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The Blang Nationality
With a population of 80,000, the Blangs live
mainly in the Blang, Xiding and Bada mountainous area in Menghai County
of Xishuangbanna in Yunnan. Their main occupations are in agriculture,
planting upland rice, cotton and tea. The Blang Mountain is the native
home of world-famous Puer tea. The Blangs enjoy the "sword dance"
and "circle dance." The women like to chew betel nut and are
proud of their black teeth stained by the juice. The Blangs have their
own language but no writing system. Their oral literature features folktales
and narrative lyrics. Some Blangs believe in Shangzuobu Buddhism.

The Blangs' houses, usually two-storied buildings,
are similar to the Dais'. People live on the second floor, and keep
their livestock downstairs. There is a porch at the entrance where women
often sit together chatting while spinning. A hearth is set up in the
center of the main room, where the whole family often stays. Most furniture
is made of bamboo. March and April is the house building period for
the Blangs. When one family builds a house, many people come to help.
The house is thus quickly completed, and all the villagers come to celebrate.
The Blangs' have special diet. They love raw and sour food. They chop
raw beef, fish and red -deer into sauce, put in fragrant tea, garlic
and salt especially for guests. Sour bamboo shoot, sour fish and sour
pork they preserve are all very aromatic and tasty.
Sometimes, the Blangs dig a hole
in the sandy beach, spread several layers of palm leaves and pour in
fresh water and live fish. They then throw in red-hot pebbles ,which
turn the water into a boiling soup. The fish soup cooked in this way
is very delicious, giving out a special flavor of heated pebble and
palm leaf - and, it is real "green food."
The Blangs make clothes with homespun cloth. Blue and black are two
prevailing colors. Men wear short collarless jackets and long black
broad trousers. They wrap their heads with black or white cloth. Old
men like to coil their braids on top of the head. Men also wear bracelets.
Blang women often wear short closefitting collarless garments and black
or patterned closefitting skirts. They tie a belt around the waist
and wear gaiters. They wear their hair in a bun under large turbans.
They like to wear big silver earrings decorated with red or yellow flowers
which hang down to the shoulders. Young women attach bright tassels
to the earrings as well.
Every Blang woman is a teamaking expert. Every April to May, they fry
the tender shoots until they get dry, and put them into capped bamboo
tubes while they are still hot. Then, they roast the tubes by the hearth.
When the bamboo skin gets scorched, the fine fragrant bamboo tube tea
is made. They produce many other types of tea such as roast tea, sour
tea and powder tea.
The Blangs are particular about drinking tea, especially with roast
tea. They put tea leaves into a special tea caddy and roast it by the
hearth. When the smell of the tea comes out, they pour in boiling water
and the fragrant roast tea is ready to serve - it is considered premium
tea for entertaining guests.
A Blang courtship begins from a visit of several young men to a girl's
home. Each man brings a threestringed instrument and sits by the hearth.
They chat with the girl while playing the instrument and humming love
songs. After rounds of singing, the man who has stopped singing leaves
quietly. The last one who stays is the girl's potential lover. After
they fall in love, the boy invites two friends to visit the girl's home
to propose for marriage. If the girl's parents give him consent, they'll
go on for some more time. Then, the boy's father asks an old man to
be the matchmaker, and pay a visit to the girl's home with a tin of
tea, 500 grams of salt, a parcel of food and some money. On the wedding
day, both families kill a pig to fete the villagers. In the end, the
newlyweds get baptized in a temple and listen to some Buddhist scriptures
chanted by an elder.
The mild climate and abundant rainfall are favorable for the growth
of plants. Most Blangs work on dry lands. When they hear cuckoos chirping
in spring, men begin to cut off branches. While the branches get dry,
they circle a piece of land and burn the grass and bush inside. During
the sowing time, men walk ahead with the previously made sticks and
women follow behind with seeds, one digging holes while the other sowing
seeds. Then they just let it sprout and grow. It seems such a simple
farming method, but on the fertile land on the Blang Mountain and with
the thick plant ash they prepare, they always get a bumper harvest in
the autumn. This form of cultivation has not changed over the years.
The Blangs have found ways to maintain the fertility of the land by
rotation cultivation, which also contributes to their good harvest every
year.
From childhood, Blang youths learn to play all sorts of instruments
and practice songs of various tunes. There is frequent competition in
singing Zhuidiao, a major tune in Blang songs at grand dancing parties.
According to the Blangs, boys who can't sing can not win girls' favor.
"Tiaoge" means singing while dancing. When a village holds
a "Tiaoge" meeting, they often invite great singers and dancers
from other villages. They also carry out singing contests after the
"Tiaoge" performances. At that time, the whole mountain is
echoing their melodious folk songs.
The Circle Dance is the most popular group dance among the young people.
The dance is first lead by an ace of singing and dancing. Following
the rhythm of the gongs and elephantfoot drums, the girls form a circle,
dancing gracefully while making anti-clockwise movements. A group of
boys jump like tigers in the circle. Sometimes, they scatter to the
rim and compete singing with the girls; sometimes, they stay together
and imitate animals' movements. They perform singing and dancing alternatively,
eulogizing the heroes in their history and their ever-changing new life.
Sword and stick dancing is also popular along the Blang Mountain area.
There are three types of sword dancing including long sword, dagger
and sword end dancing. Stick dancing includes dancing with a single
stick, short stick or sword against stick. Elephant-foot drums and cymbals
are played to the accompaniment, which adds more excitement to the dance.
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