Lion dance is a festive activity passed down from generation to generation by the Hakka people during festivals. It is said that the traditional craft of making lion heads in Hukou Village began in the second year of the Guangxu period of the Qing Dynasty (1876), and the founders were Qiu Fuguang and Qiu Xinfa. Moreover, Qiu Xinfa also studied literature and poetry throughout his life, and was granted the title of Jinshi in the Yiyi year by the emperor. At first, they created lion heads based on the story of Tang Monk going to the West to obtain Buddhist scriptures in "Journey to the West", and then matched them with masks of Tang Monk, Sun Wukong, Sha Monk and other characters to form a complete set of lion dance character props. Later, the second-generation heir Qiu Rongji inherited the ancestral art and continuously improved the ancestral craft, and the production process has been continuously improved. Qiu Jun is the third-generation heir of the lion head. Since he was 15 years old, he has continuously carried forward the ancestral folk craft and established the "Yi Guang Art Department" in the local Hukou Village to continue processing and creating the Hukou Hakka auspicious lion with a history of more than 100 years, and pass on its ancestral craft.