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Past Socio-economic Conditions
There
have been different theories put forward on the origin of
the Salars. The prevalent view held at the moment is that
the ancestors of the Salars came from the region of
Samarkand in Central Asia during the Yuan Dynasty
(1271-1368).
Xunhua County, which the largest
group of the Salars live, is a mountainous area situated
along the banks of the Yellow River in southeastern Qinghai
Province. Although it has a mild climate and fertile land
crisscrossed by canals, it is handicapped by insufficient
rainfall. Before China’s national liberation in 1949,
farmers here did not have the capability of harnessing the
Yellow River, and the county was often referred to as
"arid Xunhua." The Salars are mainly farmers,
going in for such crops as wheat, Tibetan barley, buckwheat
and potatoes. As sideline occupations, they engage in stock
breeding, lumbering, salt-producing and
wool-weaving.
During the Yuan Dynasty, a Salar
headman bearing the surname of Han was made hereditary chief
of this ethnic minority. With the rise of the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644), he submitted to the new rulers and continued to
hold his position. He had under him a basic bureaucracy
which looked after such things as military affairs,
punishments, revenue and provisions. Following the
development of the economy and the expansion of the
population, the region inhabited by the Salars was divided
into two administrative areas, i.e. the "inner eight
gongs" of Xunhua and the "outer five gongs"
of Hualong, during the early period of the Qing Dynasty
(1644-1911). A "gong" included a number of
villages, equivalent to the later administrative unit of
"xiang" (township).
New
organizational setups were introduced during the following
years of the Qian Dynasty to step up the control and
exploitation of the Salars. During both the Ming and Qing
periods Salar men were constantly subjected to conscription,
which was an extremely heavy burden on the Salar
people.
As the Salars were devout Muslims, the
villages were dominated by the mosques and the Muslim
clergy. Along with the development of the feudal economy,
land became concentrated in the hands of the ruling minority
-- the headman, community chiefs and
imams.
Prior to the founding of the
People’s Republic of China in 1949, the landlord
economy was dominant. Relying on their political power, and
feudal and religious privileges, the Salar landlords
maintained ownership over most of the land and farm animals,
as well as water sources and oil mills. Most of the Salar
farmers, on the other hand, were either landless or owned
only a very insignificant portion of barren land. They were
subjected to crippling land rents and usury, in addition to
all kinds of heavy unpaid labor services including building
houses, felling trees and doing transportation work for the
landlords. As a result, at times there were large-scale
exoduses of Salars from their villages, leaving the
farmlands lying waste and production at a
standstill.
Culture
The language
of the Salars, which belongs to the Tujue (Turkic) branch of
the Altaic language family, is almost identical with the
languages of the Uygurs and Ozbeks, with whom they share the
same religion. It contains quite a number of words taken
from the Chinese and Tibetan languages as a result of long
years of mutual contacts. Nowadays, most young and
middle-aged Salars know how to speak Chinese, which is also
accepted as the written language of the Salar ethnic
group.
The Salar people have a rich and
colorful tradition of folklore. Many of the legends, stories
and fairy tales sing the praises of the courage and wisdom
of the laboring people, and lament the hard lives of the
Salar women in the past, as well as their struggle against
feudal oppression. The typical folk tune genre is the
"Hua'er (flower)," a kind of folksong sung
sonorously and unrestrainedly in the Chinese language.
However, in most cases it is presented with a sweet,
trilling tone due to the influence of Tibetan folk songs.
The singers are all able to fill in impromptu words
according to whatever happens to strike a chord in their
hearts. Significant reforms have been introduced to this
form of art since 1949. The Salars now sing to express their
rejoicing over their new life. Amateur theatrical troupes,
and song and dance groups are flourishing among the Salar
people.
Customs
Deeply influenced
by Islam, the customs and habits as practiced among the
Salars are roughly the same as those of the Huis that live
nearby. Women like to wear kerchiefs on their heads and
black sleeveless jackets over clothes in striking red
colors. They are good at embroidery and often stitch flowers
in five different colors onto their pillowcases, shoes and
socks. Men wear flat-topped brimless hats of either black or
white colors, and wear sheepskin coats without linings and
woolen clothing in winter. Young men living along the banks
of the Yellow River love to swim. Some of the customs and
habits of the Salars have changed over the years as a result
of social and economic development. Polygamy, for instance,
has been abolished, and cases of child marriage have been
greatly reduced. The extravagant practice of slaughtering
cattle in large numbers for weddings, funerals and festivals
has been changed.
Women of the Salar ethnic
minority in the past suffered tremendously under religious
strictures and feudal ethics. Unmarried girls were not
allowed to appear in public, while married women had to hide
their faces in front of strange men. They had to turn their
faces sideways when answering an inquiry and make a detour
should they meet a strange man coming their way. But, in
recent decades, Salar women have broken away from such
practices and the traditional concept of men being superior
to women is slowly disappearing. Salar women are now taking
an active part in all local production endeavors.
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