping of the
bride" was practiced to add to the joyous atmosphere. The groom's
family would send people to the bride's home at a prearranged time
to snatch the girl and carry her home on horseback. The girl was
supposed to cry aloud for help, and her family members and relatives
would pretend to chase after the kidnappers. In other cases, when
people from the groom's side went to fetch the bride, her people
would first "attack" them with water, cudgels and stove
ashes, then treat them to wine and meat after a frolic scuffle,
and finally let them take the bride away on horseback. On the wedding
night, there would also be frolic fighting between the bride and
the groom as part of the ceremony. These were obviously legacies
of primitive marriage conventions.
Patriarchal and monogamous families were the basic units of the
clans in the Liangshan Mountains. When a young man got married,
he built his own family by receiving part of his parents' property.
Young sons who lived with their parents could get a larger portion
of the property. There were rigid differences between sons by the
wife and those by concubines in sharing legacies. Property handed
down from the ancestors usually went to sons by the wife.
The Yis traditionally associated the father's name with the son's.
When a boy was named, the last one or two syllables of his father's
name would be added to his own. Such a practice made it possible
to trace the family tree back for many generations. In the Yi families,
women were in a subordinate position with no right to inherit property,
but the remnants of matriarchal society could still be seen clearly
sometimes. The Yis much respected the power of uncles on the mother's
side, and relations between such uncles and nephews were close.
Slaves' marriages and homemaking were in the hands of slaveholders.
The fate of slave girls was even more wretched, and they were forced
to marry just to meet the needs of slaveowners for more slaves.
The Yis in the Greater and Lesser Liangshan Mountains practiced
cremation, burning dead bodies in mountains and burying the ashes
in the ground or placing them in caves. After the funeral, the mourners
used bamboo strips wrapped with white wool to make memorial tablets,
which were wound with red thread and placed in the trough carved
in a wooden stick. Again, the stick was wrapped with white cloth
or linen. Some memorial tablets were made of bamboo or wood and
carved in the shape of figurines, which were placed at the young
sons' homes. Three years later, such memorial tablets were either
burned or placed in secluded mountain caves.
The Yis in Yunnan, Guizhou and Guangxi believed in polytheism
before liberation 1949, combining worship for ancestors with the
influence of Taoism and Buddhism. The Yis in the Liangshan Mountains
worshipped gods and ghosts and believed in idolatry, and offered
sacrifices to forefathers frequently. Their religious activities
were presided over by sorcerers.
The earliest Yi calendar divided the year into 10 months, each
with 36 days. The tenth month was the period of the annual festival.
Influenced by the Han Lunar Calendar, the Yis later divided the
year into 12 months, using the 12 animals representing the 12 Earthly
Branches to calculate the year, month and date. There was a leap
year every two years in the Yi calendar. The New Year festival was
not fixed but generally fell between the 11th and 12th lunar months.
In celebrating the New Year, the Yis would slanghter cattle, sheep
and pigs to offer sacrifices to ancestors. In the Liangshan Mountains,
people of the subordinate ranks had to present half a pig's head
to their masters to confirm their affiliation. The Yis in Yunnan
and Guizhou now celebrate the spring festival as the Hans do. "The
Torch Festival," held around 24th of the sixth lunar month,
is a common tradition for the Yis in all areas. During the festival,
the Yis in all villages would carry torches and walk around their
houses and fields, and plant pine torches on field ridges in the
hope of driving away insect pests. After making their rounds, the
Yis of the whole village would gather around bonfires, playing moon
guitars (a four-stringed plucked instrument with a moon-shaped sound
box) and mouth organs, dancing and drinking wine through the night
to pray for a good harvest. The Yis in some places stage horse races,
bull fighting, playing on the swing, archery and wrestling.
New Life
The founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949 ended the
bitter history of enslavement and oppression of the Yis and people
of other nationalities in China. From 1952 to 1980, the Liangshan
Yi Autonomous Prefecture of Sichuan, the Chuxiong Yi Autonomous
Prefecture and the Honghe Hani and Yi Autonomous Prefecture of Yunnan
were established one after another. Autonomous counties for the
Yi or for several minority groups including Yi were founded in Eshan,
Lunan, Ninglang, Weishan, Jiangcheng, Nanjian, Xundian, Xinping
and Yuanjiang of Yunnan, Weining of Guizhou and Longlin of Guangxi.
Transformation of the only existing slave society in the contemporary
world over the past 30 years or more has been a matter of profound
significance in the Yi people's history. In response to the aspirations
of the Yi slaves and other poor people, the people's government,
after consulting with Yis from the upper stratum who had close relations
with the common people, decided to carry out democratic reforms
in the Yi areas of Sichuan and in the Ninglang Autonomous County
of Yunnan in 1956. The basic objective of the democratic reforms
was to abolish slavery and let the laboring people enjoy personal
freedom and political equality; to abrogate the land ownership of
the slave owning class and introduce the land ownership of the laboring
people to release the rural productive force and promote agricultural
production so as to create conditions for the socialist transformation
of agriculture and the movement of co-operation.
In accordance with the principle of peaceful consultation, the
people's government granted an appropriate political status and
commensurate material benefits to those upper stratum people who
actively assisted with democratic reforms. In this way, many slave
owners were won over, while the few unlawful and intransigent slave
owners were isolated. Thus, democratic reforms went on smoothly.
In the spring of 1958, democratic reforms concluded in the Yi
areas in the Greater and Lesser Liangshan Mountains in Sichuan and
Yunnan. The reforms destroyed slavery, abolished all privileges
of the slave owners, confiscated or requisitioned land, cattle,
farm tools, houses and grain from the slave owners, and distributed
them among the slaves and other poor people. In the Liangshan Yi
Autonomous Prefecture and the Xichang Yi areas, 120,000 hectares
of land were confiscated, and 280,00 head of cattle, 34,000 farm
tools, houses composed of 880,000 rooms and 8,000 tons of grain
were either requisitioned or purchased and given to the poor and
needy along with 4,700,000 yuan paid as damages by unlawful slave
owners. The reforms emancipated 690,000 slaves and other poor people,
making them masters of the new society.
The people's government also built houses and provided farm tools,
grain, clothes, furniture and money for the slaves and other poor
people and helped them build their own homes. In the Liangshan Mountains,
the government set up homes for 1,400 old and feeble slaves who
had lost the ability to work under slavery. Many former slaves got
married and started their own families, and many families were reunited.
The emancipated slaves took the socialist road most firmly and
shortly after the democratic reforms formed advanced cooperatives
in agricultural production.
The democratic reforms inspired the emancipated slaves and poor
peasants to reshape their land and expand agricultural production
steadily. The Chuxiong Yi Autonomous Prefecture of Yunnan achieved
a great success in increasing output of hemp, tobacco, cotton, peanut
and other cash crops. The autonomous counties of Ninglang, Weishan
and Eshan in the Honghe Yi Autonomous Prefecture built water conservancy
projects, which have played a big role in farming.
There was no industry at all in the Yi areas in the pre-liberation
days except for the Gejiu Tin Mine in Yunnan and a few blacksmiths,
masons and carpenters taken from the Han areas to the Liangshan
Mountains. Now people in the Liangshan, Chuxiong and Honghe autonomous
prefectures have built farm machinery, fertilizer and cement factories,
small hydroelectric stations and copper, iron and coal mines.
Lack of transportation facilities was one of the factors contributing
to the seclusion of the Liangshan Mountains. Construction of roads
started right after liberation. In 1952, the highway connecting
Sichuan and western Yunnan was reconstructed and opened to traffic.
At the same time, trunk highways linking the Liangshan Autonomous
Prefecture with other parts of the country were constructed. The
Yixi Highway was opened to traffic in 1957, linking up the Greater
and Lesser Liangshan Mountains for the first time in history. A
highway network extending in all directions within the prefecture
had been formed by 1961. By the end of 1981, the total length of
highways in the prefecture had increased from seven km. before 1949
to 7,368 km. While there were only 18 push carts in the whole area
before 1949, the number of vehicles in 1981 reached 11,000, of which
5,000 were motor vehicles.
The local transportation department employed a total of 10,000
people. The Chengdu-Kunming Railway crosses six counties in the
Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture over a distance of 337 km., with
45 stations on the line.
With the development of the local economy, people in the prefecture
had built 1,480 hydroelectric stations with a total generating capacity
of 97,000 kw. By 1981, providing electric power and lighting for
80 per cent of the area.
Being extremely backward in education in the old days, the Yi
people now have primary schools in all villages. The autonomous
prefecture began setting up middle schools, secondary technical
schools and schools for training ethnic teachers in the late 1950s.
In 1981, there were 180 middle schools with 220 minority teachers
and 12,000 students, 3,780 elementary schools with 3,700 minority
teachers and 66,900 pupils. Children of emancipated slaves and poor
peasants now have access to education. A new generation of Yi intellectuals
with socialist consciousness is coming to the fore, and many Yi
cadres hold leading positions at all levels of government in the
prefecture.
In the past, there were no professional doctors, and the only
way to avert and cure diseases was to pray. Now there are hospitals
and clinics in all counties. Serious epidemic diseases such as smallpox,
typhoid, leprosy, malaria, cholera have either been brought under
control or wiped out by and large. A lot of traditional medical
experience of the Yis has been collected, summed up and improved.
The world famous Yunnan baiyao (a white medicinal powder with special
efficacy for treating haemorrhage, wounds, bruises, etc.) is said
to have been prepared according to a folk prescription handed down
for generations by Yi people in Yunnan.
The colorful literature and art of the Yis are flourishing. The
Yi people have created a great deal of historical and literary works
written in the old Yi language and folk literary works handed down
orally. The oral folk literary works, numerous and in a great variety,
include poems, tales, fables, proverbs, riddles, etc. History of
the Yis in the Southwest and Lebuteyi, two encyclopedic works written
in the old Yi language and involving philosophy, history and religion
have been translated into the Han (main Chinese) language. The epics
Ashima, The Song of the Axi People and Meige are popular throughout
Yunnan.
Since liberation, many Yi folk tales, epics and songs have been
published after being collected and collated. Also published are
some new works reflecting the present life of the Yi people, such
as The Merry Jinsha River and Daji and His Father. Yi songs and
dances are rich in ethnic color. The new folk song The Stars and
the Moon Are Together expresses through beautiful melodies the happiness
and warmth felt by the Yis in the great family of nationalities
in China. The Happy Nuosu, another new song with cheerful and lively
melodies, reflects the joyous and energetic life of the Yi people. |