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 4 of 4)
“Remove the picture,” a police officer commanded.
“Excuse me?”
He tapped his finger on the screen.
“Remove it.”
Shrugging, I deleted the photo.
Mahmati, meanwhile, had been taken to the first floor of the hotel for interrogation. At midnight, he called me on his cellphone to say, in a quavering voice, that he was being taken to Kashgar’s security headquarters.
“It’s because he is a Uighur,” Ling said bitterly. “The Chinese single them out for special treatment.”
It was long past midnight when Mahmati returned. The police had questioned him for two hours about his relationship with Ling and me and had asked him to account for all the time we had spent together. Then they made Mahmati provide names, addresses and phone numbers for every member of his family in Kashgar, and warned him not to enter the “forbidden area” again—apparently the part of the Old City not designated a tourist zone. “They demanded to know the real reason for our journey. But I didn’t tell them anything,” he said.
On one of our last days in Kashgar, Mahmati, Ling and I took a government-licensed tour through a tiny section of the Old City—about 10 percent of it—for 30 yuan (about $4.40). Here was a glimpse of the sanitized future that the Chinese government apparently envisions: a Uighur woman clad in a green vest and long blue skirt led us past reconstructed houses adorned with clean ceramic tiles, handicraft shops and cafés offering Western-style food—a tidy, highly commercialized version of the Old City. She kept up a cheerful patter about the “warm relations” among “all of China’s peoples.”
But under Mahmati’s gentle questioning, our guide began to express less charitable feelings toward the Chinese government. It had refused to allow her to wear a head covering on the job, she said, and had denied her permission to take breaks for prayer. I asked her whether the area we were walking through would be spared the wrecking ball. She looked at me and paused before answering. “If the customer asks, we are supposed to say it will not be destroyed,” she finally answered, “but they will destroy it with everything else.” For a moment she let her anger show. Then she composed herself and said goodbye. We left her standing on the street, below a banner that declared, in English: “Ancient residence, a slice of the real Kashgar.”
Writer Joshua Hammer lives in Berlin. Michael Christopher Brown travels the world on assignment.
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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