A FORTUNE IN HAND

来源 :Beijing Review | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:TomasZhang_888
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读



  Tucked in a remote hamlet named Laomudeng Village in Nujiang Lisu Autonomous Prefecture, southwest China’s Yunnan Province, Yu Wulin’s guesthouse is tidy, cozy and more or less exotic.
  However, 43-year-old Yu, who is from the Nu ethnic group, hadn’t dreamed of being an innkeeper while growing up a farmer like most of his neighbors in the impoverished region.
  In the Nu dialect, Laomudeng means“the place people love to go.” The hillside village, surrounded by high mountains and green fields, is best known for its view of a canyon on the Nujiang River.
  Prime real estate
  As the fifth and youngest child in his family, Yu grew up with little food and clothing, and even without shoes.
  What his family did have was a picturesque view of a steep valley and the winding Nujiang River. The area remains primitive and unspoiled by the world’s hustle and bustle.
  In the 1990s, he began noticing backpackers trekking muddy roads to reach his village. Many asked his family for lodging and meals and paid cash when they left.
  Still, Yu didn’t consider it an opportu- nity for business.
  “We were just curious and wondered why they had nothing better to do than backpack to such a remote village,” he said.
  In 1996, Yu dropped out of high school and left for Shanghai as a singer, marking the first time he traveled outside his village. Seeing the metropolis was certainly a novelty for Yu, but he grew homesick by the day and finally returned to Laomudeng at the end of 1997.
  He married a woman from the Dulong ethnic group whom he had met in Shanghai, a coworker from the performance troupe. The couple devoted themselves to farm work but found that they could barely make ends meet.
  “Back then we lived in a bamboo house, we could only buy new clothes for our kids once a year and could hardly ever afford to go to the county seat,” Yu said.
  A helping hand
  Things began to change in 2000. The local government granted aid to local residents in order to promote tourism, and the couple was the first in Laomudeng to open a guesthouse.
  “The experience of working in Shanghai had broadened my horizons and given me the opportunity to make new friends,” Yu said.


  Some of these friends helped him promote the family inn on the Internet. Yu also became fluent in Mandarin, a precious skill in his ethnically diverse hometown where most people communicate in local dialects.   Since Nujiang Lisu Autonomous Prefecture has historically been one of China’s poorest western areas, the Central Government worked out targeted measures to help develop the area.
  It helped local people build houses and pave roads, and provided access to running water at home.
  “My success with my guesthouses can be largely attributed to the favorable policies and support of the government,” Yu said.
  In 2012, as more tourists visited the village, he expanded the inn. To help him build new rooms, the local tourism bureau granted him 50,000 yuan ($7,430) in subsidies, and the county government gave him 10 tons of cement.
  When the renovated 11-room inn couldn’t accommodate all his customers, Yu opened a second inn in 2017, with a low-interest bank loan of 2.7 million yuan($398,871).
  It was built to be more modern, complete with toilets, Wi-Fi and a public area to allow different groups of guests to eat together and sit around an indoor fire pit.


  As a musician and singer, Yu often presents guests with traditional Nu ethnic dances and music together with local folk performers, bringing them a taste of the local culture.
  The upgrades allowed Yu to charge a premium rate of 260 yuan ($38) for a stan- dard room, compared to 20 yuan ($3) a bed when he first started. His annual income has climbed to 400,000 yuan ($59,100), a small fortune in the area.
  Setting an example
  Yu’s inns employ dozens of local villagers, including some of his relatives, and he pays them monthly salaries between 2,000-2,600 yuan ($295-$384).
  His success also inspired others: 18 households in the village have since opened guesthouses, and the once shantyfilled village is now colored with brightly painted houses with modern comforts.
  “Yu is always ready to help whenever his peer villagers run into difficulties while operating a guesthouse,” said Bian Jianwen, an official from the government of Fugong County, where Yu’s village is located.“Villagers also meet from time to time to discuss business and projects they can work on together.”
  Yu’s two sons are now majoring in hotel management at a technical secondary school in Kunming, capital city of Yunnan.
  “I hope they will come back after graduation and help run my guesthouses,” he said.
其他文献
The Belt and Road Initiative, launched in 2013, has made progress, but not without concerns about its ambitions and scope.  The primary concern has been the idea of “debt diplomacy”—that China is buil
期刊
The General Office of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the General Offi ce of the State Council, China’s cabinet, recently issued a guideline on the reform of the proper
期刊
When she was in university, one of the research subjects of Gulnar Shaimergenova, Director of the China Studies Center (CSC) in Kazakhstan, was how to export wheat to Southeast Asia.  Kazakhstan is kn
期刊
Artists perform at the Beijing Garden during the Beijing Day event at the ongoing International Horticultural Exhibition 2019 Beijing on May 1.  The three-day event demonstrated achievements the capit
期刊
David Paull was born in Australia, got his MBA from Cornell University in New York, worked in Madagascar and Mozambique, and has made Ulan Bator, Mongolia, his current home. On April 25, Paull, Execut
期刊
Xiao Yang, former President of the Supreme People’s Court, died at the age of 81 in Beijing on April 19.  Born in south China’s Guangdong Province, Xiao graduated from the department of law of Renmin
期刊
George F. Gao, Director General of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (China CDC), was elected as a foreign associate by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences on April 30. The recog
期刊
Reading Buddies  In celebration of World Book and Copyright Day, children read to elderly people at a nursing center in Changxing County, east China’s Zhejiang Province, on April 23.  Conservation All
期刊
When Wang Guandi’s fi rst fi lm Champion in Village was released last year, he was thankful for the new genre of movies that has made it possible for newcomers like him to realize their dream of makin
期刊
It is in her kitchen beside a wood stove that Ken Guofang, a 91-year-old woman from the Derung ethnic group with tattoos on her face, tells her story.  She doesn’t speak Mandarin and needs a local you
期刊