Yahoo – AFP,
Tom Hancock, 5 April 2015
A man prays
at a graveside on the eve of the annual Qingming festival, or
\Tomb Sweeping
Day, at a cemetary in Dagantangcun, 30km east of Beijing
(AFP Photo/Fred
Dufour)
|
Mijiawu
(China) (AFP) - Gleaming gold watches and smartphones are piled high in a
ramshackle Chinese farmhouse –- all replicas made of paper and designed to be
incinerated, as 21st-century consumerism transforms the age-old market in
offerings to ancestors.
"Our
work is serving the dead," said Pu Shuzhen, as female workers with glue
guns folded paper into imitations of Louis Vuitton handbags and iPhones in her
dirt-floored house turned workshop.
China
celebrates "Tomb Sweeping Festival" on Sunday, when millions burn
paper offerings to their ancestors in a tradition believed to date back
thousands of years.
A man burns
fake money on a grave for
the Qingming festival in Baoding,
Hebei province, on
April 1, 2015
(AFP Photo/Fred Dufour)
|
"Before
we were growing corn and potatoes. It was tough," Pu said. "The money
from this is better than farming."
Mahjong
tables, jewel boxes and cigarettes sell well, she said. Other items include
imitation house ownership certificates and more practical goods such as
toothpaste, toothbrushes and shoes.
"They
are just the same as living people use," she said. "It was like that
in ancient times too. It's a tradition handed down from our ancestors."
Offerings
to the dead have been found at some of China's oldest grave sites.
"The
products express an emotion: we are living well, and we hope our ancestors can
live just as well in their world," said factory owner Zhang Guilai, as a
vast press roared in the background pressing out paper houses.
Grave
issues
Beijing
declared tomb sweeping festival -- just one of many traditional dates for
honouring ancestors -- a national holiday in 2007.
The move
was a marked contrast to Mao Zedong's rule when the officially atheist
Communist party condemned tomb offerings as feudal, graves were desecrated and
traditions driven underground.
"During
Mao Zedong's time it was all about opposing superstition... and we would have
to give offerings in secret," said Pu's husband, Zhao Yansheng. "But
now it's a national holiday... and we can celebrate openly."
Even so,
official attitudes are still sometimes ambivalent.
China's
civil affairs ministry this year vowed on its website to step up controls on
"burning paper money, offerings and other uncivilised tomb sweeping
behaviour", while also "preventing the use of vulgar and
superstitious grave offerings".
Women shop
for items at a market selling paper goods for the Qingming
festival in Baoding,
Hebei province, on April 1, 2015 (AFP Photo/Fred Dufour)
|
State media
have also blamed burnt offerings for adding to chronic air pollution.
The
ministry did not define what it considered "vulgar" and did not
respond to a request for comment from AFP.
But at an
open air market on a mud-soaked road in Mijiawu, vendors displayed paper
Ferraris and female mistresses.
Officials in
the northern city of Changchun -- which hands out fines for burning offerings
in public places -- last month confiscated seven vehicle-loads of "feudal
and superstitious objects", including paper cattle and horses, reports
said.
"It's
clear to see that people are adding commercial elements -- such as paper
houses, sports cars and mistresses -- into these traditions, and some people
would consider that vulgar," Yang Genlai, an academic affiliated with the
civil affairs ministry told AFP.
He added:
"Personally I think any kind of object which can express respect towards ancestors
can be reasonable. Burning iPhones is a reflection of how things are
today."
Cashing
in
Authorities
have other reasons to be suspicious of paper offerings.
At the
Mijiawu market, seller Meng Weikai said: "Everything that living people
have, there are paper replicas to be burned.
"In
the past, you just burned some plain white paper. Now we burn notes which look
more and more like real money, we even have US dollars."
A girl
prays at a grave on the eve of
the annual Qingming festival, or
Tomb Sweeping
Day, at a cemetary
in Dagantangcun, 30km east of
Beijing (AFP Photo/Fred
Dufour)
|
Workers at
one small imitation money workshop ushered AFP reporters away as fresh red
notes lay drying on rusty metal printing presses.
"It is
hard for ordinary people to tell the 'spirit money' apart from real money... this
money has seriously damaged the image of the renminbi," the state-run
Xianyang Daily cited a banking official as saying last year.
At the
Sanyuancun market in Beijing bundles of cash sell for three to five yuan
($0.5-$0.8) apiece. "People want to tell the ancestors that the family
still has descendants," said vendor Liu Li.
"This
is a 50 billion yuan note, this one is 10 million," she added. "The
afterlife has inflation as well, that's why you have to burn big denominations.
I've also got foreign notes here -- the dead need to go abroad too."
Related Article:
No comments:
Post a Comment