 
A colleague of mine still retains fond memories of his trip to the southwest 
of Central China's Hunan Province a few years ago. What he remembers the most, 
however, is not the beautiful natural scenery that the area is best known for.
It was a folk operatic show that he enjoyed the most during the trip. The 
show, usually performed during the celebrations of the Lunar New Year, starts on 
New Year's Day on the lunar calendar and continues through Lantern Festival, the 
15th day of the first lunar month.
What is amazing is that the show, which raises its curtain on a stage in the 
town's fair and tells the story of a boy trying to save his fairy mum from the 
curse of the all-powerful heavenly god, does not confine itself to the open 
stage.
It would somehow integrate itself into the daily life of the townsfolk, as 
performers join the festival parade, or add musical and drum clamours to a 
family's wedding, or participate in another family's memorial for ancestors. 
Outsiders have little inkling of when the show ends and real life starts.
Enchanting as the show is, it may be dying. My colleague found that very few 
local youths were interested in learning the opera, even though it is one of the 
local's the country's as well best intangible cultural heritage. In their 
advanced years, the performers were worried about not being able to pass it down 
to the next generation.
They are not alone, as many other folk artists share the same agony across 
the country. Over the past century, China has undergone tremendous political, 
economic and social changes. After the founding of New China, folk artists and 
researchers launched two rounds of efforts in the 1950s and 1980s to collect and 
preserve folk arts in the forms of music, paintings, papercuts, operas and many 
others.
Precious pieces were archived, documented or recorded, as visitors to the 
on-going exhibition of intangible cultural heritage at the China National Museum 
on Tian'anmen Square are able to find out, sample and enjoy.
However, both rounds of cultural preservation campaign were discontinued. 
While political movements were blamed for the stoppage of the first exertion, 
more complex reasons, from a lack of financial support to the drive for the 
market economy, were cited as causes hampering the second attempt. In between, 
veteran artists have died, with the valuable expertise buried with them.
The current exhibition of intangible cultural heritage seems to make public a 
loud and clear declaration that the country is in the midst of the third round 
of the cultural conservation campaign.
The campaign, which began last July, is to put in the country's cultural 
protection inventory its multi-ethnic and rich artistic, ritualistic, linguistic 
and intellectual legacy.
The work, which is projected to continue for three years, has already 
involved tremendous efforts from researchers and folk artists themselves, as 
they trek into the remote and mostly poverty-stricken areas and look for the 
best folk artists living as recluses.
While researchers are putting in words, archives, on CDs or DVDs the salient 
works and performances of the folk artists, the authorities and the public must 
work together to think of ways to continue the cultural traditions and 
expertise.
Intangible cultural heritage is best preserved neither in museums nor on CDs 
or DVDS nor with the designation of a cultural heritage day, but in its 
continuation as part of the cultural lives of the people, for posterity.
Thus, much more serious thinking and good policies should be in place to 
encourage the young to learn from the old arts masters and to enable the 
veterans to pass their knowledge to the young.
Email: lixing@chinadaily.com.cn 
(China Daily 02/16/2006 page4)