Thursday, November 21st, 2024

Culture of “Gypsies of the sea” well protected in China’s Hainan province



By Sun Haitian, People’s Daily

They live on junks and boats. They build boat dwellings and make a living by fishing. They are the Tanka people, also known as the “gypsies of the sea.”

The Tanka people are Han Chinese. Living on seawater for generations, they have developed unique customs different from those on land, such as wedding ceremonies hosted on the water and Tanka ditties, a type of short simple song that expresses the emotions of the Tanka people.

In Xincun township of Lingshui Li autonomous county in the southernmost province of Hainan, there are several “floating villages” inhabited by the Tanka people. At present, the township is home to 456 seafood farms and 1,475 junks. There are over 5,000 Tankas living and working on the sea in the township.

At the port of Xincuntownship, rows of houseboats are floating by the shore, and beyond themare many seafood farms, which are made of net cages. These houseboats and seafood farms, adjacent to each other, form a broad “floating village.”

As small as these houseboats are, they have everything from living rooms and bedrooms to kitchens and bathrooms. They offer a place for fishermen to rest after spending a tiring day on the sea.

To better facilitate transportation in the floating village, the Tanka people invented “taxi boats” that shuttle between seafood farms and the port, and the taxi boats are frequently taken by villagers, students and tourists.

The Tanka people living at the Xincun port pursue their traditional livelihood of fishing. Fishermen go fishing at dawn and return to the port just hours later to sell their harvests, while their family members staying at home sort the catches, wash seafood farms and weave fishing nets.

The Tanka people always sing the Tanka ditties, or the “salt-water songs,” one of the most known types of folk music in Hainan province. The ditties carry the memories and express the emotions of the Tanka community.

Fishermen are going to the sea after the off season ends in Xincun township, LingshuiLi autonomous county, south China’s Hainan province. (Photo by Huang Ju/People’s Daily Online)

To protect and inherit the Tanka culture and make it into a cultural industry, Lingshui Li autonomous county has taken great efforts to restore the marine ecology and encourage fishermen to move onshore, as well as develop deepwater fishery and seaside leisure businesses. The county, combining culture and tourism, is strivingforboth ecological and economic benefits.

Cleaning the polluted seawater and tidying up the seafood farms, the Xincun port has gone through drastic changes and is embracing an increasing number of visitors.

A museum of Tanka culture is currently under construction and B&Bs with Tanka characteristics are also developing. It is reported that the museum, together with other tourist attractions in Hainan, such as the Nanwan Monkey Island and the Xinying Mangrove National Wetland Park, will jointly form a network that promotes local tourism clusters and enhances regional economic strength.

Shen Xiaoming, Party chief of Hainan, said during an inspection tour to Lingshui Li autonomous county that the autonomous county should shoulder the responsibility of protecting and developing the Tanka cultureand develop new business models centering on the characteristics of the Tanka community.

According to him, LingshuiLi autonomous county will develop a series of tourism projects to better inherit and protect the Tanka culture.

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