Which minority is the top bowl dance?

Top Bowl Dance, a Uygur folk dance, is a group dance of women with nationality, folk, skill and appreciation. It shows the beautiful young Uyghur girls holding tea bowls, singing and dancing, welcoming guests to celebrate the festival, and expresses the sincere feelings of the Uyghur people who love life and are warm and hospitable. At the beginning of the dance, the girls with six cups on each head walked slowly and majestically, beating the rhythm with thimbles and discs in their hands. Top Bowl Dance is an innovative development based on traditional Uygur folk dance. According to relevant records, board dance was first produced in Kuqa County, southern Xinjiang. Because this dance is acrobatics, it is difficult to perform. It used to be performed by one or two artists who could master the skills. They held bowls above their heads, beat with small dishes and chopsticks, and danced less difficult steps to keep their balance. Dances are also performed in teahouses, restaurants, after meals or mass gatherings to please the audience, with no fixed content and artistic conception. After liberation, it has been put on the stage several times, but the concept is mostly to show folk dances and skills, and it has not completely changed. No matter from the sense of the times, structure, scene and skills, it can't be compared with top bowl dance.