COMMUNIST CHINA'S POLICY OF OPPRESSION IN EAST TURKESTAN
Автор: Harun Yahya ()
Дата публикации: 06/01/2004
Категория: Уйгуры
Версия для печати
EAST
TURKESTAN: A CROSSROAD OF CIVILIZATIONS
The 2,200 years of Turkestan history
have played host to some of the most important civilizations in the world. The
area is a wide expanse of territory, stretching from the Caspian Sea and the
southern part of the Ural Mountains in the west, Siberia in the north, Iran,
Afghanistan and Tibet in the south, and China and Mongolia to the east.
Today, the part of Turkestan that
includes Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan is
known as West Turkestan, and the area that has been under Chinese captivity
for the last two centuries is known as East Turkestan. The geographical and
strategic importance of Turkestan is obvious from the great interest shown in
the area by Russia and China, the two regional superpowers. Russia and China
have both played very important roles in Turkestan history, which is why it
is divided into two parts today.
Behind those two countries' refusal
to give the region up, no matter what cost, is its strategic position and its
rich underground resources. For Russia, the Turkish states in the west, and
for China, East Turkestan, are important reserves of raw materials.
Following the Bolshevik Revolution,
Russia set up a powerful control mechanism in West Turkestan where states consisting
of different Turkish tribes were set up. The area was given the name "Soviet
Central Asia," in place of the name Turkestan by which the land had been
known for hundreds of years.
The intention was to do away with
the Turks' shared national consciousness. The most important element of Russia's
policy in the region was to eliminate Islam entirely. Throughout this period,
a number of sanctions were employed in an attempt to destroy the Turks' national
cultures; mosques and places offering religious instruction were closed down
and religion was entirely divorced from social life. Crimean Turks were rounded
up and exiled to Siberia in the course of a single night, and Russians were
brought in to occupy their homes and lands. Furthermore, artificial ethnic conflicts
were incited between the nations of Central Asia. Another of the Soviet regime's
measures aimed at assimilating the Turks was to develop a second language alongside
the mother tongues of the Muslims of the Caucasus and Central Asia. It is for
this reason that Russian is now preferred to Turkish as a means of communication
between the communities in question.
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"Mankind! We created you from a male and female, and made you
into peoples and tribes so that you might come to know each other. The
noblest among you in God's sight is the best in conduct. God is
All-Knowing, All-Aware."
(Qur'an, 49:13)
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East Turkestan suffered similar
oppression to that experienced in West Turkestan, but in an even more violent
form. In the middle of the 1700s, East Turkestan was invaded by the Chinese.
The political changes that occurred in the region (and the world as a whole)
prevented the desire of the people of East Turkestan for independence from
being translated into reality. China-a country with a total land area of some
10 million square kilometers-tried to exterminate the people of East Turkestan
(also a giant nation of 2 million square kilometers) by its policies of oppression
and isolation.
Just like the Russians in West Turkestan, the Chinese also changed the region's
name. The new name they used was the "Uighur Autonomous Region of Sinkiang."
They then began to implement the same kinds of policies used by other imperialist
nations. A ruthless war was waged against the local people's beliefs, customs,
and religious practices. Ethnic discrimination became rife, demands for independence
were ferociously suppressed, defenseless people were exiled from their land,
and Chinese settlers were brought in to replace them. The brutality known
as "Chinese torture" and cruelty soon became reality.
Before going into the details of
the oppression, (of which most people are very unaware), we will review East
Turkestan's historical, geo-strategic and geo-political position.
EAST
TURKESTAN: THE CRADLE OF TURKISH-ISLAMIC CIVILIZATION
The history of the lands of Turkestan
goes back to the third century B.C. (the Gokturk and Hun period). The area
has been the Turkish homeland since very early in history, and Islamic territory
for a thousand years. Although no state or khanate bearing the name of Turkestan
was ever established, the area in question, which makes up a large part of
Central Asia, has always been called by that name because it has been a Turkish
settlement area since very ancient times. Researchers describe East Turkestan
in particular as one of the first centers of civilization and, as an area
where, due to its geo-strategic position, Western and Eastern cultures intermingled.
These lands, which have been home
to great empires all through history, became an indispensable part of the
Islamic world after the Turks converted to Islam during the reign of Caliph
Abd al-malik Marwan (b. 646/647-d. 705). The years between 751-1216 A.D. in
particular, after Satuk Bughra Khan (---/d. 955-6) had accepted Islam, are
known as the golden age of East Turkestan. Throughout that period, students
from all over the world came to study at the renowned religious schools and
educational institutions of Turkestan. Statesmen and scientists who would
help shape the world were also trained there. The Turks who migrated from
the region to all corners of the world carried Islam with them to many different
countries.
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Prominent Islamic scholars such as Ibn Sina (above), Mahmud
al-Kashgari (side) and Farabi (large picture) were just a few of the
important figures to emerge from Turkestan.
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The Qarakhan, Ghazna, Khwarezm-Shah,
Seljuq and Saidi tribes that were born in Turkestan set up states under the
banner of Islam and provided outstanding examples of Turkish-Islamic culture,
thus rendering a great service to human kind. Prominent statesmen such as Satuk
Bughra Khan (---/d. 955-956), Seljuq Bey (---/d. 1007), Mahmud Ghaznavi (b.
998-d. 1030), Malik Shah (b. 1055-d. 1092), Timur
(b. 1336-d. 1405), and Babur Shah (b. 1483-d. 1530) were among the great figures
who emerged from those lands. Imam Bukhari, Imam Tirmidhi, Ibn Sina (Avicenna),
Abu Nasr al-Farabi (Avennasar), Narshaki, Zamakhshari and Marginani, who enriched
the libraries of Islam with their works, were among the great thinkers who forged
the way for other scientists of the world. Furthermore, Makhmud al-Kashgari,
author of the Diwan Lughat at-Turk,
Yusuf Khass Khadjib, author of the Kutadgu Bilig,
and Ahmad Yuknaki, the writer of the great Atabet'ul Haqayiq, also lived in
Turkestan, the cradle of Turkish-Islamic civilization. Scholars such as these,
of whom we have cited only a few, are sufficient to demonstrate the importance
of East Turkestan to the Turkish and Islamic worlds.
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Works such as the Kutadgu Bilig and the Atabet'ul Haqayiq are
considered as important to world history as they are to that of the
Turkish-Islamic world.
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EAST
TURKESTAN IS NOT PART OF CHINA
One of the claims made by China
in order to conceal its human rights violations and repression in East Turkestan
is that the area "forms part of Chinese territory," for which reason
events in East Turkestan "need to be considered a domestic Chinese affair."
However, historical sources disprove that claim. First and foremost is the Great
Wall of China, built by the Chinese to prevent attacks on them by other nations.
This was the first time that China had put up an official border between itself
and the peoples living around it. East Turkestan falls outside that border.5 Moreover,
many sources describe the Jade Gate (so called because of the many jade stones
found there), as being at China's westernmost border. One of these sources that
describes the gate as opening into East Turkestan is actually a Chinese book,
the New China Atlas, published
in Shanghai in 1939.6
The region between the Great Wall
of China and the Caspian Sea, Siberia and Iran, and the borders of Afghanistan,
Pakistan, Kashmir and Tibet has been known as Turkestan in not only the earliest
Islamic records, but also in old Iranian and Indian accounts. This is also accepted
by a great many Western historians. Nikita Bichurin, one of the earliest known
Turcologists, has supported that historical truth in these terms: "A nation lives between the Caspian Sea
and the Koh-i Nur Mountains. They speak Turkish and believe in Islam. They introduce
themselves as Turkish and describe their country as Turkestan."7 Because these lands were given the name of
"Xinjiang"
or "Sinkiang"
(meaning "new borders") following their occupation by China does not
change that historical reality.
Over the 2,000 or so years, between
206 B.C. and 1759 A.D., East Turkestan was able to maintain its independence
for more than 1,800 years. During the periods when it was linked to the Turkish
Hun and Gokturk khanates, local administration lay entirely in the hands of
the people of East Turkestan. Between 751 and 1216 it was totally independent.
During those periods China periodically occupied East Turkestan in order to
win control of the Silk Road. Yet these occupations were always short-lived,
and China was never able to establish hegemony over East Turkestan in the true
sense of the word. In the 2,200-year history of East Turkestan, (if we take
into account the occupation that started in 1934 and which is still continuing
today) a little more than 570 years have been spent under Chinese occupation.8
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No
matter how much the communist Chinese regime claims that East Turkestan
forms part of its own territory, the fact that it lies beyond the
Great Wall of China, which is accepted as forming that country's
natural border, is just one factor that undermines this claim.
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There are also geographic facts
that disprove the claim that East Turkestan is part of China. The make-up of
the population of East Turkestan (its language, religion, ethnic origins, plus
its national and spiritual heritage) all reveal a picture of total independence
from China. Panku, the great historian of the Han Dynasty (206 B.C. -- 220 A.D.),
expresses this fact:
As for clothing, costume, food and
language, the barbarians [Uighurs] are entirely different from the Middle Kingdom…
Mountains, valleys and the great desert separate them from us.9
That difference was preserved throughout
history. Neither was there any assimilation, even during the periods under Chinese
occupation. Today, 54 percent of East Turkestan's estimated population of 17
million are Muslims, including 47 percent of the Uighurs and 7 percent of the
Kazakhs. (This figure is from statistics issued by China in 1997, and is not
accepted as reliable by international organizations because of China's biased
attitude toward this issue). The Uighurs, who make up a large part of the Muslim
population, bear no ethnic, religious or linguistic similarity to the Chinese.
The Uighur alphabet consists of Arabic letters, they are all Muslim, and they
have been living by Turkish customs and beliefs for more than 1,000 years.
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Throughout history, the Silk Road that passed
through East Turkestan played an important role in the Chinese
economy. Behind present-day China's wish to maintain its rule
over East Turkestan lies the strategic importance of the area.
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ll of these historical, geographical
and sociological facts make it clear that East Turkestan is not part of China,
but rather a separate region that China has sought to assimilate. Even under
the harshest and most difficult conditions, the people of East Turkestan never
accepted Chinese rule, and frequently sought to regain their independence, at
times even resorting to armed struggle. For example, when East Turkestan fell
under Manchu rule between 1759 and 1862, the Muslim people rose up and rebelled
against the Chinese more than 40 times.
Why is China so determined to maintain
its position on East Turkestan in the face of all the facts? This should be
discussed before turning to the long years of Chinese oppression.
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One factor that totally undermines the claim that
East Turkestan is part of China is that the Uighur Turks' language, religion,
customs, way of life and culture are completely different from those of
the Chinese.
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Periods of East
Turkestan Independence
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The First Period
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The period up to 206 B.C.
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The Second Period
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Local Administration under the Turkish Hun Khanate, 206-108 B.C.
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The Third Period
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Local Administration under
the Turkish Hun Khanate 86-60 B.C.
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The Fourth Period
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Local Administration Under the Turkish Hun Khanate, 10 B.C.-73 A.D.
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The Fifth Period
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Complete Independence, 74-554
A.D.
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The Sixth period
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Local Administration Under the Gokturk Khanate, 555-639 A.D.
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The Seventh period
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Local Administration Under the Gokturk Khanate, 650-660 A.D.
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The Eighth Period
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Local Administration under the Turgis Turkish Khanate, 699-738 A.D.
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The Ninth Period
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Complete Independence,
751-1216 A.D.
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The Tenth Period
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Local Administration Under the Mughal Empire, 1217-1351 A.D.
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The Eleventh Period
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Complete Independence,
1351-1678 A.D.
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The Twelfth Period
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Local Administration Under
the Kalmuck state, 1679-1752 A.D.
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The Thirteenth Period
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Complete Independence,
1756-1759
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Periods of Chinese Occupation
of East Turkestan
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The First Period
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108-86 B.C., Limited to the South of the Country
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The Second Period
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60-10 B.C., Limited to the South of the Country
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The Third Period
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74-103 A.D., Limited to the South of the Country
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The Fourth Period
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640-649 A.D., All of the Country
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The Fifth Period
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660-699 A.D., All of the Country
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The Sixth Period
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738-751 A.D., All of the Country and Part of West Turkestan
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The Seventh Period
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1753-1756, All of the Country
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The Eighth Period
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1759-1861, All of the Country
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The Ninth period
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1879-1931, All of the Country
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The
Tenth Period
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1934-Today.
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WHY
DOES CHINA REFUSE TO GIVE EAST TURKESTAN UP?
A basic knowledge of geography makes
it easy to understand the Chinese view on East Turkestan. Two important obstacles
to communications exist between China and the West: the first is the 5,000-kilometer
Taklamakan Desert, and the second is the Great Wall of China that stretches
along the entire length of the China border.
East Turkestan is the only Chinese
territory beyond the desert and the Great Wall, thus making it China's window
to the West. The political effect of its location (and its geographical and
strategic advantages) make East Turkestan indispensable to China. That is one
reason why, instead of withdrawing from East Turkestan, China is trying to impose
their occupation on the local population by means of force and violence. On
the one hand, it takes away the peoples' freedoms, including those of receiving
news and communications, by closing East Turkestan off and keeping the region
as far from the world's awareness as possible.
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East Turkestan is known as the
Kuwait of the twenty-first century, because it possesses rich underground
mineral reserves. This fact makes the region indispensable for China.
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These lands, which form the westernmost
point of Chinese territory, were used by the Chinese as a buffer zone against
the Soviet threat during the Cold War. These lands are thus of great interest
to China for its own security and that of the other countries in the region.
Even if Russia no longer poses a threat to China, China still maintains its
land and air forces in the region, and also keeps a large part of its nuclear
arsenal there. Another important reason for the continuing presence of China's
forces in East Turkestan is to maintain the necessary control over the local
Muslim population.
However, geo-strategic concerns
are not the only reason for China's interest in controlling East Turkestan.
As noted, the region also possesses considerable natural resources, and the
land is very productive. East Turkestan, known as the Kuwait of the twenty-first
century, is of particular interest for its oil, natural gas, uranium, coal,
gold and silver mines, and is one of China's most important sources of these
resources. Authorities on the subject say that by 2005 East Turkestan will be
China's second most important center of oil and natural gas production. The
Tarim Basin in the middle of East Turkestan in particular is thought to have
considerable petrol reserves. That basin is therefore known as the "Sea
of Hope," and is estimated to have potential oil reserves of more than
10.7 billion tons.10 Research carried out by geologists
has revealed a 300-million tons of oil and a 220-billion cubic-meters of natural
gas capacity.11
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The oil reserves in the Taklamakan Desert within
the borders of East Turkestan are some of the richest in the world.
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China's dependence on East Turkestan
for energy is not restricted to the oil beds in the Tarim Basin. East Turkestan
will also be the natural route for any pipeline from the Central Asian Turkish
states, which will in turn be of vital importance to Chinese industry. The best
way for China to insure its transportation system is effective and secure is
to keep East Turkestan under its control.
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All of East Turkestan's underground
resources are exploited by China. The Muslim people are unable
to enjoy their share of the revenues from them.
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The region's rich natural gas,
coal, and copper deposits also make it indispensable for the Chinese economy.
Of the 148 different minerals extracted in all of Red China, 118 come from
East Turkestan (this is 85 percent of China's mineral production). Among
these, coal, with its high quality and energy content, is especially
important. The coal reserves in East Turkestan are estimated at some 2
trillion tons, half of China's total coal reserves. One study at the end of
2000 revealed that China's richest copper mines were in East Turkestan. It is
a known fact that China's other regions possess little copper, and that which
exists is insufficient to meet the country's needs. The rich copper deposits
in East Turkestan make the region even more important in Chinese eyes.12
Alongside these mines, the fact
that East Turkestan is one of China's largest producers of cotton is another
reason why China regards the area as important. The Red Chinese
administration is unwilling to hand over the production of cotton, the raw
material of the Chinese textile industry, to the Muslim Uighurs, and
constantly develops new strategies to maintain control over the region. The
aim behind these strategies, which we shall be examining in detail in later
chapters, is not to allow East Turkestan to develop, but to make it dependent
on Beijing.
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East Turkestan's gold, oil and other minerals are transferred to
China, and the use of these natural resources is totally under the control
of the communist Chinese government.
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RED CHINA'S FEAR OF ISLAM
In the preceding section we saw
how East Turkestan is of great strategic and economic importance for China.
Yet the frequent arrests of devout Muslims in East Turkestan, not allowing
them to live in accordance with their religion, and the pressure put on their
religious leaders, make it clear that there is more to their policy of oppression.
First and foremost, it means that Red China is greatly concerned by the presence
of Islam in East Turkestan.
Although the roots of the Chinese
attacks on Islam and Muslims go far back in history, these policies were changed
into a systematic policy of oppression, and even genocide, with the establishment
of the communist regime. When Mao founded the People's Republic of China in
1949, all manifestations of Islam were made targets. This hostility towards
Islam began with the closure of mosques, religious schools and other institutions
providing religious education. The situation worsened after portraits of Chairman
Mao were hung in the now empty places of worship (and Muslims were forced
to show their respect for such images). Some 29,000 mosques were closed during
that period.13 The following
stage consisted of the arrest of religious leaders on groundless and baseless
charges and accusations. Some of these were condemned to death, and more than
54,000 religious figures were condemned to work in the most terrible conditions
in Chinese labor camps.14
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Radikal, 24.4.01, As their sources of wealth such as
oil, gold and uranium are plundered by Beijing, the Uighurs are also
imprisoned in their own land. Unemployment and low levels of education are
rife. Eighty percent of the population live below the poverty line. Tiny
Uighur babies can at least look to the future with hope if their families
have fled abroad, to such places as Turkey.
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Throughout that period, physical
and mental torture was inflicted on men of faith. Some Muslims were rounded
up into public squares and made to confess the so-called "divinity"
of Chairman Mao. The people were forced to carry out practices in flagrant violation
of Islamic ideas, such as cremation of the dead. The closed mosques were used
as military depots and barracks, or as places of entertainment (such as theatres
and cinemas). All forms of public worship, including Friday and other prayers,
were prohibited and heavy taxes were imposed on those Muslims who continued
to pray in the few remaining mosques. The communist administration confiscated
the alms given for the maintenance and restoration of the mosques and all the
property belonging to religious leaders. Studying and teaching the Qur'an were
completely banned. Religious works were seized from peoples' homes. Writings
in Arabic were burned, including a large number of historical handwritten texts.15
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With Mao's seizure of power, the oppression of the people of East
Turkestan has turned into a systematic campaign of genocide. Mao forced the
Muslim people to conform to communist ideology. One of the first steps to
achieving this is the way that mosques and masjids all over East Turkestan
were covered with portraits of Mao.
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Modern Chinese oppression of the
Muslims in East Turkestan is felt most heavily in the field of religion. As
in all communist regimes, hostility to religion is part of the official state
policy of Red China. A document called "The Basic Viewpoint and
Policy on [the] Religious Question During Our Country's Socialist Period,"
circulated internally through party channels throughout China in 1982 by the
Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party, openly states that fact:
In human history, religion will
ultimately disappear... All religious organizations in China will bow their
heads to the leadership of the party and the government … The true aim
of religious schools is to produce professional religious officials who support
the party administration and the socialist system … These religious officials
must remain loyal to the party's policy on religion … The fundamental
purpose of religious bodies is to play an important role in spreading the country's
political influence.16
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One of the important indications of the communist regime's hostility
to religion is the way that many mosques have been closed down and used for
storage since the earliest days of the regime. The picture to the side
shows a ruined mosque in Hotan.
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A speech by Ali Jing Jiang, a
member of the People's Republic of China Islamic Community, at the 5th
meeting of the Islamic Society of North America in the USA on September 1,
1986, shows just how fully the Red Chinese administration has put into effect
the decisions set out in that declaration. In his speech, Ali Jing Jiang
stated that in China it is legally forbidden to give any religious education,
either at home or at school, to minors under the age of 18. Although some
religious schools have been opened as the result of pressure from Islamic
countries, there are more Marxist, Leninist and Maoist ideas taught in them
than Islam. Jiang expressed that all the teachers in such schools are
communists and atheists and young people are being raised with no knowledge
of religion. In other schools, he said, religion is taught as if it were
something that needed to be forgotten, a primitive belief belonging to the
lowest levels of Chinese society. That situation has rapidly begun to
distance young people from religious belief. He also added that the
government keeps a tight rein on Muslims' activities and that the communists
are using Islam merely as a tool with which to improve relations with Muslim
nations.17
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Yeni Asya
1.2.01
WORSHIP IS FORBIDDEN
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CRUELTY AIMED AT MOSQUES IN CHINA,
Türkiye,
29.6.97
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THEY HAD US FEED
PIGS IN THE MOSQUES!...
The Chinese cruelty in
East Turkestan is never ending. Chinese officials often halt the construction
and repair of mosques, ban Muslims from engaging in communal worship,
and force them to carry out practices in flagrant violation of Islamic
ideas.
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The anti-religious pronunciations
of the Chinese Communist Party are not new. The Qur'an reveals that the deniers
who opposed the Prophet Noah, peace be upon him, attempted to belittle the believers
with the words, "…We do not see you as anything but
a human being like ourselves. We do not see anyone following you but
the lowest of us, unthinkingly…" (Qur'an, 11:27). In another
verse, God describes how deniers believe themselves to be terribly clever:
When
they are told, "Believe in the way that the people believe," they
say, "What! Are we to believe in the way that fools believe?" No indeed!
They are the fools, but they do not know it. (Qur'an, 2:13)
The Chinese Communist Party's attempts
to portray religious devotion as "a primitive belief belonging to the very
lowest levels of Chinese society," is an example of this foolishness.
While the Communist Party uses such
propaganda methods, it also at the same time steps up its oppression of Muslims.
Following the initiatives demanding independence in the 1990s, (the Baren uprising,
the Gulja uprising) the oppression of Muslims was stepped up even further. The
way these uprisings spread to the whole of East Turkestan, and the fact that
Turks in public posts also supported the demands for independence, greatly alarmed
Red China. It initiated another ruthless campaign against those Muslims who
had backed independence movements. Hundreds of thousands of people were detained,
thousands executed and tens of thousands were sent to labor camps. Michael Winchester,
one of the rare journalists able to enter the region and send out a secret report
about the oppression of Muslims, had this to say in an article titled "Inside Story
China: Beijing vs. Islam":
Since then they have closed down
unregistered mosques; forbidden the use of loud-speakers outside registered
ones; banned Quranic classes for children and youths; prohibited foreign money
for religious purposes; tightened exit requirements; imposed an age restriction
on haj pilgrims; outlawed unauthorized religious publications; and cracked down
on Communist party members visiting mosques.18
One Turkestan resident interviewed
by Winchester (who refused to give his real name) said that since he worked
in a state office he was never able to go to the mosque, and that he would be
sacked if he were to be seen doing so. The reason was the increased Chinese
hostility to Islam which began at the end of the 1980s. A 1997 article in the
official East Turkestan newspaper, the Xinjiang Daily,
set out what party members' view of religion should be:
Those party members firmly believe
in religion and who refuse to change their ways after education should be given
a certain period to make corrections, be persuaded to withdraw from the party
or dismissed from the party according to the seriousness of their case. In recent
years, 98 religious party members have been dealt with.19
In East Turkestan, those who are
caught praying or studying the Qur'an are punished, particularly if they are
aged under 18, because Chinese law explicitly prohibits minors from studying
the Qur'an. In 1999, for example, five 12-year-olds were arrested for
reading the Qur'an. When one of them fled from the police station,
his family were arrested and tortured by the police (and told that they would
not be released until he gave himself up).20 That incident
is just one of the many frequently encountered in East Turkestan. Thousands
of people have been detained and tortured simply for living in accordance with
their religion, or for teaching other people who want to do so. The accusations
made against religious figures who have been detained are particularly noteworthy.
For instance, on October 28, 1999, Memet Eli, the imam of the Oybagh Mosque
in Hotan, was arrested and heavily fined for teaching religion contrary to the
Communist Party policy. This is how his "crimes" were set out in the
indictment:
During his duty as an Imam,
Memet Ali did not study, teach and implement Communist Party's regulations on
religion. He pretended he did not see the instructions of department
of religious supervision. When related departments organized study and educational
activities for religious personals, he did not attend… He allowed people with
unclear identity to stay at the Mosque…21
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The Chinese Communist
Party banned the teaching of the Qur'an.
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Other articles, as well as "failure
to give instruction in communist teachings" (under which six other imams
in Hotan were arrested on similar pretexts) are striking examples of the oppression
faced by Muslims in Red China:
They said in their prayers: "God
rescue your Muslim believers from the oppression of atheists." They did
not stop people when they came to pray from other neighborhoods. They exceeded
the 20 minutes time limit for Friday prayer and teachings. They failed to inform
the authorities of people who came to get religious education."22
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Mao's Hatred of
ReIigion
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Like
other communist dictators, Mao also claimed divinity for himself,
and that twisted belief was stressed in posters of him.
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Like other communist dictators, Mao also denied the existence of God
and tried to prevent the people from believing in Him. He had terrible
tortures inflicted on many who believed in God, wanted to live by his
will or tried to defend his beliefs, and resorted to all kinds of oppression
in an effort to turn people away from God. Another side to Mao is the
way that he presented himself to the Chinese people as a divine being.
This common feature of atheist dictators was revealed in the Qur'an.
The verses describe
Pharaoh as saying, "…Council, I do not know of any other god for you apart from me…"
(Qur'an, 28:38) The painful end of the people who grew so arrogant and saw themselves
as gods has also been revealed in the Qur'an:
We brought the tribe of Israel across the sea and
Pharaoh and his troops pursued them out of tyranny and enmity. Then, when
he was on the point of drowning, he said, "I believe that there is
no god but Him in whom the tribe of Israel believe. I am one of the Muslims."
What, now! When previously you rebelled and were one of the corrupters?
Today we will preserve your body so you can be a Sign for people who come
after you. Surely many people are heedless of Our Signs. (Qur'an,
10: 90-92)
|
5. Owen Lattimore,
Studies in Frontier History, London, 1962, p. 59
6. New China Atlas, Shanghai, 1939, p. 51. Also see Herman Albert, Historical
and Commercial Atlas of China, Harvard University Press, 1935
7. Opisanie Cuntariy I vostoçnogo Turkestan v drevhem I nineþnem
sostaynaniy, Prevedono s Kitaykogo, Petersburg, 1829, Vol I, pp. 10-11, cited
in Alaeddin Yalcinkaya, Somurgecilik ve Panislamizm Isiginda Turkestan (Turkestan
In the Light of Imperialism and Panislamism), Timas Yayinlari, 1997, Istanbul,
p. 28
8. Isa Yusuf Alptekin, Unutulan Vatan Dogu Turkistan (The Forgotten Land East
Turkestan), Seha Yayincilik, Istanbul, 1999, p. 91
9. Pan Ku, The Account of Hsing-nu, Han-Shu, 91, Sect. 2 p. 32 a-b
10. China Daily, April 26, 1999
11. China Daily, January 4, 1999
12. "China's Largest Copper Reserve Found in Xinjiang," www.uyghuramerican.org/economy/chinaonlineoct62000.html
13. The Los Angeles Times, December 1, 1983
14. The Los Angeles Times, December 1, 1983
15. Yusuf Han, Sotsiyalistik Kazakhstan, Almaty, January 14, 1976, cited in
"Chinese Policy, Human Rights Abuses and The Consequences," East Turkestan
Information, A Publication of the Eastern Turkestan Union in Europe, www.caccp.org/et/etiu1.html
16. The People's Republic of China: Document 19: The Basic Viewpoint on the
Religious Question During Our Country's Socialist Period: Issued by the Central
Committee of the Chinese Communist Party on 31 March 1982
17. Radio Free Europe/RL, 01.09.1986
18. Michael Winchester, "Inside Story China: Beijing vs. Islam," Asiaweek,
October 24, 1997
19. Amnesty International Report, April 4, 1999
20. "Uyghur Boys Were Arrested, Parents Were Tortured," East Turkestan
Information Center, October 30, 1999
21. "Imam Was Punished For Refusing to Teach Communist Doctrines in Mosque,"
East Turkestan Information Center, November 19, 1999 (emphasis added)
22. "Islam Treated Same As Falun Gong," East Turkestan Information
Center, November 19, 1999
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