Girls sport their ancestors\' hair for Lunar New year in China

Girls sport their ancestors' hair for Lunar New year in China

AFP  |  Longjia (China) 

Girls with large headpieces made from the hair of their ancestors and wearing intricately patterned dresses danced in isolated villages in to celebrate the Lunar New Year.

Against a stunning mountain backdrop, dozens of girls and women of the Long ethnicity performed for the annual flower festival or 'Tiaohuajie', held in province on Thursday.

Onlookers watched - in hand - as the women swirled across a meadow, wearing dresses and jackets embroidered with pink roses and geometric patterns.

But it was the towering black headdresses of the dancers that really stood out - made from wool, string and the hair of their ancestors, and wrapped around animal horns with white fabric.

"It's really special to be at the centre of attention like this. I feel quite proud," said Yang Yunzheng, 16.

"We organise this festival once a year when we wear these headpieces. That doesn't change with modernisation".

The Miao ethnic minority is made up of some nine million people, mostly found in China's southwest. Of those, around 5,000 "Long Horn Miao" live in just a dozen isolated villages in

Their headpieces are passed down through generations and worn on a number of occasions to honour their ancestors and preserve their traditions.

The festival is held on the 10th day of the Lunar New Year.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, February 17 2019. 16:35 IST