| The Dai ethnic people live in
compact communities in the southwest frontier of China in Yunnan Province.
The beauty of the subtropical natural scene is enhanced by exquisite
bamboo houses, charming Dai women in their colorful clothes, and other
sights with strong Dai characteristics.
The Dai Bamboo
Houses
Bamboo houses are the traditional dwellings of the Dai people. They are
said to have a history of more than 1,000 years. The most typical Dai
bamboo houses are found in Xishuangbanna, where every household has such a
building in an independent courtyard. Planted around the house are all
kinds of subtropical fruits such as papaya, grapefruit, banana and
pineapple.
 The Dai Bamboo
House | The Dai bamboo house is square in
shape and has two stories. The upper story, supported by twenty wooden
poles, is more than two meters above the ground, which is the living
quarter. The lower story, not enclosed by walls, is for raising domestic
animals and storing odds and ends. The building has an oblique roof,
shaped as an upside down V, covered with grass or tiles. The upper story
of the house is divided into two parts: the inner part is bedrooms and the
outer part is the living room. Outside the upper story are a corridor and
a balcony.
At the center of the living room is a large bamboo matting, on which
people eat, rest, or receive guests. Dai people's homes are very clean, so
people have to take off the their shoes when they enter the room. There is
also a stove in the living room, which is kept burning all year through.
On the stove stands an iron rack, which is used for cooking and boiling
water. The local people like to have a talk sitting around the stove.
The bedroom is separated from the living room by walls made of thin
bamboo strips. Outsiders are not allowed to enter the bedroom. Almost all
the furniture in the house are made of bamboo, such as tables, chairs,
beds cases and so on. The bamboo house is sturdy and dry inside the room
due to good ventilation--wind can blow in the room through the slots of
bamboo strips. Therefore, it is cool inside the room even in hot summer
days.
Clothes and Ornaments of the Dai
People
 Dai
Girl | The traditional Dai clothes are
mostly made of home-spun cloth by Dai women. The cloth has beautiful
patterns. Men's wear is similar to that of the Han people. There upper
clothes are a short shirt with buttons down the front, no collar, or
shirts with short sleeves and buttons on the right. The trousers are long
and wide. The Dai men like to wrap their heads with white or blue cloth.
The Dai women's clothes have a variety of styles. In the Xishuangbanna
area, women often wear white, sky-blue or pink tight underwear with
Jewel-collared short skirt outside, with buttons on the front or on the
right. The shirt has long and slim sleeves which wrap on the arms tightly.
It is thin and narrow at the waist, exposing part of skin at the lower
back. The lower clothes are usually a tight skirt, which is long and can
even reaches the feet. This kind of clothes well reveal the beautiful
figure of the Dai women.
Many Dai women wear a silk girdle around their waists. It is said to be
very precious, because it is passed down by mothers from generation to
generation. The girdle is actually a love token. If a girl gives the
silver girdle to a young man, it means she has fallen in love with him.
The Dai women are particular about their hair style. They wind their
long hair into a bun on the top of the head, and fix it with only a
beautiful crescent-moon-shaped comb.
The Dai Food
The staple food of the Dai people is rice. People in Xishuangbanna and
some other areas also like to eat polished glutinous rice wrapped in
banana leaves. Rice cooked in bamboo tubes is also favoured by the Dai
people. The Dai people are especially fond of sour-taste food, such as
sauerkraut and sour bamboo root shreds. To make sauerkraut, people first
boil the vegetable then dry it in the sun, after that they add some sour
papaya sauce in the vegetable and dry it again. Besides, barbecued fish,
shrimp, and crab are also popular with the Dai people. "Duosheng' is a
traditional dish, which is made by mixing minced raw meat with condiments
like salt and hot pepper. The Dai people are especially fond of wine, and
they usually make wine out of polished glutinous rice. Like the Dong and
Wa people, the Dai also like to chew areca-nut. |