Protecting the intangible takes a special touch
"It must be integrated into current life. One of the biggest problems is a lack of professional tourism planners in activating authentic intangible heritage tourism. In addition, the scale of such heritage projects is relatively small, and with low economic return we have yet to witness the scale effect."
Accurately positioning the development of intangible heritage and tourism for rural revitalization has been a major theme of the heritage week.
One event during the week, an exhibition titled "Intangible Cultural Heritage Helping Precision Poverty Alleviation", guided by the Intangible Heritage Department of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, showcased intangible cultural heritage poverty alleviation employment workshops across the country. Sixty workshops were selected from 16 counties and cities in Qiandongnan prefecture, covering activities such as Miao embroidery, Dong embroidery, Miao silver ornaments, Miao batik, bamboo weaving, rattan weaving, inkstone, ethnic medicine, tea and specialty snacks.
More than 30 traditional craft intangible cultural and creative projects, and nearly 20,000 intangible cultural and creative products have been displayed and sold at the event site.
Lin Jifu, a professor at Minzu University of China in Beijing, said rural revitalization is a "comprehensive revitalization" centered on the wholeness and relevance of rural people's lives. As an excellent rural traditional culture, intangible cultural heritage has become an important part of this revitalization. It is necessary to realize the mutual integration of rural revitalization and the construction of cultural and ecological protection areas.