Chinese Destinations Related to Martial Arts Tourism from the UNESCO Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Cultural Tourism
1.1.1. Shaolin Temple
1.1.2. Chenjiagou Village
1.2. The World Heritage System
1.3. Literature Review
2. Aim and Methods
2.1. Circumstances of Research
2.2. Interviews and Questionnaire
2.3. Characteristics of Research Group
3. Results
3.1. In Search of Authenticity
3.2. Research on Authenticity
(...) was wondering to came here and train with the masters and breathe the air of the temple Buddhism, because for doing the martial arts that is called Shaolin Gong Fu, and then visiting Shaolin 20 years after that’s going to be a waste of time, so I have to be there.
So, the first time when I heard about Shaolin was when I saw a documentary on YouTube. It was very interesting documentary. Shaolin monks were training all day, and that was really important thing, because I was really into train, I wanted to do something like real strong stuffs, tiring staff, and all day train in full immersion, and all kind of drill that makes stronger, like, you know, Iron Fist, climbing up to the mountain, and doing forms that makes you faster, becoming stronger these were my objective, so I said Shaolin Temple is where I want to go because there are the best masters and where I can find a real training I want to do so I came here.(Student from Italy, age 24)
(...) And talking about the training, there is complete not, yhmm, no discipline. I thought that discipline is the first thing in a training, in any training in any sport. And here, a Shaolin monk, and as a master, and not demonstrating discipline in a training, means you are not even respecting him and his experience.
(...) Sometimes it’s like being on vacation. I think that in my opinion they do not press too much on this site, because we are foreigners, so they do not want to create problems, maybe problems with wages, and make our stay here more convenient, and not ruin the vacation for foreigners. But that means we shouldn’t be tourists, we should be students. The master should be the master...(student from Italy, 26 years)
…these coats unfortunately did not smell good.... I can’t imagine wearing such a garment in the middle of summer. I viewed the exhibit in my own clothes. Unfortunately, it’s just the usual tourist trap.... another item on the “must see” map, but only because it’s in Shaolin.... (...) where did the idea for ice monks come from anyway? Maybe it’s cool for kids...(student from Italy, 26 years)
Training fees, souvenir stores, side attractions—why not? The monastery has to make money too. Why should it give it up? Is it just because it is a monastery? Around the world, monasteries and temples also benefit financially from their history and traditions, if they can boast of such...(Respondent from France, age 37)
I also went there to watch the monks and the performance. (…) I thought is the Shaolin. And they said no, we are just the kung fu school, the Shaolin is the name of our team to have the performance. And it’s just to show the tourist what is the model of Shaolin kung fu… I thought, ok, yeah, it can be like this, but for my expectation it must be all of the monks, I thought it must all be monks…(student from Italy, age 22)
(…) they are keeping the less important part and they lose the one they should keep. (…) Shaolin is now like a brand, the success of Shaolin, fame, its fame relies on the thousands of year past, so all is thanks to their past. If they follow like this, they will lose their authority, and get to kind of museum with the circles, amusement park. Also from the business part of view I have seen that they should decide what they should focus on. They are also not doing business in wright way. I mean, from my point of view, when I’m a single foreign student, they just don’t care about my opinion and my problems, and it’s clear, that they just want to get my money. So overall, it’s disappointing, because it is supposed to be a temple, secondly is disappointing, because they promised me something, I paid a lot of it, and not getting that and it’s not good for them, because when you think about your business, you shouldn’t let your customer go unsatisfied. Because, we are single students, ok, we gonna spread so much more that school students. Once they will go back, they will go to the same school and just talking with each other. When we go back we will talk about it with our school so, maybe 20 more people each, so… And the bad marketing is so much more effective than good one. And everyone knows that, from the business point of view.
Is it even possible to speak of the authenticity of the monastery? For sure you can feel the kung fu spirit here, for sure training within such walls is motivating, but modern monks are not authentic for me... They do not relate their attitude to the historical vision of Shaolin monastery... The walls themselves are more authentic for me, the buildings, because I know the history of the monastery, I know when the monks had to leave the monastery due to historical circumstances... Going to the monastery today I look more for this hidden kung fu spirit, than for inspiration of modern monks. The monks I see here, especially the young ones, do not have much in common with Buddhism for me. They are more like actors, ready to play all the time. Some who teach foreigners here do not feel the spirit of the martial arts at all. It happens that these young teachers play on their phones while teaching, and yet you have to pay for training. Sometimes I think it’s completely inconsistent with the spirit of the martial arts to conduct training so hopelessly and then send a foreigner with a diploma of ‘training in Shaolin’ when you haven’t really taught that person anything...
...it’s all Chinese government…Wanzhigou village was destroyed. We all know about it, but in the temple monks don’t speak about it, even Mr. Wang (tourists’ coordinator in Shaolin Temple). It was a great place, lot of kung fu schools… to close to Shaolin Temple. Is it all about the money? Where is the place for real kung fu?(Student from Germany, age 27)
3.3. Research on UNESCO Conventions
- -
- Monuments of outstanding universal value from the point of view of history, art or science;
- -
- Assemblages of separate or combined buildings which are of outstanding universal value from the point of view of history;
- -
- Historic places having exceptional universal value from a historical, aesthetic, ethnographic, or anthropological point of view.
- I.
- Represent an outstanding work of human creative genius; or
- II.
- Represent a significant exchange of values, occurring in a given period of time or in a given cultural area of the world, in the field of architectural or technical development, monumental arts, urban or landscape design; or
- III.
- Bear unique or at least exceptional testimony to a cultural tradition or civilization still living or no longer extant; or
- IV.
- Be an outstanding example of a type of building, architectural ensemble, set of engineering objects, or landscape that illustrates significant stage(s) in human history; or
- V.
- Be an outstanding example of a traditional settlement, traditional land or sea use representative of the culture(s) in question, or illustrating human interaction with the environment, particularly if/the asset/has become vulnerable due to irreversible change; or
- VI.
- Be associated in a direct or material way with events or living traditions, ideas, beliefs, artistic or literary works of outstanding universal significance (the Committee believes that this criterion should generally be used in conjunction with the other criteria).
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Skowron-Markowska, S.; Nowakowska, M. Chinese Destinations Related to Martial Arts Tourism from the UNESCO Perspective. Sustainability 2021, 13, 7581. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13147581
Skowron-Markowska S, Nowakowska M. Chinese Destinations Related to Martial Arts Tourism from the UNESCO Perspective. Sustainability. 2021; 13(14):7581. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13147581
Chicago/Turabian StyleSkowron-Markowska, Stefania, and Marta Nowakowska. 2021. "Chinese Destinations Related to Martial Arts Tourism from the UNESCO Perspective" Sustainability 13, no. 14: 7581. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13147581
APA StyleSkowron-Markowska, S., & Nowakowska, M. (2021). Chinese Destinations Related to Martial Arts Tourism from the UNESCO Perspective. Sustainability, 13(14), 7581. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13147581