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Shudu
Lake in autumn.
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Kyhigyala
carries the Olympic torch through Shangrila.
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Local
children in Potatso National Park.
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WHEN the Beijing Olympic torch relay passed through Shangrila
(Zhongdian) County in June, seat of Yunnans Deqen Tibetan
Autonomous Prefecture and the likely inspiration for James Hiltons
book Lost Horizon, it began its second leg with a lighting ceremony
at Potatso, Chinas first national park on the mainland.
The park was the brainchild of Kyhigyala, secretary of the Communist
Party of China (CPC) Deqen Prefectural Committee, who proposed
establishing the nature preserve in Shangrila three years ago,
and today the parks pristine beauty compares favorably with
Hiltons mythic Shangrila, an imaginary kingdom where no
one grows old.
A Native Sons Vision
A decade ago, few outsiders knew of Zhongdian. That began to
change in 2001 when Chinas State Council approved the countys
application to change its name from Zhongdian to Shangrila, a
claim it based on the consensus view of Chinese scholars that
Zhongdian was the probable setting for Hiltons 1933 book.
Since then, Kyhigyala has personally overseen the changes brought
about in his home province as a result. He describes himself as
a genuine Kamba (Tibetan) man, born and raised in
Shangrilas Jiantang Grassland area. Growing up poor, he
became a herder at a local stock farm at the age of 10 to help
ease his familys financial burden, working there for 10
years until 1979, when he passed a civil service examination administered
by the Zhongdian county government and became a civil servant.
His decade-long herding experience taught him a great deal about
his native land, and inspired him to dedicate his life to the
sustainable development of Tibetan communities.
Today, Deqen is a shining example of the harmony achievable between
man and nature, and within human communities. Situated at the
juncture of Yunnan, Sichuan and Tibet, it is the core of the Three
Parallel Rivers area that was named a UNESCO World Natural
Heritage site in 2003. It is also home to the snow-capped Meili,
Baima and Balagengzong mountains, and three major religions
Buddhism, Catholicism and Islam coexist peacefully in the
region.
To protect Deqens natural and cultural diversity, Kyhigyala
deliberated carefully on the development plan the prefecture should
adopt. He initiated the joint development strategy
for eastern Tibetan areas, and has tirelessly guided the local
people since to build Deqen into the best Tibetan region
in China, marked by a healthy ecology, cultural diversity
and a strong economy, according to Qian Xing, editor-in-chief
of the Deqen Daily.
Kyhigyala is a good CPC cadre, broad-minded and far-sighted.
He has played a significant role in the rapid development of Deqen,
Qian said.
Chinas First National Park
June brings out the Deqen Plateaus natural beauty at its
most spectacular, with blooming flowers, vast green prairies on
which flocks of sheep and cattle graze, rolling mountains, running
streams, emerald lakes and primeval forests that reach skyward
to the clouds, all blending at 3,000 meters above sea level to
paint a portrait of an earthly paradise.
Naturally enough, that beauty has been the focus of Deqens
tourism industry, and the Potatso National Park has been crucial
to the prefectures plans to develop the Greater Shangrila
Ecological Tourism Area. When Kyhigyala first proposed his plan
for the construction of a national park in his home region in
2004, he was obliged to travel to Beijing several times to consult
with relevant government departments, and after considerable lobbying,
Chinas first national park was finally established in Shangrila
on August 1, 2006.
Always mindful of maintaining the areas natural harmony,
the Potatso National Park, at the very heart of the Three
Parallel Rivers area, has followed a development strategy
that reconciles tourism construction with ecological protection,
and it has become a model of eco-tourism for the whole province.
More importantly, the development of Deqens tourism industry
has benefited local Tibetan herders considerably.
Since opening, the park has shown great promise. According to
Tang Lizhou, general manager of the Shangrila Potatso National
Park Management and Administration Company, between August 2006
and April 2008 the park received 830,000 tourists and brought
in RMB 150 million. In 2007 alone, it received 560,000 tourists
and generated a tourism income of RMB 104 million.
Tang Lizhou credited Kyhigyala for having made the greatest contribution
to the parks achievement, as he was not only the parks
initiator, but also its planner and builder. Kyhigyala measured
the parks area on seven separate field surveys and investigative
trips, trekking on foot through the wilderness. It was thanks
to his hard work and visionary drive that the park was opened
within two years of its proposal.
Building a World-class Brand Name
Kyhigyala and his colleagues in Deqen prefecture are currently
concentrating on forging their Greater Shangrila Ecological
Tourism Area into a world-class brand name, an endeavor
which began years ago with the successful renaming of Zhongdian
to Shangrila.
They are acutely aware of the value of a pristine natural environment
to the development of local tourism, and have established in Shangrila
the first county-level environmental protection bureau for Tibetan
areas, closing down eight smoke-spewing factories at or above
3,000 meters. As early as 2001, they successfully brought plastic
bag pollution under control, and initiated a sustainable development
and environmental conservation policy to protect the Three
Parallel Rivers area.
Without a healthy environment, Shangrila and Deqen will
not have a chance, said Kyhigyala. The local government
has followed a basic policy of ensuring ecological conservation
and construction ahead of its tourism development plans. Even
though we are slower than our neighbors to develop our tourism
industry, we will not change from our low-arrival, high-efficiency
policy, and wed rather be slow than make mistakes,
he said.
That caution is well-founded, for there is only one Shangrila
in China, not to mention the world. According to the prefectures
plan, the heart of the Three Parallel Rivers area
will become the Greater Shangrila national parks zone,
including Potatso, Meili Snow Mountain, Hutiaoxia (Tiger Leaping
Gorge), Shangrila Grand Canyon, and Tacheng Black Snub-nosed Monkey
national parks. The local government will integrate tourism infrastructure
construction, holiday destination projects and related financing
and investments to build the Greater Shangrila into
a world-class national park brand name within the next few years.
A Better Life
When evening falls, Sifangjie Square, in the ancient town of
Dukezong, is transformed into a festive ground for the people
of Shangrila and tourists alike. Hand-in-hand, they form a circle
and perform Tibetan folk dances to the strains of joyous music.
As more people join in, the circle becomes larger and larger,
until it finally breaks up into more circles. If you ask what
they are dancing, locals will tell you, the Gyala Dance,
because this activity was initiated by Kyhigyala.
Kyhigyala is the pride and joy of Shangrilas people,
said Goinchu Toinzhub, who operates a family-run restaurant in
Dukezong Ancient Town. The current policy is wise, and local
officials care about us. All this is making our lives better and
better. My restaurant brings in an annual income of at least 300,000
yuan, and that is something I could never have imagined in the
past.
The old town was run down not so long ago, but thanks to the
development of tourism in the area it has taken on a new look,
filled with vacationers and travelers on its streets, and brimming
with bars, teahouses, restaurants and shops. In 2005, the prefecture
increased the tempo of the towns reconstruction drive for
the CCTV-sponsored election of Charming Towns of China,
and Dukezong eventually won the title of Chinas Most
Exotic and Charming Town.
There are over 30 restaurants in Shangrila, one-third of them
run by local residents, and the rest by new arrivals. In addition,
there are nearly 100 businesses engaged in arts, entertainment
and holiday-making services. A Briton who identified himself as
William said he came to China for the first time in 2001 and immediately
fell in love with the life and culture of the country. In 2004,
he settled in Shangrila and opened an art studio here.
I love the purity of the exoticism and also of the Tibetan
people on the plateau. And the environment here is superb as a
result of the local governments effective pollution control,
he said.
If you talk to local residents, more often than not they will
express a sincere appreciation for Kyhigyala and his enthusiasm,
devotion and far-sightedness in leading the local people to transform
an unknown and backward Tibetan area into a lively tourist destination
in just a few years. Indeed, were he to visit today, James Hilton
would have no problem recognizing his beloved Shangri-la, a land
of enchanting beauty where people do not grow old.
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