Antelope Valley Press

Ramadan in China: Faithful dwindle under limits

-

KASHGAR, China (AP) — Tursunjan Mamat, a practicing Muslim in western China’s Xinjiang region, said he’s fasting for Ramadan but his daughters, ages eight and 10, are not. Religious activity including fasting is not permitted for minors, he explained.

The 32-year-old ethnic Uyghur wasn’t complainin­g, at least not to a group of foreign journalist­s brought to his home outside the city of Aksu by government officials, who listened in on his responses. It seemed he was giving a matter-of-fact descriptio­n of how religion is practiced under rules set by China’s Communist Party.

“My children know who our holy creator is, but I don’t give them detailed religious knowledge,” he said, speaking through a translator. “After they reach 18, they can receive religious education according to their own will.”

Under the weight of official policies, the future of Islam appears precarious in Xinjiang, a rugged realm of craggy snow-capped mountains and barren deserts bordering Central Asia. Outside observers say scores of mosques have been demolished, a charge Beijing denies, and locals say the number of worshipper­s is sinking.

A decade ago, 4,000 to 5,000 people attended Friday prayers at the Id Kah Mosque in the historic Silk Road city of Kashgar. Now only 800 to 900 do, said the mosque’s imam, Mamat Juma. He attributed the drop to a natural shift in values, not government policy, saying the younger generation wants to spend more time working than praying.

The Chinese government organized a five-day visit to Xinjiang in April for about a dozen foreign correspond­ents, part of an intense propaganda campaign to counter allegation­s of abuse. Officials repeatedly urged journalist­s to recount what they saw, not what China calls the lies of critical Western politician­s and media.

Beijing says it protects freedom of religion, and citizens can practice their faith so long as they adhere to laws and regulation­s. In practice, any religious activity must be done in line with restrictio­ns evident at almost every stop in Xinjiang — from a primary school where the headmaster said fasting wasn’t observed because of the “separation of religion and education,” to a cotton yarn factory where workers are banned from praying on site, even in their dormitory rooms.

“Within the factory grounds, it’s prohibited. But they can go home, or they can go to the mosque to pray,” said Li Qiang, the general manager of Aksu Huafu Textiles Co. “Dormitorie­s are for the workers to rest. We want them to rest well so that they can maintain their health.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tursunjan Mamat holds a copy of the Quran in the Arabic and Uyghur languages during an April 20 government organized visit for foreign journalist­s to his home in Aksu in western China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Tursunjan Mamat holds a copy of the Quran in the Arabic and Uyghur languages during an April 20 government organized visit for foreign journalist­s to his home in Aksu in western China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States