Demolishing Kashgar's History
A vital stop on China's ancient Silk Road, the Uighur city of Kashgar may lose its old quarter to plans for "progress"
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Michael Christopher Brown
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
He led us through the courtyard of his home, filled with drying laundry and potted roses, and up a rickety flight of stairs to a balustraded second-floor landing. I could reach out and practically touch the mottled tan house across the alley. I stood on the wooden balcony and took in the scene: head-scarfed women in a lushly carpeted salon on the ground floor; a group of men huddled behind a half-closed curtain just across the balcony. The men were Abdullah’s neighbors who had gathered to discuss the eviction. “We don’t know where we’re going to be moved to, we have no idea,” one of them told me. “Nobody here wants to move.”
Another man weighed in: “They say they are going to rebuild the place better. Who designs it? Nothing is clear.”
Abdullah said he was told that homeowners would be able to redesign their own dwellings and the government would pay 40 percent. But one of his neighbors shook his head. “It has never happened before in China,” he said.
One evening, Mahmati took me to a popular Uighur restaurant in Kashgar. Behind closed doors in a private room, he introduced me to several of his friends—Uighur men in their mid-20s. As a group they were angry about tight surveillance by Chinese security forces and inequalities in education, jobs and land distribution. “We have no power. We have no rights,” a man I’ll call Obul told me over a dinner of lamb kebabs and cabbage dumplings.
In 1997, Chinese troops in the Xinjiang town of Ghulja fired on protesting Uighur students waving the flags of East Turkestan, killing an unknown number. Then, following the 9/11 attacks, the Chinese persuaded the United States to list a secessionist group calling itself the East Turkestan Islamic Movement as a terrorist organization, claiming it had ties to Al Qaeda.
During the American-led offensive against the Taliban in Afghanistan in 2001, Pakistani bounty hunters captured 22 Uighurs on the Afghan-Pakistan border. The prisoners were turned over to the U.S. military, which incarcerated them at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The Bush administration eventually released five to Albania and four to Bermuda. Six were granted asylum on the South Pacific island of Palau this past October. Seven Uighurs remain at Guantanamo, with ongoing litigation about whether they can be released in this country. (The federal government has determined that they pose no threat to the United States.) The Supreme Court has agreed to take up the case.
Just before the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the Chinese government claims, two Uighurs driving a truck deliberately slammed into a column of Chinese paramilitary police jogging through the streets of Kashgar, killing 16 of them. (Eyewitness accounts from foreign tourists cast doubt on whether this was intentional.) In the following days, a few explosives went off 460 miles south of Urumqi, in the city of Kuqa, presumably the work of Uighur nationalists. But, says Bequelin of Human Rights Watch, “these are small groups with no coordination, no international support. They have no access to weapons, no training.” The Chinese cracked down on all Uighurs, shuttering Islamic schools and tightening security.
One of the men at dinner that night told me that after he went to Mecca for the hajj, the annual holy pilgrimage, in 2006, he was interrogated by Chinese intelligence agents and ordered to surrender his passport. “If you are a Uighur and you need a passport for business purposes, you must pay 50,000 yuan (about $7,500),” another dinner guest told me. Ling suggested that the Uighurs were partly to blame for their problems, saying they didn’t value education and their children had suffered for it. Obul acknowledged the point, but said it was too late for reconciliation with the Han majority and the Chinese government. “For us,” he said, “the most important word is ‘independence.’”
It didn’t take long before I—as one of the few foreigners then visiting Kashgar—came to the attention of Chinese authorities. At about 9 p.m. on my second night in Kashgar, there was a knock on my hotel room door. I opened it to confront two uniformed Han police officers, accompanied by the hotel manager. “Let me see your passport,” one officer said in English. He rifled through the pages.
“Your camera,” he said.
I retrieved it from my knapsack and displayed the digital photographs one by one—scenes from the Sunday animal market, where Uighurs from rural Xinjiang meet to buy and sell donkeys, sheep, camels and goats; shots taken in the alleys of the Old City. Then I came to a picture of a half-collapsed house, mud walls sagging, tile roof disintegrating—belying the image of burgeoning prosperity that China projects to the world.
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Related topics: Communities Renovation and Restoration The Silk Road China
Additional Sources
"Islam and Modernity in China: Secularization or Separatism?" by Dru C. Gladney, in Chinese Religiosities: Afflictions of Modernity and State Formation, edited by Mayfair Yang, University of California Press, 2008
"Rumblings from the Uyghur" by Dru C. Gladney, in China: Contemporary Political, Economic, and International Affairs, edited by David B. H. Denoon, New York University Press, 2007
Violent Separatism in Xinjiang: A Critical Assessment by James A. Millward, East-West Center (Washington, D.C.), 2004









Comments (5)
More info on the demolition: http://www.demotix.com/news/1106549/old-city-kashgar-disappears-under-chinese-reconstruction
Posted by hal on March 17,2012 | 12:03 PM
The sad thing is, that the world will do absolutely nothing, nada, zilch. This is China we are talking about, the country which holds more US and Europe govenrment debt to make your eyes sore. The newest richest country, which will replace the US as superpower within the next 40 years. Even the ANC government in South Africa, forgetting their roots and what they said they stood for, long enough to refuse the Dalai Lama to attend Desmond Tutu's 80th birthday bash.
In the end of course it will be China who will have lost their heritage. But, as with the Taliban and the Buddhas of the Bamiyan Valley, Philestines are destined never to learn from their barbaric acts.
Posted by Dirk on October 18,2011 | 09:26 PM
I believe China is destroying Uigur Civilization.It needs to stop. Area is not Xingjiang, should called Turkestan. That is a historical name for that area.Xingjiang came in late century by the Chinese authoroties because of they wanted to change Turkestans' etnic identity.Chinese starts an etnic cleansing or genocide type of killing,destroying Uigur culture.IT is not very late we can help.
Posted by Suzan Devletsah on November 19,2010 | 09:04 AM
Thank you for your article...its nice to see the other side of the story reported. Kashgar is not only an acient city that is an important mark along the Silk Route, it is a part of the Uighur identity. Destroying Kashagar will destroy yet another part of Uighur identity that has managed to survive the Dragon's fire.
The claims made by the Chinese government that the archeticture in Kasgar is suseptible to earthquakes is an unvalid one. This city has been around for thousands of years and it has survived. If you look to natural disasters in China, you see them in modern cities where there are modern buildings. China isn't trying to help the Uighurs here, they are masking their attack on Uighur identity. If their intention was to protect uighurs from disasters then they would not have done nuclear testing at Lop-Nur where the Uighurs are mutated by high concentration of nuclear chemicals. Once again, this is no move to help the Uighur people; its an initiative to continue to destruct the Uighur people through an aggressive attack on their culture and identity.
The world needs to act. This is not mearly the question of perserving an acient city, but a question of perserving the Uighur people.
Posted by uyghur on February 25,2010 | 10:12 PM
if you have done more homework on Xingjiang's history .this article will be a different one.Xingjiang is my hometown,my family have lived more than three generations there.I'm not Han or Uighur.the last thing we people need is the so-called help or sympathy from the western.
Posted by FRR on February 20,2010 | 07:38 AM