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Three-year-old Yehenala Yiyi is pictured with his Manchu grandfather, Ye Longpei, in Beijing.

China’s ethnic Manchus rediscovering their roots




By Barbara Demick


 
Nobody would suspect that this impish toddler is of noble lineage. Yiyi has the same buzz cut as other 3-year-old Chinese boys, the familiar habit of scattering his fleet of toy cars across the living room rug.
But his family name gives him away: Yehenala, a famous Manchurian clan that once ruled China.
When Yiyi was born, his father and grandfather made the unusual decision to give him the old Manchu name. Generations earlier, the family had shortened the name to Ye to disguise the fact that they were aristocrats in the communist country.
“We are proud of our royal blood,” said the boy’s father, Ye Jia, a 40-year-old state company employee who says he would change his name too if the bureaucracy wasn’t so complicated.
The name is a mouthful in a country where almost all family names are written by a single character and pronounced with a single syllable. Yiyi is the only child with such an exotic name in his Beijing preschool class.
But his father thinks it will serve him well in the long run. “Even his teacher says he’s special,” Ye said.
Descended from a horse-riding nomadic people of northeastern China, the Manchus were the last imperial rulers of the country, establishing the Qing Dynasty, which lasted from 1644 until 1912. After the abdication of the last emperor, Pu Yi, his clan changed its name to Jin. The Yehenalas, related to Cixi, the empress dowager who was de facto ruler in the late 19th century, became Ye or Na.
A century later, ethnic Manchus are rediscovering their roots.
A few universities have revived the study of the nearly extinct Manchu language, which is more like Mongolian than Chinese. There are culture seminars to study the dance, food and music of Manchuria, even Internet forums. Many people have also begun using their Manchu family names, even if few are legally registered like little Yehenala Yiyi.
Although aristocracy is no longer a dirty word in China (daytime television is full of historical dramas about imperial times and luxury goods are advertised as fit for royalty), China’s imperial kin continue to live modestly, not flaunting their lineage like European nobility.
The Ye family has faded black-and-white photographs of Cixi and other illustrious relatives in their brocaded costumes of old, but they are kept tucked away in a folder.
During the Cultural Revolution, Mao Zedong’s decade-long purge of the elites, the stigma attached to being a member of the old aristocracy was so great that many imperial descendants were unaware of their own lineage. Ye Longpei, Yiyi’s 70-year-old grandfather, didn’t find out until he was an adult that his own grandfather had been the youngest brother of the empress Cixi.
His father, who was then close to dying, confided the family secret in 1975, in the waning days of the Cultural Revolution, during a walk to the Summer Palace, Cixi’s retreat in northwest Beijing.
“That’s how shameful it was to be part of the royal family. This is something that nobody would brag about,” said Ye, a retired schoolteacher who lives with his son’s family in a comfortable but nondescript two-bedroom walk-up apartment south of downtown Beijing.
Chinese history deals harshly with the Qing Dynasty. Pu Yi is still despised as a collaborator for having headed the puppet state of Manchuko, which was established by Japanese occupiers during the 1930s. Some memoirs about Cixi describe an insatiable sexual appetite and cruelty, although her relatives say the stories are fabricated.
“Cixi became the scapegoat for everything that was wrong with old China,” said Na Genzheng, a 61-year-old descendant of one of the empress’s brothers. One of the more outspoken family representatives, he keeps a photograph of Cixi flanked by tall vases, shrinelike, in a niche in his living room. He specialises in Manchu script, producing loopy calligraphy that looks a little like Arabic written vertically.
“People don’t appreciate her contribution and the family’s to Chinese culture,” he said.
Not all Manchus can trace their lineage to emperors, but many have ties to the former imperial bureaucracy. (In fact, a large number of descendants found jobs in the civil service or in state-owned companies, many joining the Communist Party.) In far western China, near the Kazakhstan border, descendants of a garrison of Qing soldiers still speak a dialect of Manchu, among the few native speakers left in China.
Manchus today live throughout China, indistinguishable from the Han majority except for a few physical traits. They tend to be larger, with more prominent noses and curlier hair.
“We wear the same clothes. I don’t feel we are so different from other Chinese people,” said Na Na, a 20-year-old Manchu student who has been working with her father, a calligrapher, to revive Manchu culture.
The number of people in China who identify themselves as Manchu (a classification that exists on Chinese identification cards) has increased from just over 4mn in the early 1980s to more than 10mn. Because the increase is greater than the birthrate, it suggests that many people have changed their classification back from Han.
Unlike some other Chinese minorities, Manchus are not exempt from China’s limits on family size, although they do get preferential treatment on college entrance exams as part of an affirmative action programme for minorities.
But the primary benefits of being Manchu appear to be psychological, a way to distinguish oneself in a country of 1.3bn.
“Right now, China is stable, politically and financially. People have the leisure to trace back their family history,” said Ye Ming, 29, who runs an Internet forum called Fortunate Manchu Ethnicity, with 17,000 members.
Ma Baohe, 20, of Hebei province says he became interested in his Manchu heritage when he started college and met other minorities. “People would say to me: ‘Oh, you’re Manchu. What’s your language?’
“I had no answer, so I figured I had to learn.”
The Manchu language is multisyllabic and lyrical; some linguists believe it to be part of the Altaic language group, which includes Mongolian, Korean and Turkish. It can be downright confusing to Chinese speakers: For example, the word for “father” — “ama” — sounds like “mother” in Chinese.
Courses in the Manchu language are now offered at Ethnic Minorities University in Beijing and at other schools around China. Because the Manchus have no separatist aspirations, they are considered a model minority by the Communist Party, and the government has encouraged some elementary schools in northeastern China, the heartland of old Manchuria, to offer the language so it doesn’t die out.
Nowadays, fewer than 100 people are believed to be native speakers of Manchu, the largest cluster of them in a single isolated village, Sanjiazi, in northeastern China.
“Only the old people can really speak the language,” said Shi Junguang, a part-time Manchu-language teacher who learned from his grandmother and has about 70 students.
So few people can read Manchu that many Qing Dynasty documents have gone untranslated, scholars say.
Despite their enthusiasm for Manchu culture, little Yiyi’s family has not gone so far as to study the language. — Los Angeles Times/MCT

*** (Nicole Liu of the Los Angeles Times’ Beijing bureau contributed to this report.)


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