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Dwarfs Park open for
public
fnbworld
bureau/Agencies

Kunming: Queer
as this may be, dwarfs or midgets have existed
since the very beginning of the human race and
have been looked upon with curiosity and have also
been a subject of serious scientific studies. As a
befitting tribute to midgets, China has come out
with an innovative idea – a dwarf park in
the town of Kunming. Since it opened to the
public, it has been drawing huge crowds. The park
employs more than 100 midgets or vertically
challenged people i.e. dwarfs and they dress up in
various characters, and they entertain the
tourists who come to visit the dwarf park.
This innovative dwarf park is the
brainchild of a very successful Chinese
businessman – Chen Mingjing who wanted to
give back to the society and do his bit for
mankind, so he set up this park. In this park,
more than 100 dwarfs, who belong to a mountain
community of the Southern China, have a good and a
secure job.
The group living in Kunming
and has built up mushroom-shaped houses to live in
and are donning fairytale costumes in a bid to woo
tourists to their attraction. There are strict
rules in place about who can live and work in the
park - all inhabitants must measure below 4ft
3inches tall. It is a self sufficient community
with a police force and fire brigade serving
inhabitants.
"As small people we are
used to being pushed around and exploited by big
people. But here there aren't any big people and
everything we do is for us," said spokesman Fu
Tien. The theme park has come under fire from
those concerned about the group's human rights,
sparking strong views on whether their community
is merely a curious circus act for visitors.
"When I first heard this I pictured myself
obscure freak shows from a hundred years back,"
wrote one commenter on the GoKunming website. "Pay
the entrance fee and you can watch these people
perform." Those in favour of the theme park argue
that with unemployment levels high across China
are simply finding a new way to work.
"They can't work anywhere, they are disabled
people, so we have a village for them to live and
be happy in. No one would hire a dwarf," one
commenter said on the GoKunming website. It isn't
the first time a theme park dedicated to little
people has appeared. In early 1900s, the Coney
Island's Dreamland in New York was home to a
'Lilliputia' attraction before the whole park
burned to the ground in 1911.
Chen also
has expansion plans in mind, after seeing the
roaring success of this venture. He plans to
increase the size of the park to a whooping 13,000
acres. He plans to make it a fairy tale land, and
his designs for the park are such that there would
be numerous attractions in the park, but their USP
would be that they would all be in miniature size.
“It will be like a fairy tale,” Chen
Mingjing said. “Everything here I have
designed myself.”
The park which
was let open for public visit last year has
attracted many tourists and locals. Chen Mingjing,
according to reports, plans to increase the area
of the park to 13,000 acres and has taken special
care to design everything in the present park. The
park will have many new features added in it in
the future according to him but everything will be
in a mini size. It will be like a fairy tale
land,said Chen Mingjing.
The entry fee
to the park is US$9 and by paying the amount one
can get into the “Kingdom of the Little
People”. From fireman to police to dancing
fairies and princesses all are little human beings
busy amusing visitors with their performances,
dramas, dancing and singing. The human rights
activists however have condemned the
“Kingdom of the Little People” by
saying that it is nothing more than a “Freak
Show” which debases the position of the
dwarfs all the more. I guess they need to be
reminded that some good things come in small
packs!
For fine and Bizarre collage(s) with frames as per requirement, feel free to write to Tanya Loveinsky at:
fnbworld@gmail.com