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The Kazak ethnic minority, with a population of over
a million, mainly lives in the Ili Kazak Autonomous
Prefecture, Mori Kazak Autonomous County and Barkol Kazak
Autonomous County in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
Some are also located in the Haixi Mongolian, Tibetan and
Kazak Autonomous Prefecture in Qinghai Province and the
Aksay Kazak Autonomous County in Gansu
Province.
The Kazak language belongs to the
Turkic branch of the Altaic language family. As the Kazaks
live in mixed communities with the Hans, Uygurs and
Mongolians, the Kazaks have assimilated many words from
these languages. They had a written language based on the
Arabic alphabet, which is still in use, but a new Latinized
written form was evolved after the founding of the
People’s Republic of
China.
Ethnic Identity
Except for a few settled farmers, most of the
Kazaks live by animal husbandry. They migrate to look for
pasturage as the seasons change. In spring, summer and
autumn, they live in collapsible round yurts and in winter
build flat-roofed earthen huts in the pastures. In the yurt,
living and storage spaces are separated. The yurt door
usually opens to the east, the two flanks are for sleeping
berths and the center is for storing goods and saddles; in
front are placed cushions for visitors. Riding and hunting
gear, cooking utensils, provisions and baby animals are kept
on both sides of the door.
The pastoral Kazaks
live off their animals. They produce a great variety of
dairy products. For instance, Nai Ge Da (milk dough) Nai Pi
Zi (milk skin) and cheese. Butter is made from cow's and
sheep's milk. They usually eat mutton stewed in water
without salt – a kind of meat eaten with the hands. By
custom, they slaughter animals in late autumn and cure the
meat by smoking it for the winter. In spring and summer,
when the animals are putting on weight and producing lots of
milk, the Kazak herdsmen put fresh horse milk in shaba
(barrels made of horse hide) and mix it regularly until it
ferments into the cloudy, sour horse milk wine, a favorite
summer beverage for the local people. The richer herdsmen
drink tea boiled with cow's or camel's milk, salt and
butter. Rice and wheat flour confections also come in a
great variety: Nang (baked cake), rice cooked with minced
mutton and eaten with the hands, dough fried in sheep's fat,
and flour sheets cooked with mutton. Their diet contains few
vegetables.
The horse-riding Kazak herdsmen are
traditionally clad in loose, long-sleeved furs and garments
made of animal skins. The garments vary among different
localities and tribes. In winter, the men usually wear
sheepskin shawls, and some wear overcoats padded with camel
hair, with a belt decorated with metal patterns at the waist
and a sword hanging at the right side. The trousers are
mostly made of sheepskin. Women wear red dresses and in
winter they don cotton-padded coats, buttoned down the
front. Girls like to sport embroidered cloth leggings
bedecked with silver coins and other silver ornaments, which
jangle as they walk. Herdsmen in the Altay area wear square
caps of baby-lamb skin or fox skin covered with
bright-colored brocade, while those in Ili sport round
animal-skin caps. Girls used to decorate their
flower-patterned hats with owl feathers, which waved in the
breeze. All the women wear white-cloth shawls, embroidered
with red-and-yellow designs.
The Kazak family
and marriage in history fully showed the characteristics of
the patriarchal feudal system. The male patriarch enjoyed
absolute authority at home; the wife was subordinate to the
husband, and the children to the father. The women had no
right to property. The marriage of the children and the
distribution of property were all decided by the patriarch.
When the man came of age and got married he received some
property from his parents and began to live independently in
his own yurt. Only the youngest brother eventually stayed
with the family. Herdsmen with close blood relations formed
an "Awul" (a nomadic clan). Rich herd owners or
venerated elders were considered the "Awulbas"
(chiefs of the community).
The Kazak people
usually practiced monogamy, but in the old society, polygamy
was quite common among the feudal lords and tribal chiefs,
in accordance with their Islamic faith.
The
feudal mercenary marriage system deprived young men and
women of their independence in matrimonial affairs and high
bride prices were charged. Hence richer people married up to
four wives each and poor herdsmen were unable economically
to establish a family. Among the latter, a system of
"barter marriage" was practiced. Two families, for
example, could exchange their daughters as each other's
daughter-in-law without asking for betrothal gifts. This
often gave rise to a large disparity in age of the
matrimonial partners, let alone mutual
affection.
The Kazaks are warm-hearted, sincere
and hospitable. They entertain all guests, invited and
uninvited alike, with the best things they have -- usually a
prize sheep. At dinner, the host presents a dish of mutton
with the sheep's head to the guest, who cuts a slice off the
right cheek and puts it back on the plate as a gesture of
appreciation. He then cuts off an ear and offers it to the
youngest among those sitting round the dinner table. He then
gives the sheep's head back to the host.
The
Kazaks are Muslims. Though there are not many mosques in the
pastures, Islam exercises a great influence upon their
social life in all aspects. Their religious burdens used to
be heavy. They had to deliver religious food grain and
animal taxes in accordance with Islamic rules. If they
wanted to invite mullahs for prayers on occasions of
festivals, wedding, burial ceremonies or illnesses, they had
to present given amounts of money or property.
The Kazaks' festivals and ceremonies are
related to religion. The Corban and Id El-fitr festivals are
occasions for feasts of mutton and mutual greetings. The
Nawuruz Festival in the first month of the lunar calendar is
a grand occasion to say good-bye to the old, usher in the
new, and hope for a better year in stockbreeding. Every
family entertains with "kuji," a food made of
mutton, milk dough, barley, wheat and other delicacies. They
give feasts when there are births, engagements or
weddings.
The Kazaks, men and women alike, are
good horse riders. Young men like wrestling and a game in
which horsemen compete for a sheep. There are horsemanship
displays on the grasslands during festivals. The young
people like to play a "girl-running-after-boy"
game. The boys and girls ride their horses to an appointed
place; the boys can “flirt with” the girls on
the way. However, on the way back, the girls chase the boys
and are entitled to whip them if they can as a way of
"vengeance." Such merry-making more often than not
terminates with love and marriage.
This ethnic
minority has its own rich literary heritage. As there were
many illiterates, folk literature handed down orally was
quite developed. After liberation, ballad singers, or
"Akens," made great efforts to collect, study and
re-create old verses, tales, proverbs, parables and maxims.
Many outstanding Kazak classic and contemporary works have
been published in the Kazak language.
Kazak
music and dance also have their own unique features and are
very popular. The Kazaks like summer the best, terming it
merry-making time. They often sing and dance throughout
summer nights on the pastures. The two-stringed instrument
is their favorite.
Tribal Life
All Kazaks belonged to definite clans before
1949. They and their area were divided into three hordes
(ordas): the Great Horde, Middle Horde and Little Horde --
or the Right, Left and Western branches as the Qing
government documents referred to them. The Middle Horde was
the most powerful, with the largest number of people and
most complete clan lineage. The Kazaks in China mostly
belonged to the Great and Middle Hordes.
The
clans were formally blood groups of different sizes. The
smallest productive organization and nomadic community
within the clan was the "Awul," people with the
same grandfather or father; sometimes they included people
without any blood ties, mostly dependent poor herdsmen from
without. So, there was a sharp contrast of wealth in the
"Awul" of three, five, a dozen or more families.
Owing to wars, migration or other causes, such internal
blood relations became very loose.
The ruling
group was composed of the nobility, tribal chiefs, herd
owners and "Bis." The Bis generally came from a
rich herdsman's family, were well-versed in the laws,
customs and eloquence, and were generally regarded as
qualified mediators. The ethnic group did not have any
written law, but each clan had its own common law which
protected private property, the privileges of the tribal
chiefs, and tribal solidarity and unity. Whenever there were
disputes over property, marriage or other matters, the
"Bi" mediated and handled them in accordance with
the clan law, generally practicing "punishment by
nine," i.e., compensation of nine head of animals paid
by the loser to the winner of the lawsuit.
The
Kazak clan organization was a combination of the feudal
system of exploitation and the clan patriarchy. The ruling
class plundered the people economically and enjoyed
political privileges. The majority of the poor herdsmen were
deprived of all rights
whatsoever.
Economic Life
The Kazaks
have accumulated much experience in stock raising over a
long period of history. However, under the feudal system,
their production level was very low and, being conservative
in technical matters, the nomads made little effort to
improve their expertise and depended entirely on the natural
growth of the stock. As they had no means to resist natural
disasters, great numbers of animals died in snowstorms in
winter and spring. Disease also took its toll of the
herds.
Kazak handicrafts were basically a
family undertaking. Blacksmiths and carpenters were not
specialized, they were herdsmen with expertise in these
fields. The making of buttered tea, milk products and felt,
tanning animal skins and tailoring furs were all done by
women. Though Kazak animal husbandry provided wool, hides
and skins and livestock, the commodity economy was not
developed. In the pastures barter trade was in vogue, with
sheep as the standard of the price. The herdsmen exchanged
their stock for food grain, tea, cloth, daily utensils and
handicrafts. In remote Altay, they bartered a sheep skin for
only 100 to 150 grams of tea.
A minority of
rich Kazaks in the early 20th century owned thousands of
head of cattle, sheep, horses and camels, while the majority
of herdsmen kept very little stock and that was for
subsistence. Though the pastures were owned by the whole
tribe, they were in fact the property of clan chieftains and
big herd-owners, the winter pasturelands in
particular.
As commerce developed in Xinjiang
after the 19th century, Kazak animal husbandry economy grew
closer ties with markets. The merchants, the privileged
Russian merchants in particular, plundered the herdsmen
through unfair exchange of commodities. Usury came into
being, too. Such ruthless exploitation made the head of
animals drop drastically and Kazak stock breeding virtually
struggled on the brink of bankruptcy on the eve of
liberation.
The Kazaks began farming in the
late Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). The main farm implements
include katuman (a kind of mattock), sickles, ploughs and
grinding stones. In some localities, seeds were sown from
horseback before p
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