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Szeretettel köszöntelek a Tanuljunk együtt közösségi oldalán!
Csatlakozz te is közösségünkhöz és máris hozzáférhetsz és hozzászólhatsz a tartalmakhoz, beszélgethetsz a többiekkel, feltölthetsz, fórumozhatsz, blogolhatsz, stb.
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Üdvözlettel,
Tanuljunk együtt vezetője
Amennyiben már tag vagy a Networkön, lépj be itt:
Szeretettel köszöntelek a Tanuljunk együtt közösségi oldalán!
Csatlakozz te is közösségünkhöz és máris hozzáférhetsz és hozzászólhatsz a tartalmakhoz, beszélgethetsz a többiekkel, feltölthetsz, fórumozhatsz, blogolhatsz, stb.
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Üdvözlettel,
Tanuljunk együtt vezetője
Amennyiben már tag vagy a Networkön, lépj be itt:
Szeretettel köszöntelek a Tanuljunk együtt közösségi oldalán!
Csatlakozz te is közösségünkhöz és máris hozzáférhetsz és hozzászólhatsz a tartalmakhoz, beszélgethetsz a többiekkel, feltölthetsz, fórumozhatsz, blogolhatsz, stb.
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Tanuljunk együtt vezetője
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What an outrage! That is what I felt last week when a friend sent me an email with this disturbing news from China.
China razes the cradle of a culture
Paul Mooney, Foreign Corresponden May 3. 2009
KASHGAR, CHINA // An old way of life is coming to a crashing end in north-western China with two-thirds of Kashgar’s Old City being bulldozed over the past few weeks under a government plan to “modernise” the area.
The few remaining houses still standing are marked with an ominous-looking Chinese character written in red with a circle drawn around it. The character, pronounced “chai” in Chinese, means demolish.
An Uighur man sits on the pavement in the Old Town of Kashgar, under threat of demolition from the Chinese.Paul Mooney for The National A
government plan worth US$440 million (Dh1.6 billion) calls for the
relocation of 65,000 Uighur households, about 220,000 people, whose
families have lived in the Old City for centuries. Until a few weeks
ago, the area housed 40 per cent of the city’s residents in its
labyrinth-like alleyways, where the naturalness of the life made it a
popular tourist destination and one that was not ruined by tourism. For
centuries, children played on the cobblestone streets of the Old City,
mothers standing in the doorways of their mud-brick dwellings chatting
with neighbours, their faces covered by scarves. Bearded men wearing
embroidered doppas (skullcaps) have walked daily to the many small
neighbourhood mosques that pepper the area for prayers, passing by
coppersmiths hammering pieces of metal into shiny pots, butchers
cutting lamb in the open air and bakers slapping traditional flatbreads
on to the sides of a tandoor, a makeshift clay oven. Irritated
residents claim the government made no attempt to discuss the
demolition plan with them or to consider other ways of dealing with the
problems. The
Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking Muslim group, have long resented Chinese
rule of Xinjiang, which they call East Turkestan. Wang Lequan, the
Xinjiang party secretary, announced in March during a visit to Kashgar
and Hotan that the two cities were at the “forefront of the fight
against the three evil forces of terrorism, extremism and separatism”. “The
Old City in Kashgar represents the very essence of Uighur civilisation
for thousands of years,” said Rebiya Kadeer, the president of the
Uyghur American Association. “The Uighurs consider Kashgar the cradle
of Uighur civilisation. Kashgar is on the old silk road that connected East to West and was one of the major trading routes of the world at one time. I first arrived there in May of 2006 as we scouted locations for filming The Kite Runner.
We were looking for someplace to stand in for Kabul, Afghanistan in the
1970's, and since we could not film in the actual city of Kabul for
security reasons at that time, our line producer Bennett Walsh, who had
produced "Kill Bill" for Quentin Tarantino in China, had lead us to
explore this ancient city with its small alley ways and mud homes and
old mosques in this uniquely Muslim area in the Xinjaing Autonomous
Region which is home to the Uighur ethnic minority. The
Uighurs were at one time the majority population of this remote corner
of northwest China. But long simmering tensions with the dominant Han
Chinese after demands of autonomy and threats of secession over the
years, have resulted in a conflict that has seen a massive resettlement
of Han to the region, making the Uighurs a minority in their own
homeland.Now
this latest act, which is characterized by the Chinese government as a
kind of urban renewal project to clean up a leaky old slum, has
demolished this unique and beautiful old city, and displaced the
resident population. But more than that, it has cut the heart out of
the culture.It
was impossible to imagine when we were filming The Kite Runner that the
movie would become any kind of historical record of a place on the
verge of eradication. Now, among all the other reasons that I am glad
it exists in the world, it is also a way to remember and honor Old
Kashgar, not as a stand-in for Kabul, but for the special place that it
was.Here are some images of Uighurs in old town Kashgar I took on the scout. KASHGAR,
CHINA // An old way of life is coming to a crashing end in
north-western China with two-thirds of Kashgar’s Old City being
bulldozed over the past few weeks under a government plan to
“modernise” the area. The
few remaining houses still standing are marked with an ominous-looking
Chinese character written in red with a circle drawn around it. The
character, pronounced “chai” in Chinese, means demolish. For
centuries, children played on the cobblestone streets of the Old City,
mothers standing in the doorways of their mud-brick dwellings chatting
with neighbours, their faces covered by scarves. Bearded men wearing
embroidered doppas (skullcaps) have walked daily to the many small
neighbourhood mosques that pepper the area for prayers, passing by
coppersmiths hammering pieces of metal into shiny pots, butchers
cutting lamb in the open air and bakers slapping traditional flatbreads
on to the sides of a tandoor, a makeshift clay oven. Irritated
residents claim the government made no attempt to discuss the
demolition plan with them or to consider other ways of dealing with the
problems. The
Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking Muslim group, have long resented Chinese
rule of Xinjiang, which they call East Turkestan. Wang Lequan, the
Xinjiang party secretary, announced in March during a visit to Kashgar
and Hotan that the two cities were at the “forefront of the fight
against the three evil forces of terrorism, extremism and separatism”. “The
Old City in Kashgar represents the very essence of Uighur civilisation
for thousands of years,” said Rebiya Kadeer, the president of the
Uyghur American Association. “The Uighurs consider Kashgar the cradle
of Uighur civilisation.
Some Uighurs argue the demolition is part of an orchestrated campaign by the Chinese government to destroy Uighur culture.
“By destroying Kashgar, the Chinese
government will make all East Turkestan cities and towns look just like
all other Chinese cities and towns along the east coast. Once Kashgar
is destroyed, the unique Uighur and Central Asian character of East
Turkestan will become history.”
A
government plan worth US$440 million (Dh1.6 billion) calls for the
relocation of 65,000 Uighur households, about 220,000 people, whose
families have lived in the Old City for centuries. Until a few weeks
ago, the area housed 40 per cent of the city’s residents in its
labyrinth-like alleyways, where the naturalness of the life made it a
popular tourist destination and one that was not ruined by tourism.
Some Uighurs argue the demolition is part of an orchestrated campaign by the Chinese government to destroy Uighur culture.
“By destroying Kashgar, the Chinese
government will make all East Turkestan cities and towns look just like
all other Chinese cities and towns along the east coast. Once Kashgar
is destroyed, the unique Uighur and Central Asian character of East
Turkestan will become history.”
How
sad. How shameful that we continue to plow under traditional cultures
in the name of security or development around the world. What an
outrage!
william
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E-mail: ugyfelszolgalat@network.hu
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