An elementary school student
practices tai chi during a break in 2015 in Wenxian county, Henan province,
where tai chi classes have been offered since 2001. XU HONGXING/CHINA
DAILY
For residents of Chenjiagou village,
the birthplace of tai chi, a more than 10-year wait to see the martial art
recognized globally as intangible Chinese heritage could soon be
over.
China has nominated tai chi for inclusion
in the UNESCO List of Intangible Cultural Heritage, with a final decision to
come late this year.
The application, made by Wenxian
county in Henan province, has been in the making since 2006, when the country
drew up its first national intangible heritage list and included tai chi, said
Zheng Aizhen, chairman of the Wenxian committee of the Chinese People's
Political Consultative Conference, the country's top policy advisory
body.
"For the past decade, we have
collected materials, gathered a lot of masters and experts together to discuss
tai chi culture and tried to restore the centuries-old history of tai chi,"
Zheng said. "As a precious traditional Chinese legacy, we all have a
responsibility to protect it."
China attempted to get UNESCO status
for the martial art in 2008, but the application-one of 35 from China that
year-was withdrawn after an evaluation
deemed it "too vague", according to a Wall Street Journal report.
The next year, the rules were changed
to limit nations to only two nominations, which for China were Peking Opera and
acupuncture. Both went onto make the list.
The latest attempt to include tai chi
comes amid speculation that South Korea and Japan could make similar
nominations.
Zhang Liyong, a deputy to the
National People's Congress, the country's top legislature, and president of the
Henan High People's Court, said that the situation is urgent: "Both South Korea
and Japan were trying to get tai chi registered. South Korea has already
registered the Dragon Boat Festival as theirs, so we should be
alarmed."
He was referring to the decision by
UNESCO to grant intangible heritage status to the Gangneung Danoje Festival in
2008, which caused anger among some Chinese, who argued that the event is
derived from the Dragon Boat Festival and accused the United Nations of
endorsing South Korea's appropriation of Chinese culture. UNESCO added the
Chinese festival to the list in 2009.
Chen Xiaowang, a tai chi master, said
claims that tai chi was invented in Korea are based on a fictional character
from a kung fu novel by Hong Kong writer Louis Cha. He said the martial art's
history can be traced to creator Chen Wangting in the mid-17th
century.
"If we fail again in our application,
or if it is registered by South Korea, it will be a great pity," Chen
said.
Zhu Xianghua, 40, the son of tai chi
master Zhu Tiancai, said he feels a growing duty to protect tai chi culture. "It
is not just a traditional activity; it is deeply rooted in many areas of Chinese
culture, such as medicine, aesthetics and mechanics," Zhu said.