Holy cow: Bullfighting coming to Beijing?

December 23rd, 2009

Shanghai BullfightWriting a blog about China and Latin America, some news stories seem just too good to be true. This is one of them: Real, live bullfighting may be coming to Beijing as early as next year. CAS International, a Dutch anti-bullfighting organization, reports:

According to pro-bullfighting websites, bullfighter Manolo Sánchez made a deal with the local government of the Huairou District in Beijing (Peking) to build a bullring and a bull breeding farm close to the Chinese Wall, as part of a Spanish amusement park (also with tapas bars and flamenco shows).

In January, they want to import 100 bulls and 100 cows from Spain and they also want to start building the bullring. The bullring will be finished in October 2010 and will be inaugurated with two bullfights. From 2011, they want to organize 16 bullfights a year, 4 in June, 4 in July, 4 in August and 4 in September.

Wow. Where to start on this one?

It’s worth remembering that China has toyed with this idea before. In 2004, Beijing almost allowed the city’s Wild Animal Park to hold a fight, but eventually scrapped the idea. City council members complained that bullfighting was cruel and had “the potential to tarnish Beijing’s and China’s image” ahead of the Olympics.

However, that same year in October, Shanghai successfully held two days of bullfights. Organizers imported bulls from Mexico, matadors from Spain, and converted a city stadium into a bullring, spending US$605,000. Bulls were taunted and stabbed with spears, but not killed.

Not all fell under the spell of “a bullfight with a truly Spanish flavor.” The editorial board of China Daily called the event a “mistake.”

While animal protection and anti-violence is becoming more fashionable in society, Shanghai’s “bravery” in staging this kind of bloodsport betrays itself as one of China’s most modern cities.

Rather than a milestone in its bid to become a much-coveted international metropolis status – indeed, the bullfighting episode is more like a slap in the face.

Will this time be any different?

Worldwide, times are tough for the industry. Spain’s northeastern Catalonia region recently banned the sport, and other regions may soon follow suit. In Latin America, bullfighting can be found in Mexico, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela and may survive there a bit longer. Still, anti-bullfighting sentiment is on the rise in Latin America too. Many people see exporting the sport to China and other foreign countries as a last-ditch strategy to save a dying industry. Pro-fighting optimists may believe China to be bullfighting’s last great hope.

But don’t count on it. Organizations like CAS International are already circulating petitions and mobilizing efforts to stop the sport from coming to China. On top of that, it will only take one top cadre deciding there is something decidedly “uncivilized” about the bloodsport before this plan gets scuttled like the last. Don’t get me wrong, I think most Chinese could stomach the blood to watch for the “mystery” and “passion,” as this account can attest.

My guess is this project becomes something much more benign and tourism-friendly – more “Spanish amusement park” and less bullfighting. Bloodless “bullfighting demonstrations,” perhaps. Tourists dressed up as matadors. Tours of the stables and photos with the bulls. Chinese copies of Death in the Afternoon, plastic banderillas, magnets and other tchotchkes – these all seem likely.

An authentic bullfight in Huairou? Not so much.

Image: China Daily

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