In the summer of 2006 I spent a lot
of time working and travelling in Asia. After several weeks in Beijing I went
to Shanghai, where I spent a month working on an exhibition at Shanghai Museum, then travelling on to Taipei in Taiwan, and to Tokyo in Japan, before
heading back home, via Shanghai once again. In that first month-long stay I did
a lot of exploring on foot and consequently I got to know Shanghai very well.
I’ve since been back on a number of occasions, each time getting to know the
city better. It’s definitely one of my most favourite cities in the
world. I have many magical memories of travelling in China. I hope it’s
not too long before I get a chance to go back at some point.
Recently, while leafing through a
short diary I kept of that summer stay in Shanghai, I found a brief account of a
visit I made to the White Cloud Temple (白雲觀 Baiyun Guan), a Taoist temple, the
construction of which dates back to the late 19th century. The presence of Taoism in Shanghai itself though dates back to the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1386 AD). The
temple stands not far from the Huangpu River, located in the area of the
original Chinese walled city, which predated the ‘International Settlement’ that
grew up around it from the late 19th to early 20th
centuries.
This is what I wrote at the time:
Shanghai.
June 15th 2006.
Today
was a day of Temple wandering on my own. The White Cloud Taoist Temple, the Old
Confucian Temple, and the Peach Garden Mosque. The weather was hot and humid, a
thick white pall obscuring the opposite bank of Pudong from the Bund. Surprised
at the White Cloud Temple, as not piped music but rather a man playing a
stringed instrument (a Zheng?). Two ladies there taught me how to make a proper
prayer, guiding me simply by gestures and encouraging me to follow their lead,
praying and bowing three times to the four directions with a wad of burning joss
sticks held, pressed between my hands in front of my forehead, which I then
left smoking away in a kind of covered metal font filled with other burning incense sticks.
After
I left, walking back along the road to Renmin Lu, I was passed by a man slow-cycling
on a tricycle-trailer. The back was loaded with a couple of boxes of water
melons and standing behind him was a small boy, maybe his son, of around two
years old. The child looked around slowly and catching sight of me, he broke
into a bright-eyed smile and waved. I waved back and he smiled even more. An
old lady pulling a trolley of goods and a young boy standing at the side of the
road all smiled to see this. The small boy continued to look back and wave as I
walked, waving back. I watched as eventually the tricycle pedalled across Renmin Lu and
disappeared into the Shikumen lanes across the road, the small boy still
smiling and waving at me until we were both out of each other’s sight.
All photos and both short films were taken by me in June 2006
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