Home / Dongfang culture
Nestled along the southwestern coast of Hainan, Dongfang is a city where tradition and modernity collide against a backdrop of turquoise waters and swaying coconut palms. While Sanya and Haikou dominate the tourist spotlight, Dongfang remains an underrated treasure trove of indigenous Li and Miao cultures, maritime heritage, and a microcosm of China’s climate resilience efforts. Here’s why this coastal enclave deserves a place on the global cultural map.
The Li ethnic group, one of China’s oldest indigenous communities, has called Hainan home for over 3,000 years. In Dongfang’s villages like Basa and Jiusuo, their legacy thrives through:
- Brocade Weaving (Li Jin): A UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage, Li textiles are dyed with wild indigo and woven into intricate geometric patterns, each telling stories of nature and ancestry.
- Oral Traditions: The Li lack a written language, so their history survives through songs like the Gan’en Diao (感恩调), a haunting melody of gratitude to the land.
- Spiritual Practices: Animist beliefs persist, with rituals honoring the Five-Finger Mountain (Wuzhishan) as a sacred axis between earth and sky.
Smaller in number but equally vibrant, the Miao communities in Dongfang are famed for their silver adornments and lusheng (芦笙) flute performances. Their annual Huashan Festival, where dancers mimic birds in elaborate headdresses, is a hypnotic celebration of survival and adaptation.
Dongfang’s Danjia (boat-dwelling people) have lived on the South China Sea for centuries, but rising tides and overfishing now threaten their way of life. Innovations like floating fish farms and eco-tourism initiatives aim to preserve both livelihoods and marine biodiversity.
Near Xinying Bay, locals and NGOs are replanting mangroves—nature’s tsunami barriers. These "blue forests" also sequester carbon, making Dongfang an unsung hero in China’s 2060 carbon-neutral pledge.
Chewing binlang (betel nut) remains a social ritual, despite links to oral cancer. Public health campaigns now clash with tradition, sparking debates about cultural preservation versus modernization.
Every May, Dongfang’s Changhua River erupts in dragon boat races, where crews row to drums echoing 2,000-year-old Chu Kingdom hymns. Today, drone footage of the event trends on Douyin (China’s TikTok), merging antiquity with virality.
The Fishing King Festival blends Taoist sea-god worship with a raucous competition—the catch of the day wins a year’s worth of bragging rights.
With Hainan’s free-trade port policy luring investors, Dongfang faces a crossroads. High-speed rail now connects it to Haikou in 90 minutes, but locals fear becoming "another Sanya"—a cultural shell for luxury resorts. Grassroots projects like homestays in Li villages and folk-art co-ops offer a alternative: sustainable, community-led tourism.
As the world grapples with cultural homogenization and climate crises, Dongfang stands as a reminder that resilience isn’t just about surviving—it’s about dancing, weaving, and feasting your way forward.