Xinjiang prefecture creates multi-ethnic communities
Aksu Prefecture in Northwest China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region is encouraging residents of different ethnic groups to live in the same residential communities to promote communication and ethnic unity.
In Aksu’s Chaoyang residential community, 3,119 households from six ethnic
groups including Han, Uyghur, Hui and Kirgiz live together, officials working in the community told the Global Times.
Ten percent of the apartments in the residential community are public rental housing.
A total of 200 households from different ethnic groups applying for the housing have been arranged to live next to each other at these apartments in consideration of their willingness and conditions, according to an introduction by the administrative office of the community.
Discounts of 3 to 5 percent were also given to people who buy apartments in the community and choose to live next to other ethnic groups.
“Under the guidance of the local governments, residential communities of different ethnic groups as neighbors is a trend in Aksu,” said Fan Guowen, Party chief of Langan Street, which administers the Chaoyang residential community.
Villagers in rural areas in Aksu are also encouraged to live with different ethnic groups.
In Tuowanke Maigaiti village in Wushi county, residents of affordable housing are arranged to live with people of different ethnic groups as their neighbors.
“For the 82 houses which were built with government subsidies, more than 70 households of different ethnic groups have been moved in,” Zhuang Qiang, an official of the working group stationed in the village of Tuowanke Maigaiti, told the Global Times.
Working groups stationed in villages are formed by officials, who are deployed from the Xinjiang regional government to help with poverty alleviation work and promote ethnic unity.
Since 2014, more than 43,700 officials in Xinjiang have been deployed in five waves to over 1,000 villages in Aksu.
Closer than relatives
The Aksu prefecture government is promoting mixed residential communities to promote ethnic unity: not only neighborhoods of different ethnic groups, but also closer economic and social ties.
In March 1989, Singapore implemented an ethnic integration policy to promote racial integration and harmony in Housing and Development Board estates including ethnic quotas in neighborhoods and blocks.
Arranging neighborhoods of different ethnic groups helped dispel misunderstandings among them and form “a shared national identity,” according to a 2016 article by Gao Yongjiu, a professor at Lanzhou University.
“The Singapore government’s policies received large recognition from its citizens,” Gao wrote.
Working group official Zhuang said, “neighbors of different ethnic groups usually exchange experiences in farming and together take part in various activities organized by the working group.”
As many people originate from Southwest China’s Sichuan Province, playing mahjong has become a form of entertainment for villagers in Tuowanke Maigaiti.
The Global Times reporter saw four people of different ethnic groups playing mahjong together in an entertainment room on Saturday.
Casting away the red dragon tile, a player told the reporter that although some may having difficulties speaking Putonghua, all could speak the suits of mahjong fluently.
As the Chinese saying goes, “A good neighbor is better than a brother far away.” Aside from arranging neighbors, residents in urban and rural areas are also paired with different ethnic groups in the same residential communities, officials told the Global Times.
“The residential community organizes activities to promote interaction between paired relatives. For example, the paired relatives drive to visit scenic areas around Aksu or stage artistic performances,” Fan said.