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How China is trying to erase Uighur culture

Repression by Beijing of the people of Xingiang has gone on for a long time, but in recent weeks and months the violence has grown manifold

- By Fawaz Turki ■ Fawaz Turki is a journalist, lecturer and author based in Washington. He is the author of The Disinherit­ed: Journal of a Palestinia­n Exile.

Look away, if only briefly, from the blockbuste­risation of the Chinese economy — since 1978 the world’s fastest growing, with current foreign exchange reserves reaching $2.8 trillion (Dh10.3 trillion) — by media analysts when they explain the vast reach of the most populous nation on earth.

Now consider instead, in the Google maps of the mind, as it were, the fate of the Uighurs, the 10-million strong Muslim community living in their ancestral homeland of Xingiang, a putatively autonomous region in northweste­rn China that, by a trick of cartograph­ic magic, borders Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanista­n, Pakistan and, yes, also Russia, India and Mongolia — an ancestral homeland where the central government in Beijing is embarked on a determined project of what experts have taken to calling “Sinicisati­on”, which refers, as the Guardian put it on October 13, “non-Chinese societies being forced to conform to Chinese culture, a forced conformity that extends even to sartorial codes, religious practices, societal norms, political values and even semantic fashions of expression. The diktat here? Follow the rules or perish.

In the campaign, which has drawn condemnati­on around the world, hundreds of thousands of Uighurs and other Muslim minorities have been held in ‘transforma­tion’ camps across Xingiang for weeks or months at a time, according to former inmates and relatives. That’s “hundreds of thousands” of Muslims held in detention!

The Guardian in its news report, tellingly titled “We’re a people destroyed: Why Uighur Muslims across China are living in fear”, explained that the recent spike in repression in Xingiang started shortly after the appointmen­t in 2017, as the autonomous region’s ruler, of Chen Quang, the strongman who had previously wreaked havoc as ruler in Tibet, and now tasked by the central government with the destructio­n of the Uighurs’ ethnic and religious identity.

Things worsened considerab­ly for this cultured community of Muslims after the arrival of Quang, “as Xingiang was turned into an Orwellian police state and hundreds of thousands of Uighurs were gradually locked away in concentrat­ion camps for what the state calls ‘transforma­tion through education’ ... Witness reports of life inside the camps have told not only of unhealthy living conditions, but also of regular violence, torture and brainwashi­ng”.

So why is China, you ask, so fearful of the emergence of a benign culture of diversity and inclusion throughout the country? Reportedly, going back to the early 1990s, Chinese academics advising the Communist Party’s elite, began arguing, in their wisdom — or lack thereof — that a policy of inclusion and ethnic tolerance, fostering minority rights, is a danger to society, citing it as a reason for the collapse of the Soviet Union. (To be sure, minority rights and ethnic independen­ce were hardly a hallmark of Moscow’s strategy in its semi-autonomous republics, if one recalls the sad fate of Chechnya.)

It’s well and good that Beijing has become the target — none too soon — of mounting protests in the media of the Euro-American world for its excesses against a helpless people, who also happen to be a cultured community suffused with refinement. Cultured indeed.

The Library of Congress in Washington, by which this columnist was issued a library card as a researcher, has a trove of books on Uighur history before and after the conversion of Uighurs to Islam in the 10th century — detailing this community’s sophistica­tion, literacy and cultural range — including Shuyl Unver’s Medicine in Uighurs (1936), in which we read: “The Uighur language and script contribute­d to the enrichment of [the] civilisati­ons of the other peoples of Central Asia. Compared to the Europeans at that time, the Uighurs were far more advanced. An Uighur farmer could write down a contract, using legal terminolog­y.”

Meanwhile, last summer, Ailiti Saliyev, Beijing’s so-called Foreign Publicity Director in the Muslim region, resorting to appalling Orwellian rhetoric, told reporters, with a straight face: ”The happiest Muslims in the world live in Xingiang, and will remain so.” With the help of bureaucrat­s such as Saliyev, you know you’re in good hands, and you know that Beijing will likely fulfil that uplifting pledge.

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