Off topic alert!
Kirkhill said:
Is it just "Islamism" the Chinese are worried about? Or is it "separatism" generally?
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The reason I am citing it is to demonstrate how seriously China takes potential challenges to its claims to local hegemony. It has sat on this archaeology story for a number of years because it seems to suggest that, at very least, tall blondes and redheads ended up in Xinjiang before the "Chinese", the Han, made it up out of the coastal lands and river valleys, across the mountains and the Gobi to the Altai and the Steppes. They have similar problems with the Tibetans (of course), Hong Kong and (in their view) Taiwan.
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I do not agree that the Chinese have attempted to thwart research into the mummies of Urumchi. They have been in a publicly accessible museum in Urumchi for 20 years. Western scholars have been visiting, and speculating on, the mummies since they were found.
The Chinese do not attach a huge importance to these mummies.
As far as I can read they have no difficulty with the idea that a proto-Indo-European people may have come to and then lived in Xinjiang 4,000 and 3,000 years ago. But, that’s not the ‘big story’ in China. The big story (over the past half century) is the discovery that the
Shang dynasty was, certainly, real and that there must have been something very like to the (previously mythological)
Xia dynasty in its described time (2100-1600 BCE) and place (Henan province). The fact that some nomads settled on the edge of the Taklamakan Desert and, evidently, stayed and established trade links to the East and West is fascinating but hardly, for the history obsessed Chinese, overly important. They were, even to the supposedly contemporary
Xia, ‘barbarians.’ (Parenthetically,
I have heard it posited by an internationally recognized linguist, that words like ‘barbarian’ and ‘tartar’ have their roots in sounds like “
ba-ba,” “
bar-bar,” “
ta-ta” or “
tar-tar” which were used to describe the ‘primitive’ and incomprehensible sound of the language of the ‘other’ people – from outside of the settlements in China, the Caspian basin, Iran, the fertile Crescent and so on.)
In addition to Barber there have been many papers on the mummies of Urumchi. Some (many?) tend to get bogged down in the ‘problem’ of a proto-Indo-European people in China saying, “See, we were here first.” My question is: so what? We appear to have a long settled population that appears to have traded East and West –
maybe for obsidian, which was well known and valued 4,000 years ago and is plentiful in Xinjiang. Climate change was, almost certainly, partially responsible for their demise – see? It was all George W. Bush’s fault, after all! But, at bottom, their arrival, ‘culture’ and passing are of minor interest to Chinese scholars.
Let me be clear: the Chinese
are racist – we can see that in a whole host of linguistic and cultural attributes, beginning with how they describe themselves, their language and their country. Institutionalised, ethno-cultural racism is not, however, unique to the Chinese.
I believe it is common to almost all cultural and linguistic groups. The Chinese, like most other peoples, mix up the issues of race, language and culture. The current Chinese government, following 2,000± years of consistently ‘traditional’ policy is trying to make the
Han people = the Chinese people with minorities, of all kinds, relegated to the margins, existing as happy folk dancers. The Uiger are just one, albeit a problematical one , of the many minorities (the Kazak minority in Xinjiang is less of a problem). There is a
separatist movement – with
Islamist overtones amongst the Uiger of Xinjiang. The ongoing
Hanification of Xinjiang province is designed to smother that – a sort of
revanche du berceau in reverse. The central government in Beijing aims to make the Uiger a minority in their own home province. Initially, shortly after the revolution, Han migration to Xinjiang was forced; now it is a ‘pull’ system based on economics – a slow but surer system, the Chinese believe (
I think) of achieving their aim.
On balance, however,
I think Prof. Mair is overstating the case. Euro-centric scholarship bumps Sino-centric scholarship. “We’re more important than you!” “It’s all about us!”