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    Mini China Welcomes You

    Mini China Welcomes You,Activity,health ,Nature, Fashion,TCM course,prevention,Treatment,Travel
    Is it possible to walk the length and breadth of China within a single day?

    One place you could do just that is at the Chinese Ethnic Culture Park, south of the Bird's Nest and within the Olympic Green.

    The huge park has been a labor of love and precisely recreates life in all 56 of China's ethnic groups.

    From some of the "mountains" or "plateaus," you can see Beijing's main Olympic venues, as well as the Three Towers of Dali in Yunnan province, vivid replicas of the Jokhang Temple and many other ethnically significant buildings.

    The park covers 45 hectares of land within the North Fourth Ring Road and a leisurely stroll throughout will take six or seven hours. It is also an anthropological museum, the China Nationalities Museum.

    When construction started in 1992, it was part of China's plan to bid for the 2000 Olympics. China lost the bid in 1993, only to win it eight years later for the 2008 Games.

    "It is actually a good thing for us, for we had eight more years to do research work for the museum and collect cultural relics from various ethnic groups," says museum curator Wang Ping.

    It took three to five years for the park and museum to prepare the construction of each ethnic group's area. Although the first phase of the park opened back in 1994, work has been going on non-stop ever since.

    "I have done fieldwork in all the ethnic minority regions in China - I have never been to some tourist attractions like the Huangshan Mountain or Taishan Mountain but I have been to many villages around the Himalayan Mountains," Wang says.

    Every ethnic group has a "village" in the park to display its architecture, religion, lifestyle and cultural relics. Various crops are also planted in accordance with different ethnic groups, including paddy rice for the Dong people, highland barley for the Tibetans and buckwheat for the Yi.

    "We hope to encourage visitors to enter the lives of different ethnic groups," says Wang.




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