The number of De'ang people in China totals 15,500.
Small as their population is, the people of this ethnic
group are quite widely distributed over Yunnan Province.
Most of them dwell in Santai Township in Luxi County of the
Dehong Dai-Jingpo Autonomous Prefecture and in Junnong
Township in Zhenkang County of the Lincang Prefecture. The
others live scattered in Yingjiang, Ruili, Longchuan,
Baoshan, Lianghe and Gengma counties. Some De'angs live
together with the Jingpo, Han, Lisu and Va nationalities in
the mountainous areas. And a small number of them have their
homes in villages on flatland peopled by the Dais
The De'ang language belongs to the South Asian
family of languages. The De'angs have no written script of
their own, and many of them have learned to speak the Dai,
Han or Jingpo languages, and some can read and write in the
Dai language. An increasing number of them have picked up
the Han language in years after the mid-20th
century.
In the mountainous areas of Gaoligong
and Nushan ranges in western Yunnan Province, the De'ang
people have been living there for generations. The climate
here is subtropical, and there is fertile soil, abundant
rainfall, rich mineral resources and dense forests. The
dragon bamboo here grows very long and has a stem with a
diameter of 10 cm to 13 cm. The Zhenkang area has been famed
for this kind of bamboo for the past 2,000 years. It is used
to build houses and make household utensils and farm
implements. Bamboo shoots are a famed
delicacy.
he De'angs, who took to farming since
very ancient times, grow both wet and upland rice, corn,
buckwheat and tuber crops as well as walnut and jute. And
they have learned to cultivate tea, cotton, coffee, and
rubber after the founding of the People's Republic in
1949.
The De'angs have been great tea drinkers
since very early times, and now every family has tea bushes
growing among vegetables, banana, mango, jack fruit, papaya,
pear and pomegranate trees in a garden around the
house.
History
De'ang was a name given to this ethnic group
in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). Before that time the
De'angs along with the Blang and Va ethnic minorities
speaking a south Asian language inside Yunnan Province were
called "Pu people," according to historical
records. In those bygone times the "Pu people"
were distributed mainly in the southwestern part of Yunnan
Province, which was called Yongchang Prefecture in the Han
Dynasty (206 B.C.-A.D. 220). Their forefathers settled on
the banks of the Nujiang River (upper reaches of the Salween
that flows across Burma) long before the arrival of the
Achang and Jingpo ethnic
minorities.
Development of De'ang society has
been uneven. Since the De'angs have lived in widely
scattered localities together with the Han, Dai, Jingpo, Va
and other nationalities, who are at different stages of
development, they have been influenced by these ethnic
groups politically, economically and culturally. Dai
influence is particularly strong since the De'angs had for a
long period lived in servitude under Dai headmen in feudal
times. However, some traces of the ancient clan and village
commune of the De'ang ethnic minority are still to be found
in the Zhenkang area.
The production unit of
the De'ang ethnic group is the family, and there is marked
division of labor according to sex and age. The farm tools
used are bought from Han and Dai regions. Generally
speaking, the De'angs practice intensive farming on flatland
and on farms near the Han and Dai regions or in paddy
fields. Dry land is not cultivated
meticulously.
In De'ang villages in the Dehong
area, the cultivated land used to be communally owned. The
wasteland around each village was also communally owned, but
people could freely open up the land for cultivating crops.
If the land was left uncultivated, it automatically reverted
to communal ownership again. In later times, the selling or
mortgaging of paddy fields and gardens led to the emergence
of private ownership. As a result, most of the paddy fields
came into the possession of Han landlords, rich peasants and
Dai headmen.
Without either draught animals or
funds, and burdened down with taxes and debts, the De'angs
could not open up hillside land and gradually became the
tenants or farmhands of the landlords, rich peasants and
headmen. Many cut firewood, burned charcoal and wove in the
off-hours to make ends meet.
In the Zhenkang
Prefecture, which had plenty of dry land and little paddy
land, private ownership of land and usury had been uncommon.
Yet feudal ownership and tenancy show such traces of
communal ownership of land as strict demarcation lines
between the land of different villages and clearly-marked
signs between communally owned land, woods and small
privately owned plots. Communal land in each village was
managed by headmen. And anyone, from other villages who
wanted to rent the communal or private plots, had to get the
permission of village headmen.
Some De'ang
people still retain some traces of the communal system in
the way they live. A clan commune was formed by many small
families with blood relations. Usually thirty to forty
people shared one outsized communal house, but each
individual family had its own fireplace and kept its own
account. Primitive distribution on an equal basis was
practiced in farming. But exploitation had appeared with
some families owning more cows and working
less.
The De'ang people everywhere used to live
under the sway of the feudal lords of the Dai ethnic group.
De'ang headmen in the Dehong region were either appointed by
Dai chieftains or were hereditary. To control and exploit
the De'ang people, Dai chieftains granted official titles to
De'ang headmen and let them run the villages, impose levies,
and collect tributes. Some De'ang people who lived in or
near areas under the Jingpo's jurisdiction had to pay
"head taxes." This constituted another burden for
the De'angs who were bled white by heavy taxes and rents
collected by Dai chiefs or the Kuomintang
government.
Landlords and rich peasants of the
De'ang ethnic group made up only two per cent of the
population. Many of them were appointed headmen of Dai
chiefs. Being tenants or farmhands of either Han landlords
and rich peasants or Dai headmen, most De'angs lived in dire
poverty.
Post-1949 Development
A new day dawned for the De'ang people when
Yunnan Province was liberated in 1951. The first thing the
De'angs did was to restore social order and develop farm
production after helping the government round up remnant KMT
troops who had turned bandits. In 1955 land was distributed
to the De'ang people who made up half of the population on
the flatland and in the semi-hilly areas of Zhenkang,
Gengma, Baoshan and Dehong in an agrarian reform in which
both the De'ang and Dai people participated. Not long
afterwards, the De'angs set up agricultural cooperatives. At
the same time, the rest of the De'ang people living in the
mountainous areas of Dehong, like the Jingpos dwelling
there, formed mutual aid groups to till the land, carried
out democratic reforms and gradually embarked on the
socialist road.
The De'ang people, who lived in
compact communities in Santaishan in Luxi County and Junnong
in Zhenkang County, established two ethnic township
governments. In July 1953, the Dehong Dai-Jingpo Autonomous
Prefecture was established, and the De'angs had 12
representatives in the government. Many functionaries of the
De'ang people are now serving in government offices at
various levels. Some De'angs in Yunnan Province have been
elected deputies to local people's congresses and the
National People's Congress.
The economy in the
De'ang areas has been developing apace. Take Santaishan in
Luxi County for example. People here started farmland
construction on a big scale with their Han and Jingpo
neighbors in the wake of agricultural cooperation. Today,
the land here is studded with reservoirs and crisscrossed by
canals, and hill slopes have been transformed into terraced
plots. Tea and fruit are grown, and large numbers of goats,
cows and hogs are raised. The cropped area has increased
enormously, and grain production is four times the 1951
level.
As the people of this minority group
could scarcely make enough to keep body and soul together,
no De'angs went to school in pre-liberation days. Those who
could read some Dai words in those days were a few Buddhist
monks. Pestilence and diseases due to poor living conditions
were rampant, and there were no doctors. People had but to
ask "gods" to cure them when falling
sick.
Today De'ang children can attend primary
schools established in villages where the De'angs live.
Priority is given to enrolling De'ang children in other
local schools. Large numbers of illiterate adults have
learned to read and write, and the De'ang people now have
even their own college students, teachers and
doctors.
Smallpox which had a very high
incidence in localities peopled by the De'ang people has
been eradicated with the assistance of medical teams
dispatched by the government. Malaria, diarrhea and other
tropical diseases have been put under
control.
Life Style
Like most people in the sub-tropical regions,
the De'angs live in houses made of bamboo. While some dwell
in large communal houses, those in the Dehong area have a
two-story house to every family. The upper floor serves as
living quarters, kitchen and storeroom, and beneath it is a
stable for animals and poultry. There are also outhouses in
which are stored firewood and foot-pedaled mortars used in
husking rice.
People dress in traditional
costumes studded with silver ornaments. Men wear turbans.
Boys look handsome with their silver necklaces. Most women
wear dark dresses lined with extra large silver buttons at
the front, and skirts with red and black flower patterns.
Rattan waistbands and silver earrings add grace and harm.
Nowadays, De'ang boys have the same hairstyle as the Hans
and do not like to burden their bodies with heavy ornaments.
Men have the custom of tattooing their bodies with designs
of tiger, deer, bird and flower.
Monogamy is
practiced. People of the same clan do not marry with one
another. Intermarriage is rare with people of other ethnic
groups.
Young people have the freedom to choose
their own partners, and courtship lasts for a long time.
When a girl hears a love song under her window, she either
ignores it or responds. If she likes the boysinger, she
tosses a small blanket down to him. Then she opens the door
and lets him in. The boy covers his face with the blanket,
enters her room, and meets the girl by the side of the fire.
The parents are happy and do not interfere.
The
lovers often meet and chat until midnight or dawn. After a
few dates, the boy gives her a necklace or waistband as a
token of his love. The more waistbands a girl gets, the more
honored she is. To show his devotion, the boy wears
earrings. The number she gives him is a mark of her
love.
If the courtship goes well, the boy would
offer gifts to the girl's family and send people to propose
marriage. Even if the girl's parents disagree, the girl can
decide for herself and go to live in the boy's
house.
A De'ang wedding party is gay and
interesting. Each guest is sent two packages, one containing
tea and the other cigarettes. This is an invitation. They
bring gifts and firecrackers to the bride and
groom.
The new couple first enter the kitchen
and put some money in a wooden rice tub. This means they
have been nurtured by the cereal, and now show their
gratitude. Water-drum dancing is an important part of the
wedding ceremony. The drums are made of hollowed trunks into
which water is poured to wet the skin and center to
determine its tone. Water-drum dancing has a legend behind
it. In ancient times a young De'ang man's beautiful fiancee
was snatched away by a crab monster. He fought the crab,
vanquished it, ate it, and made a drum of its shell. At
today's wedding ceremonies, water-drum dancing symbolizes
true love.
The De'angs bury their dead in
public cemeteries but those who die of long illness or
difficult labor are cremated.
The De'angs are
Hinayana Buddhists. Most villages have a temple. The monks
live on the offerings of their followers. Their daily needs
are provided by the villagers in turn. Formerly the De'angs
did not raise pigs or chickens. A rooster was kept in each
village to herald the break of day. Today this old custom
has died, and chickens are raised. People do not work during
religious holidays or sacrificial days. Being Buddhists, the
De'angs in some localities do not kill living creatures.
This has its minus side -- wild boars that come to devour
their crops are left unmolested. This at times results in
quite serious crop losses