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Standing at China's west gate in the
eastern part of the Pamirs on the "roof of the
world" is the Taxkorgan Tajik Autonomous County in
Xinjiang, a town built up since 1950s. It is the place where
the ancient Tajik ethnic group has lived generation after
generation. Most of the 26,500 Tajiks live in compact
communities in Taxkorgan, and the rest are scattered over
areas in southern Xinjiang, including Shache, Zepu, Yecheng
and Pishan. The Tajiks in Taxkorgan live alongside Uygurs,
Kirgizs, Xibes and Hans.
Taxkorgan is perched
at the highest part of the Pamirs. The world's second
highest peak, Mount Qogir, towers in the south, and in the
north stands Mount Muztagata, "the father of ice
peaks." In addition, several dozen perennially
snow-capped mountains, 5,000 to 6,000 meters above sea
level, dot the 25,000-square-kilometer county. For
centuries, the Tajiks have been engaged in animal husbandry
and farming by making use of the luxuriant pasturage and
abundant water resources. Every spring, they sow highland
barley, pea, wheat and other cold-resistant crops. They
drive their herds to highland grazing grounds in early
summer, return to harvest the crops in autumn and then spend
winter at home, leading a semi-nomadic
life.
Custom
Over
the centuries, the Tajiks have adapted their dressing,
eating and living habits to the highland conditions. Men
wear collarless long jackets with belts, on top of which
they add sheepskin overcoats in cold weather. They wear tall
lambskin hats lined with black velvet and decorated with
lines of embroidery. The flaps can be turned down to protect
ears and cheeks from wind and snow. Women wear dresses.
Married women wear back aprons, and their embroidered
cotton-padded hats also have back flaps. Women usually tie a
white square towel on top of their hats when they go out,
but brides like red ones. Both men and women wear felt
stockings, long soft sheepskin boots with yak skin soles,
which, light and durable, are suitable for walking mountain
paths. The Tajik herdsmen enjoy butter, sour milk, and other
dairy products, and regard meat as a delicacy. It is a taboo
to eat pork and the flesh of animals which died of natural
causes.
Most Tajik houses are square and
flat-roofed structures of wood and stone with solid and
thick walls of rock and sod. Ceilings, with skylights in the
center for light and ventilation, are built with twigs on
which clay mixed with straw is plastered. Doors, usually at
corners, face east. Since the high plateau is often assailed
by snowstorms, the rooms are spacious but low. Adobe beds
that can be heated are built along the walls and covered
with felt. Senior family members, guests and juniors sleep
on different sides of the same room. When herdsmen graze
their herds in the mountains, they usually live in felt
tents or mud huts.
In most cases, three
generations of a Tajik family live under the same roof. The
male parent is the master of the family. Women have no right
to inherit property and are under the strict control of
their father-in-law and husband. In the past, the Tajiks
seldom had intermarriages with other ethnic groups. Such
marriages, if any, were confined to those with Uygurs and
Kirgizs. Marriages were completely decided by the parents.
Except for siblings, people could marry anyone regardless of
seniority and kinship. Therefore marriages between cousins
were very common. After the young couple was engaged, the
boy's family had to present betrothal gifts such as gold,
silver, animals and clothes to the girl's family. All
relatives and friends were invited to the wedding ceremony.
Accompanied by his friends, the groom went to the bride's
home, where a religious priest presided over the nuptial
ceremony. He first sprayed some flour on the groom and
bride, and then asked them to exchange rings tied with
strips of red and white cloth, eat some meat and pancake
from the same bowl and drink water from the same cup, an
indication that they would from that time on live together
all their lives. The following day, escorted by a band, the
newlyweds rode on horseback to the groom's home, where
further celebrations were held. The festivities would last
three days until the bride removed her
veil.
Childbirth is a major event for the
Tajiks. When a boy is born, three shots will be fired or
three loud cheers shouted to wish him good health and a
promising future; a broom will be placed under the pillow of
a newborn girl in the hope that she will become a good
housewife. Relatives and friends will come to offer
congratulations and spray flour on the baby to express their
auspicious wishes.
The Tajik people pay great
attention to etiquette. Juniors must greet seniors and, when
relatives and friends meet, they will shake hands and the
men will pat each other's beard. Even when strangers meet on
the road, they will greet each by putting the thumbs
together and saying "May I help you?" For
saluting, men will bow with the right hand on the chest and
women will bow with both hands on the bosom. Guests visiting
a Tajik family must not stamp on salt or food, nor drive
through the host's flocks on horseback, or get near to his
sheep pens, or kick his sheep, all of which are considered
to be very impolite. When dining at the host's, the guests
must not drop left-overs on the ground and must remain in
their seats until the table is cleaned. It would be a breach
of etiquette to take off the hat while talking to others,
unless an extremely grave problem is being
discussed.
The Tajik spring festival, which
falls in March, marks the beginning of a new year, which is
the most important occasion for the Tajik people. Every
family will clean up their home and paint beautiful patterns
on the walls as a symbol of good luck for both people and
heads. Early on the morning of the festival, members of the
family will lead a yak into the main room of the house, make
it walk in a circle, spray some flour on it, give it some
pancake and then lead it out. After that, the head of the
village will go around to bring greetings to each household
and wish them a bumper harvest. Then families will exchange
visits and festival greetings. Women in their holiday best,
standing at the door, will spray flour on the left shoulder
of guests to wish them happiness. The beginning of the
Fasting Month marks the end of a year. On this day, every
family will make torches coated with butter. At dusk, the
family members will get together, have a roll call and each
will light a torch. The whole family will sit around the
torches and enjoy their festive dinner after saying their
prayers. At night, every household will light a big torch
tied to a long pole and planted on the roof. Men and women,
young and old, will dance and sing through the night under
the bright light of the torches. The Islamic Corban festival
is another important occasion for the Tajik
people.
As a result of frequent exchanges with
other nationalities, many Tajiks also speak the Uygur and
Kirgiz languages and generally use the Uygur script for
writing.
History
The origin of the Tajik ethnic group can be
traced to tribes speaking eastern Iranian who had settled in
the eastern part of the Pamirs more than twenty centuries
ago. In the 11th century, the nomadic Turkic tribes called
those people "Tajiks" who lived in Central Asia,
spoke Iranian and believed in Islam. That is how
"Tajik" came to be the name of the ethnic group
inhabiting this area. So, the Tajik people who had lived in
various areas of Xinjiang and those who had moved from the
western Pamirs to settle in Taxkorgan at different times
were ancestors of the present-day Tajik ethnic group in
China.
The ancient tomb of Xiang Bao Bao, found
through archaeological excavation in recent years in
Taxkorgan, is a cultural relic ever discovered in the
westernmost part of the country. Many burial objects found
in this 3,000-year-old tomb and funeral rites they revealed
show that the Tajik ethnic group has been a member of the
big family of ethnic groups in China since ancient
times.
In the late 18th century, Tsarist Russia
took advantage of the turmoil in southern Xinjiang to occupy
Ili and intensified its scheme to take control the Pamirs of
China by repeatedly sending in "expeditions" to
pave the way for armed expansion there. In 1895, Britain and
Russia made a private deal to dismember the Pamirs and
attempted to capture Puli. Together with the garrison
troops, the Tajik people defended the border and fought for
the territorial integrity of the country. At the same time,
Tajik herdsmen volunteered to move to areas south of Puli,
where they settled for land reclamation and animal husbandry
while guarding the
frontiers.
Social System Before
1949
The Tajik people were mainly engaged in
animal husbandry and farming, but productivity was very low,
unable to provide enough animal by-products in exchange for
grain, tea, cloth and other necessities. The economic
polarization resulting from heavy feudal oppression was best
illustrated by the distribution of the means of production.
The majority of the Tajik herdsmen owned very small herds,
so that they were unable to maintain even the lowest
standard of living, and still others had none at all. A
small number of rich herdsmen not only owned numerous yaks,
camels, horses and sheep, but held by force vast tracts of
pasturage and fertile farmland.
In the Tajik
areas, the chief means of exploitation used by rich herd
owners was hiring laborers, who received only one sheep and
one lamb as pay for tending 100 sheep over a period of six
months. The pay for tending 200 sheep for the herd owner for
one year was just the wool and milk from 20 ewes. Herd
owners also extorted free service from poor herdsmen through
the tradition of "mutual assistance within the
clan."
Tajik peasants in Shache, Zepu,
Yecheng and other farming areas were cruelly exploited by
the landlords. In those areas, "gang farming" was
a major way of exploitation. Besides paying rent in kind
that took up two-thirds of their total output, tenants had
to work without pay on plots managed by the landlords
themselves every year, and even the peasants' wives and
daughters had to work for the landlords. There was
practically no difference between tenants and serfs except
that the former had a bit of personal
freedom.
There were all kinds of taxes and
levies in both pastoral and rural areas. Especially during
the 1947-1949 period, the Tajik herdsmen in Taxkorgan were
forced to hand in more than 3,000 sheep and 500 tons of
forage and firewood a year to the reactionary government.
Poverty-stricken under heavy exploitation, the Tajik people
were unable to make a decent living, and widespread diseases
reduced their population to just about 7,000 when Xinjiang
was liberated in December
1949.
Development after
1950
In 1954, the Taxkorgan Tajik Autonomous
County was founded on the basis of the former Puli County
where the Tajik ethnic group lived in compact communities.
At the time
of China’s national liberation in 1949, Taxkorgan had
only 27,000 animals, two per capita of the total population
in the county; total grain output was 850 tons, 55 kg per
capita. Since 1959, the county has been self-sufficient in
grain and fodder and able to deliver a large number of
animals and quantities of furs and wool to the state each
year. Several hundred hectares of new pasture and grassland
have been added in recent years. There was no factory or
workshop in Taxkorgan before 1949, and even horseshoes had
to come from other places. Now more than 10 small factories
and handicraft workshops have been built, such as farm and
animal husbandry machine factories, hydroelectric power
stations and fur processing mills. Mechanization of farming
and animal husbandry has expanded. Veterinary stations have
been built in most communities. Tajiks have been trained as
veterinarians and agro-technicians. Tractors are being used
in more than half of the land in the county. One breed of
sheep developed by the Tajik herdsmen is among the best in
Xinjiang.
Taxkorgan was a backward,
out-of-the-way area before 1949, when it would take a
fortnight by riding a camel or a week on horseback to reach
Kashi, the biggest city in southern Xinjiang. In 1958, the
Kashi-Taxkorgan Highway was completed, shortening the trip
between the two places to one day.
In the town
of Taxkorgan, the county seat, which is perched right on top
of the Pamirs, wide streets link shops, the hospital,
schools, the post office, bank, bookstore, meteorological
station and other new buildings in traditional architectural
style and factories under construction. Great changes have
also taken place in many mountain hamlets, where shops and
clinics have been built. The herdsmen and peasants are
enjoying good health with the improvement of living
conditions and medical care. Since 1959, schools have been
set up in all villages, and roaming tent schools have been
run for herdsmen's children. Many young Tajiks have been
trained as workers, technicians, doctors and
teachers.
The Tajik people's living standards
have improved considerably with the steady growth of the
local economy. A growing number of herdsman households have
bought radios and TV sets.
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