The area around Luliaogou above the hillside on the west side of Zhuhu is known as Zhuhu community. The Luliaogou area was originally the site of the Zhuhu-she and the Sabie-she of the Amis people. In the late Qing Dynasty, due to a land dispute with the local Pingpu peoples that almost turned into a fight, the Pingpu peoples cursed that there were ghosts in the area and will cause disasters. The Amis people were deeply afraid of the theory that ghosts would disturb the people, so they migrated to the south and north of the area one after another. Among them, the one going south is today's Nanzhuhu, and the one moving north is the left bank of Dade River. The Ami people of Nanzhuhu called the community bakaraatsu (the name of a kind of crab) because the early Zhuhu-she was surrounded by paddy fields, and there was a small crab called bakaraatsu inhabiting the paddy fields. After the war, due to the division of the tribe, it was divided into upper and lower communities. The upper "Nanzhuhu" is adjacent to alley 17-20 of Zhuhu hamlet 17-20, and residents are mainly Catholic and Presbyterian. The lower part, also called "Xiakan", is alley 15-16 of Zhuhu hamlet, and most of them are true Jesus believers.
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