Before and after pics of a Uyghur sacred historical site, Imam Asim, desecrated by China's authorities.
Thread on what it means for Uyghur culture to be destroyed, using photos of what has been lost in the banning of the shrine festival at Imam Asim.
First a note on the photos: faces have been distorted and blurred. This is because authorities have put people in internment camps for religious activities they participated in as long as ten years ago.
All but the desecration image in tweet#1 are by me, from visits in 2008, 2010, & 2013. Desecration pic from tripadvisor user marceltraveller.
Every year in late spring, pilgrims would arrive at Imam Asim, near Khotan, in the thousands. The first stop was a special seasonal market at the edge of the desert, with children's rides, a tight rope act, and sweets for sale.
As you exited the market toward the desert, you passed rows of pious beggars, who provided the pilgrims the opportunity to engage in charity and gain merit. Some were ascetics and others ordinary impoverished people.
The distance from the market to the main shrine was about 1 kilometer. One option was to take camels. This was prob. more for entertainment than anything else. Camels are used widely in the region for transportation, but normally for pulling carts, not riding.
Most people walked.
Some paid for a ride on an electric cart or horse cart.
About halfway along there is a smaller shrine that people stopped to pray at. Some said it was the tomb of Imam Hashim.
Forgot to mention, on the edge of the market area, musicians and storytellers performed, some narrating the histories of the saints.
At the main shrine, where a Muslim warrior hero of ca. 1000 CE is said to be buried, people recited parts of the Qur'an and made personal pleas for intercession by the saint, e.g. for forgiveness, healing, pregnancy, prosperity.
Many people partly buried themselves in the sand, which is thought to have health-giving properties.
Alongside the shrine was a mosque (now destroyed) and a kitchen. Free, communal meals were prepared and distributed to anyone willing to stand in line.
Pilgrims tied cloths to fences, planted flags, and stuffed the skins of sheep slaughtered as offerings. The mass of flags and cloths were a testimony to the unseen thousands of fellow pilgrims who visited the site over the years, a created a powerful sense of community.
When I visited in 2013, the authorities had shut down the annual festival, but few pilgrims and I managed to evade the checkpoints. The place was mostly empty, but the shrine and devotional objects had not yet been harmed. First evidence of desecration was 2018.
Photo of sand-bathing, picnicking, and praying. The festival mixed sacred and profane, entertainment and devotion. Early 20th c. reformists complained of trysts, hooligans, and inappropriate religious activities like rubbing one's face on the walls of the shrines.
All shrine festivals have now been stopped. Imam Asim was the last. Some other shrines, like Imam Japir Sadiq, have been completely obliterated, despite being located in remote desert locations where the land has no other use. Satellite images from theguardian.com/world/2019/may…
Winter image of Imam Asim I took in 2008, with the now-demolished (according to satellite imagery) mosque visible.
Not all shrines are being destroyed or desecrated. policies vary by locality. Satellite images suggest that this important shrine in Yarkand (left) and this one in Qaraqash (right) were still standing recently. But praying at then could now land you in a concentration camp.
The shrine and mosque demolitions are part of a larger obliteration of Uyghur space and geography, penetrating down to the interiors of people's homes. Here is Kashgar's magnificent old city around 2007. It was demolished and replaced with a touristy imitation (right).
Of course there are graveyard demolitions, bans on Uyghur language education, forced boarding schools, and countless other efforts at cultural cleansing that are widely reported, but I'll end with pics to keep this thread focused on the rich Uyghur culture these policies target.
Khotan, 2015, now demolished.
Yarkand, 2015, apparently still standing.
Saybagh, Khotan oasis, 2015. demolished
Ghojam, Turpan oasis, 2007, apparently still standing.
Niya, 2007. Demolished.
addendum: It's depressing to see so many Hindu nationalists quote-tweeting this thread to openly cheer on the destruction of other people's heritage simply because they are Muslim. A sign of the dangerous situation in India.
Chinese gov has a new white paper out focused on Xinjiang population. Its central distortion is to say Uyghur pop. increased from 2010 to 2020 (it did), when the problem is that Uyghur births were brutally suppressed from 2017 onward. gov.cn/zhengce/2021-0…
So they're hiding the crash in Uyghur population growth rates 2017-2020 by presenting all data in a block that includes a period of high Uyghur growth rates (2010-2016). They never say what happened between 2017 and 2020.
There's also an unusually high number of bald-faced lies for a white paper. Many of them amount to: well-documented form of oppression x clearly isn't happening in Xinjiang. Evidence? The constitution prohibits it.
While the Chinese state has destroyed some of the most important Uyghur sacred and historical sites, they have supported the construction of invented sites, with exoticizing, primitivizing, fantasies of indigenous culture. Here is Xitiya "Mystery City" (photo from CITS site).🧵
Begun in 2011 and still expanding as of the last two years, Xitiya, near Karghalik, appropriates elements of Uyghur shrine architecture that are being destroyed at actual sacred places. For example, this "sacred tree" has Uyghur-style votive ribbons attached.
These elements are mixed with exoticizing concoctions that have nothing to do with any local traditions, like this altar:
3+ years after my colleague Rahile Dawut's disappearance, some news about the official reasons for her detention. Police station at Xinjiang University says she was "provoking" farmers against the government. You can hear the phone recording from RFA here: rfa.org/uyghur/xewerle…
Rahile did most of her fieldwork in rural locations. As a star scholar visiting from the top provincial university, she was in a position to tell local officials in remote areas that the religious traditions she was studying were innocuous and important to Uyghur inhabitants.
Her daughter Akida is reporting a change in her family's communication (which is presumably closely monitored by the government) since the phone call.
In "China's little Mecca," the town of Linxia, Gansu, every domed mosque has had its dome(s) removed.
All of these satellite images are from Linxia.
This is part of a government program that has hit cities across China.
Many are replaced with gabled roofs that the government deems more "Chinese," in an official campaign to "Sinicize Islam," part of the current ethno-nationalist effort to assimilate minority cultures and religions.
By request, another numismatic thread. This time instead of coin-making habits transmitted across cultures separated by distance, an example of transmission across cultures in the same place (Yarkand, in today’s Xinjiang / Eastern Turkistan), separated by time.
These three coins look quite different. First is a coin of the (Eastern Chaghatayid) Khanate of Yarkand under Abdullah Khan, 1635-1667. The second is a coin of the Dzungar Mongol, Tsewang Rabdan, 1697-1727, third is of the Manchu Qing empire under Qianlong, minted 1759-1761.
Sometimes conquerors play it safe and mint coins that look like those of the conquered. Genghis Khan did it that way 1207-1227. But the Dzungars (who took control of the Tarim Basin late 17th c.) displayed their power with a radical departure from the money of the conquered.
China’s propaganda push on its mass internment program for Uyghurs and other minorities has been remarkably successful. Thread 1/x
Western media have been widely reproducing Chinese propaganda images from staged, dressed-up internment camps: ordinary classrooms, fence-free spaces, dancing inmates -- often without alternative images for context. But this is what internal Chinese propaganda portrayed before:
Is it feasible for reporters to explain to their photo/graphics people that if they insist on using propaganda images of dressed-up internment camps, they should pair them with more realistic images? 3/x