Sui people
The Sui people, also spelled as Shui people, are an ethnic group living mostly in Guizhou Province, China. They are counted as one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognized by the People's Republic of China.
History and demographics
The Sui are descended from the ancient Baiyue peoples, who had inhabited southern China before the Han dynasty. The name "Sui," which means "water" in Chinese, was adopted during the Ming Dynasty.Today, 93% of all Sui people reside in Guizhou, China, with about half of them living in Sandu Shui Autonomous County. To the south, 10,000 Sui live around Yingdong village in Rongshui County, Guangxi. Small pockets of Sui people also live in Fuyang and Yiliang Counties, Yunnan. Additionally, there are 120 Sui living in Hồng Quang District, Tuyên Quang Province, northern Vietnam who are the descendants of Sui people who had left Sandu County 8 generations ago.
Language
The Sui speak a Kra–Dai language, part of the Kam–Sui languages.Society
The Sui are organized around family clans. Villages usually have a few hundred inhabitants, most of whom have the same family name.Traditional Sui houses are usually made of fir or pine, although today the houses are increasingly made with bricks. There are three main types of traditional Sui housing :
- ɣaan2 faaŋ1 - The ganlan stilted house, which has two or three stories. The second floor is used for the living quarters whereas the first floor is used primarily as a stable and storage area.
- ɣaan2 hum5 - The ground house, which has one story.
- The split level house - a "hanging foot" building called diaojiaolou in Chinese. These houses are built on hillsides, with longer pillars supporting the downhill-facing side of the house, and are called "hanging house" since the pillars supporting the house are sometimes located outside the walls.
Cuisine
The staple food of the Sui people is glutinous rice. Supplementary grains and tubers include corn, wheat, barley, millet, and sweet potatoes. Rice is either steamed in a bamboo steamer or cooked in a covered pot over a low fire. Popular rice-based dishes include ʔjut7 and cooked glutinous rice with chrysanthemum and puffed rice. Sui women also give glutinous rice to relatives when visiting them.Fish is one of the most important sources of food. Like the Dong people, many Sui raise carp in village fishponds. A popular dish consumed during the summer is a kind of sour broth called lu5 hum3. Sui families also regularly hold communal hot pots. Kippered fish, kippered meat, and the meat of suckling pigs are also popular. Rice spirits are popular among the Sui, and are also consumed during marriages, funerals, festivals, and building raising events. The Sui are also famed for their jiuqian wine.
Festivals
Festivals include :- tsjə1 twə3 - This harvest festival is similar to the Chinese New Year. It is held from around September to November. Livestock meat is not eaten during the Sui New Year's Eve. On New Year's Day, antiphonal choirs, horse racing, and other festivities are held. Since Sui in different areas celebrate Duan at different times, this festival actually lasts for more than two months when festivities from various locations are combined together. A total of five different Duan's are celebrated in the following locations.
- Wangsi in Duyun City
- Malian, Layou, Miaocao, Shuidong in Sandu County
- Tingpai, Hengfeng, Heyong, Tianxing in Sandu, Libo, Dushan Counties
- Zhonghe, Dixiang, Jiuqian in Sandu County
- Sandong, Shuinian, Xingxiang in Sandu County.
- tsjə1 mau4 - This four-day festival is celebrated by those who do not celebrate the Duan festival. It occurs after the transplanting of rice seedlings on the tenth month of the Sui calendar. Mao Day is celebrated in the Libo County villages of Shuili, Yaoqing, Shuirao, Shuipu, and Yongkang. Antiphonal-style choirs sing traditional Sui love songs during this festival. However, by tradition married women are not allowed to perform in the choirs.
- tsjə1 tseŋ1 - This festival is especially elaborate in the Sandu County locales of Bannan, Shuimei, Yanggong, Zhouqin, and Yang'an. These villages, however, do not celebrate either the Duan or Mao festivals.
- su3 njen2 hi5
- tsjə1 ʔau4 hmai5
- Liuyueliu
- si3 ming2 festival
- Duanwu
- sup8 hi5
Religion
The Sui are mainly polytheists and practice ancestor worship as well. Shamans were traditionally hired to carry out prayers and sacrifices in the houses of those that were sick or close to death. The Sui religion has more than 900 ghosts and gods that can cause both good fortune or misfortune. Some deities and legendary figures are also borrowed from Chinese folk religion.The Sui people have a wide array of taboos and superstitions, such as :
- During the first thunderclap of the start of the spring season, the ground cannot be plowed for three days. Breaking this taboo would anger the thunder god, resulting in abnormal rain patterns.
- Oaths should not be said when seeds are being sown lest there is crop damage.
- The lusheng should not be played after the seeds are sowed during the beginning of spring, or else the seeds might be blown away later.
- On the first morning of the Duan festival as well as the preceding evening, meats of land animals cannot be eaten. Violating this taboo is seen as disrespect towards ancestors and will result in fewer descendants.
- Dogs should not be killed during festival days.
- On the first day of the Spring Festival, houses should not be cleaned, food should not be cooked, and hair may not be cut. Instead, New Year's Eve leftovers are eaten.
- During a wedding procession, bad luck may result for a couple if the procession chances upon a coffin, bird crossing the road, thunder, or a pregnant woman.
- Remarried widows cannot return to their former husbands' villages, and cannot visit their parents' homes for an entire year, or else her parents' village will not prosper.
- Pregnant women cannot bear children in their parents' villages, or else her parents' family and livestock will be harmed.
- After just having a child, if a woman visits another person's village or house, that person will fall ill.
- Members of a clan cannot eat meats of land animals after one of their elders has died. The deceased elder's clothing and personal items cannot fall to the ground, and he must have an odd number of belongings.
- People born on the same day as a recently deceased person should not visit him, or else the dead may take their souls into the grave.
- Names should not be called out when people are being buried, or the dead may take their soul.
- After the death of a male, sows or cows cannot be killed. After the death of a female, horses or bulls cannot be killed.
- Pregnant women and babies should not be buried in areas which receive much sunshine.
- Solar and lunar eclipses, as well as calls of birds, are not liked by the Sui people.
Population
Provincial level
;Distribution by provinceRegion | Sui | Percentage |
Guizhou Province | 369,723 | 90.86% |
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Province | 15,476 | 3.80% |
Yunnan Province | 12,533 | 3.08% |
Jiangsu Province | 2,775 | 0.68% |
Guangdong Province | 1,948 | 0.48% |
Zhejiang Province | 1,421 | 0.38% |
Elsewhere | 3,026 | 0.74% |
By county
;County-level distribution of the SuiProvince | Prefecture | County | Sui Population | % of China's Sui Population |
Guizhou | Qiannan Buyei and Miao Autonomous Prefecture | Sandu Shui Autonomous County | 189.128 | 46,48 % |
Guizhou | Qiannan Buyei and Miao Autonomous Prefecture | Libo | 35.407 | 8,70 % |
Guizhou | Qiannan Buyei and Miao Autonomous Prefecture | Rongjiang | 33.678 | 8,28 % |
Guizhou | Qiannan Buyei and Miao Autonomous Prefecture | Duyun | 32.702 | 8,04 % |
Guizhou | Qiannan Buyei and Miao Autonomous Prefecture | Dushan | 26.299 | 6,46 % |
Yunnan | Qujing | Fuyuan | 10.567 | 2,6 % |
Guizhou | Qiannan Buyei and Miao Autonomous Prefecture | Danzhai | 10.501 | 2,58 % |
Guizhou | Qiannan Buyei and Miao Autonomous Prefecture | Leishan | 5.227 | 1,28 % |
Guizhou | Liupanshui | Pan | 5.164 | 1,27 % |
Guizhou | Qiannan Buyei and Miao Autonomous Prefecture | Liping | 4.710 | 1,16 % |
Guizhou | Liupanshui | Shuicheng | 3.875 | 0,95 % |
Guizhou | Qiannan Buyei and Miao Autonomous Prefecture | Congjiang | 3.300 | 0,81 % |
Guizhou | Qiannan Buyei and Miao Autonomous Prefecture | Jianhe | 3.293 | 0,81 % |
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region | Liuzhou | Rongshui Miao Autonomous County | 3.183 | 0,78 % |
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region | Hechi | Nandan | 3.083 | 0,76 % |
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region | Hechi | Yizhou | 2.160 | 0,53 % |
Guizhou | Bijie | Qianxi | 2.102 | 0,52 % |
Others | 32.523 | 7,99 % |
Literature
Sui oral literature is rich in myths, songs, and folk tales. The list below is from Wei.- Ancient myths and songs
- *The creation of heaven and earth
- *The origin of humanity
- *The song of creating humans - involving a fight among humans, dragons and tigers
- *The origin of new life - A brother and sister plant a pumpkin from which new life sprouts.
- Legends about individuals
- *The song of Pan Xinjian, a rich magnate
- *The story of Jingui
- *A man named Niu
- *A poor teacher
- *A stone horse who shot out the sun
- Legends about customs
- *Origin of the Duan festival - A brother marries his younger sister, giving rise to the Duan festival.
- *Origin of the Mao festival
- *The planting of the fir upside down
- Legends about scenery
- *Legends on the origins of the Duliujiang River
- *The legend of dinosaurs and the Yueliang Mountain
- Folk tales
- *The origin of bronze drums
- *The grape girl
- *Why the tiger hates the buffalo and tiger
- *The eye and the foot
- Life-related songs
- *The song of creating cotton
- *The song of creating grain
- *The song of making wine
- *The song of planting trees
- *The song of suffering
- Custom-related songs
- *The song of the Duan festival
- *The song of mourning
- Love songs
- *The girl lovely as brocade
- *It is hard to miss you
- *Sister will go with the brother together
- Sayings and singing
- *The crane and the crow
- *The sparrow and the thrush