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Beijing students to learn Peking Opera
BEIJING—Students in Beijing’s
schools found their grandfathers’ favorite Peking Opera pieces in their
music class repertoire as the new semester began on Monday.
“I am expecting my first music class to learn Peking Opera and I expect
to wear the fancy facial makeup,” said Zhang Yaoyin, a third grade
student in Beijing No.2 Experimental Primary School on her way to the
school. Peking Opera was added into music courses in 20 Beijing primary
and secondary schools in order to promote traditional Chinese culture.
“The Peking Opera is very vivid and I like the melody best,” she said,
wondering whether her school has been chosen as a pilot.
Zhang Suhan, her father, called the action a “must” in preservation and
revitalization of Chinese culture.
Peking Opera, known as China’s national opera, is facing the danger of
extinction as its slow pace and abstruse lyrics have scared away the
younger generation which prefers pop culture. The Education Ministry
decided this month to start a pilot project in the new semester in 200
schools in 10 provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions. The
project added 15 pieces of Peking Opera,including both classical and
modern ones, into music courses for students.
Music teachers in Beijing schools were required to learn how to perform
Peking Opera before introducing it to their students.
“Most teachers themselves do not know how to perform the almost
forgotten art form,” said a principal in Beijing’s Dongcheng District.
“It is the basic requirement that every music teacher in Beijing schools
should be able to sing Peking Opera,” said Wang Jun, a local education
official.
The news, however, has aroused great controversy among the Chinese. In a
survey by Netease, a news portal in China, nearly 70 percent of voters
were against the project.
The opera, with a history of more than 200 years, is a synthesis of
music, dance, art and acrobatics and is widely regarded as a symbolic
expression of Chinese culture.—Xinhua |