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Volume 9, May 2007 |
ISSN 1538-893X |
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Pearl Culture |
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“Looka, looka. You buy, okay?” a Muslim Hui woman wearing a straw hat with an orange scarf approaches me on the beach in Sanya on Hainan province, China. Golden, white and rose colored pearls of dubious quality dangle from her outstretched arms. At least twenty more strands are draped around her neck. They can be purchased for about $3 a strand.
From the humble to the elegant, pearls define Hainan’s culture. “In Chinese we use two characters for pearl,” says Wei Quan Lui, General Manager of Haiyu Pearl Company, Ltd. “The first one is for the pearl. The second one means treasure. Since the first character represents the main meaning, in China we say that pearls are more valuable than treasure.” Assistant manager, Li Ping adds, “One of our legends tells us that the first pearl came from a fairy lady’s tear. Pearls are a warm jewel, unlike diamonds which are cold.” Pearls from Haiyu Pearl Company and other pearl factories are exported to countries around the world including Japan, Korea, Taiwan, the EU and the United States. China’s salt water pearl industry is really a triangle of three provinces: Guangdong, Guanxi, and Hainan. Guangdong is the leader in saltwater pearl production generating about 12 tons of pearls per year with Guanxi a close second producing app. 8-10 tons. Hainan trails behind yielding less than a ton of pearls each year. In fact, many of the pearls sold in Hainan’s pearl shops, probably come from Guangdong or Guanxi Provinces. Yet pearl culture permeates Hainan’s lifestyle much more than in the other two pearl provinces. Maybe it’s the tropical climate and the sapphire South China Sea with its miles of white sand beaches. Or the coconut palms and vibrant hibiscus that line the wide boulevards and give the island a casual, laid back feel. Pearls seem to be a natural extension of Hainan’s character. Also, what Hainan lacks in quantity, it is seeking to make up for in quality. With an annual average air temperature of 28º C (82.4º F) and water temperature averaging 25ºC (77º F), Hainan has become a prime research area for tropical marine lives, including salt water pearl oysters.
In 2003 Professor Wang and his students began working on a project to cross oysters from different geographical locations. They crossed akoyas from India and from Hainan to try and produce a superior oyster. The Indian cultured population is fast growing with a pink nacre while the Sanya wild population grows more slowly with a yellow nacre. The first generation hybrid showed a nearly 50% increase in size and weight and with proper matching of the mantis and receptive oyster showed a promising increase in color and higher quality pearls. Some of the farmers in Guangdong and Guangxi, two very important culturing areas in China, are asking Professor Wang to supply the new hybrid. Professor Wang has also developed a better bio-nucleus which is being exported to Tahiti and Indonesia.
The curative power of powdered pearl has a long history in China. Li Zhi Zhen, one of China’s great physicians and herbalists from the Ming Dynasty, compiled a 52 volume dictionary of herbs and herbal remedies, Ben Cao Gang Mu, that has been translated into over 60 languages. This work is still considered one of the cornerstones for traditional Chinese medicine. In it he discusses pearl powder as a treatment for a number of ailments including insomnia, indigestion, and heart and liver problems. Today, pearl powder is a commonly used remedy for colicky babies. China’s romance with pearls is long-standing. Over 4,000 years ago they were given as precious gifts to royalty. A legend recalls how an ancient emperor became so enthralled with pearls that he forced the fishermen to dive for them even during turbulent weather. Accounts of farming pearl oysters are first recorded during the Song Dynasty from about 960-1127. Pearls are also bound up with another great icon of China—the dragon. A pearl is often depicted either as a luminous spinning ball above the dragon’s head or held on its tongue. Daoist thought links the dragon’s pearl with the moon and thunder, with meditation and dreams, and with the wisdom that comes when a person is ready to receive it. It represents the dual influences of nature, the light of wisdom and the source of eternal life for those who perceive truth and, thus, attain enlightenment. The acceleration of China’s pearl industry is directly related to Deng Xaio Peng’s economic reforms introduced into the country in 1978. China’s coastal areas have benefited most from these reforms and this is reflected in the rapid advancements made in the pearl industry. In 1988 Hainan was established as China’s largest special economic zone. The pearl, which is so wrapped up with China’s history and mythology, is an apt symbol for this region’s emergence as a major player in the world’s pearl economy. Leslie Jordan Clary is a freelance writer currently living on Hainan Island. Her website.
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