Into Tibet 2020: What local people's life really looks like now?

CGTN

PR85420

 

BEIJING, Sept. 4, 2020 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/ --

 

Year 2020 marks the 55th anniversary of the founding of southwest China's Tibet

Autonomous Region. The life of local people here has drastically changed since then.  

 

Video - https://cdn5.prnasia.com/202009/tf/video.mp4 

 

CGTN dispatched three teams to different parts of the plateau for a special

series named "Into Tibet 2020" to showcase a new Tibet.

 

During the journey, they caught up with the Deng people - an ethnic minority in

the region, encountered the nomads, played music and performed a song with

local musicians.

 

Through their lens, a new Tibet was presented to the audiences, not just as a

time-honored tourist destination but a beautiful home to the local people.

 

A new era

 

CGTN's Yang Xinmeng and Spanish vlogger Noel visited the Deng people, also

known as Dengba, an ethnic group that lives traditionally in modern times.

 

Deng people live mainly in the valleys of Zayu County, Nyingchi City in Tibet.

They record events by tying knots, use reaphook to cultivate farmlands and

always carry a knife in a sheath on the belt.

 

They also showed the audiences what the Tibetan knives worth $100,000 look like

and how those knives differ from one another.

 

Photo - https://photos.prnasia.com/prnh/20200904/2908094-1 

 

CGTN's Li Jingjing and YouTuber Daniel Dumbrill from the other team talked to

some nomads during their visit to a Tibetan black tent, the traditional

dwelling of local nomads. Herding is the most important task for the nomads,

they move from pasture to pasture to find better grazing areas.

 

Apart from herding and farming, music is also an indispensable part of local

people's life. CGTN's Marco and Oscar visited a studio in Lhasa and learned how

to play with Dramyin, a traditional folk music lute.

 

In recent years, an increasing number of talented Tibetan musicians have

entered the fray, Denchu AD is one of them. He played one of his hit songs

"If I Meet You In Lhasa" with two of our reporters in the studio.

 

In Ranwu Town, Baxoi Country, Qamdo City, a tourism plan was initiated in 2000,

which included promoting the town's snow-capped mountains, grasslands and the

Ranwu Lake, according to a member of the local government. "We only had

bicycles, no motorbikes or phones, now every household can afford cars and

cellphones," he said.

 

These fascinating stories unfold on this land every day as a new Tibet meets

the world through the eyes of CGTN reporters.

 

SOURCE  CGTN

 

Image Attachments Links:

 

   Link: http://asianetnews.net/view-attachment?attach-id=370603 

 

   Caption: Two local people sit in front of Tibetan black tent, a traditional dwelling of

local nomads. /CGTN

 

本プレスリリースは発表元が入力した原稿をそのまま掲載しております。また、プレスリリースへのお問い合わせは発表元に直接お願いいたします。

このプレスリリースには、報道機関向けの情報があります。

プレス会員登録を行うと、広報担当者の連絡先や、イベント・記者会見の情報など、報道機関だけに公開する情報が閲覧できるようになります。

プレスリリース受信に関するご案内

SNSでも最新のプレスリリース情報をいち早く配信中