The story appears on

Page A6

August 23, 2017

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Nation

Night of the dancing men keeps tradition alive and women keen

AS night falls on a square in the village of Matai’an, young women cast a critical eye over a dancing circle of men in embroidered skirts and feathered head dresses as part of an ancient match-making ritual.

Known as “Lovers’ Night,” it is the grand finale of the annual harvest festival in the settlement which belongs to the Amis tribe, the largest of the 16 recognized indigenous groups in Taiwan.

Near the island’s rugged east coast, the village — also known as Fata’an, the name of a local plant in the Amis language — is a collection of basic, low-lying houses along meandering streets, located in a valley between two mountain ranges.

The harvest festival — which usually runs between June and August, with each village holding it at a different time — is the biggest and most important celebration for the Amis tribe, and in Matai’an it culminates with single women taking their pick of eligible bachelors.

The centuries-old custom is a reflection of the tribe’s matriarchal system, which sees women making the key decisions, including managing finances and men marrying into their wives’ families.

As the singing and dancing men pick up the pace, the women move in behind their chosen love interest and tug on a multicolored cloth bag slung on their target’s shoulder.

To spark interest, the men wiggle and flex their muscles, the most popular among them accruing a queue of interested women.

If a man reciprocates the approach, he will give his bag — known as an alufu — to the woman, marking the beginning of a courtship.

In the past, the ritual would lead to marriage and even now still sparks relationships, but it is also a chance for Amis community members who work in cities to return and socialize.

“Lovers’ Night is to make friends,” said Cheng Ying-hsuan, 22.

Dressed in a red traditional outfit adorned with green beads and her own sequined alufu, she returned to the village from Hualien, where she now lives, an hour’s drive away.

Asked if she hoped to find a boyfriend, she said: “That’s also a possibility.”

Matai’an is one of the biggest Amis settlements and is home to around 500 people — mostly children and the elderly.

“We like the feeling of everyone coming back together and reconnecting. For us this is the most important,” said Liao Ching-tung, 28, who lives in Taipei.

Each harvest festival, hundreds who have moved away to work or study return to join in the festivities.

The indigenous community has seen its traditional culture eroded since immigrants started arriving from China’s mainland centuries ago, but in Matai’an, tradition is alive and kicking.

Lamen Panay, 41, says the matchmaking event is still meaningful to her even though she is no longer single.

She has a collection of lovers’ bags from past harvest festivals, but has since settled down with her long-term boyfriend, living with him in Taipei.

The couple are both from the village and Lamen still makes a point of picking him out during the matchmaking ritual.

“We are both usually very busy with work,” she said. “It’s necessary to rekindle the flames.”




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend