
SURVIVING TIMES
It was not always so. The worship was condemned as "superstitious activity" during China's Cultural Revolution (1966-1976). The ancestral temple of the Monkey King was torched while worshippers from You's temple retreated underground.
"We managed to rescue the monkey head," You says, pointing to a peach-sized head now installed on an ornately dressed statue. "Its body was gone, so we placed it on a tea cup to continue our worship."
The belief began to regain strength in the 1980s: the ancestral temple was rebuilt; Ruyi Hexin Temple resumed the Parade of Gods tradition and has seen increasing participation in recent years.
"Now, more people see it as a part of the culture, rather than superstition," says Zheng Kui, a member of the temple's committee.
The biggest threat now comes from Fuzhou's rapid urbanization and the demolition of old neighborhoods.
Many local beliefs are community-based. When the old neighborhoods were demolished and their residents relocated, the temples lost attendance.
The original Ruyi Hexin Temple and its neighborhood were demolished by the city government in 2007. The new venue built to house the celestial monkey is small and cramped, but You still felt lucky as they were resettled close to the parish.
"After all, the King still lives with his people. Many temples have been relocated far from the original sites."
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