A grand ritual, the largest since 1949, was held in China's Shaanxi Province yesterday to commemorate the
Yellow Emperor, believed by many to be the ancestor of modern
Chinese people.
The ritual started at 9:50 AM Thursday. About 10,000 Chinese
people from home and abroad gathered and paid respect to their
ancestor to mark the Qingming Festival at the Palace of Offering
Sacrifices in Xuanyuan Temple of Emperor Huang's Mausoleum in
Huangling County in northwest China's Shaanxi Province, where
legend has it that the Yellow Emperor is buried.
The festival is a time when the Chinese people around the world
honor their deceased ancestors and beloved.
The Yellow Emperor, known as Huang Di, who lived more than 4,000
years ago, is believed to be a great sovereign and hero during his
reign from 2698 BC to 2599 BC, as well as an ancestor of the Han
people. He is also said to be the inventor of the principles of
traditional Chinese medicine.
Spotted in the crowd were Li Tieying and Jiang Zhenghua, both vice-chairmen of the
Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, China's top
legislature.
The Vice Chairman of Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference Zhang Siqing and province's Party secretary, Zhao Leji,
and governor Yuan Chunqing were also on hand. Along with
representatives from the state, provincial, municipal departments
and more than 2,300 compatriots from Hong Kong, Macao, Taiwan and
foreign countries, all of those present bowed to the statue of the
Yellow Emperor.
A big drum was struck 34 times to represent the provinces,
municipalities, autonomous regions, and special administrative
regions. A large bell was then rung 9 times to represent the
highest respect in Chinese traditional culture.
More than 1,000 performers staged a grandiose 4-part music and
dance performance.
According to the legend, the Yellow Emperor won a decisive
battle against the eastern Yan Di, or Yan Emperor. The latter was
actually the star of a ritual that 10,000 people attended in his
alleged burial place in Yanling County, Zhuzhou, in central China's
Hunan Province yesterday.
Those were not the only ones to commemorate Yellow Emperor and
Yan Emperor. A project of Yan Huang Plaza will be completed on April 18,
while a big ritual is scheduled for the next day. The huge
106-meter-high statues of the two faces, similar to the United
States' Mount Rushmore, were built in Zhengzhou City of Henan Province.
(China.org.cn by Zhang Rui April 6, 2007)