Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 15 – The Wakhan
Corridor, the isolated segment of Afghanistan linking that country to China but
separating Tajikistan from Pakistan, is currently home to one of the last truly
nomadic groups in Eurasia, 1100 ethnic Kyrgyz who returned to what they call
“the roof of the world” when many of their co-ethnics moved from Pakistan to
eastern Turkey.
The history of the latter group is
relatively well-known as is the history of the Wakhan Corridor, but the Kyrgyz
community which lives in the Wakhan Corridor now is almost unknown. A
remarkable and richly illustrated picture of this group has been provided this
week by the Russian blog Tolkovatel (ttolk.ru/?p=18178).
No state controls this community,
and it retains its medieval style of life and barter economy. Indeed, its only
connection with the outside world is the sale of opium, a drug that the Kyrgyz
themselves not only do not use but expel from their community anyone who is
found to have violated that prohibition.
A millennium ago, the Wakhan was
part of the Great Silk Road, and Marco Polo claimed to have passed through
there. Its current shape was the result
of the great game between tsarist Russian and the United Kingdom in the 19th
century, and its precise borders were defined after the Russian and Chinese
revolutions.
Until 1949, the Kyrgyz could and did
ignore all these external borders, regularly passing from Soviet Central Asia
into Xinjiang. Indeed, that is the path that Rakhman-Kul followed in bringing
the Kyrgyz to the Wakhan in the 1950s before leading them out again to Pakistan
following the 1979 Soviet invasion.
At that time, his Kyrgyz community numbered
1300 people, but after arriving in Pakistan, the group split into two parts,
one numbering about a 1,000 under Rakhman-Kul who hoped to go to Alaska but
ended up in eastern Turkey and a second of about 300, under Abdul Rashid Khan,
the father of the current khan Ali Bey who returned to the Wakhan.
Those who went to Turkey gave up
their nomadic style of life, but those who returned to a land whose average
height above sea level exceeds 2500 meters have maintained their nomadism. And
they have remained unaffected by Soviets, Taliban or the Americans in turn ever
since. Indeed, the self-designation of the Kyrgyz is “free men” like the
basmachis of the 1920s.
Infant and child mortality among the
Kyrgyz is extremely high: half of all children die before their fifth birthday,
but the community has grown rapidly because the average family has seven
children who live beyond that age. Over the last 30 years, the group has
increased 3.5 times.
A khan has formal authority over the
Kyrgyz but his powers are nominal. Indeed, his chief function seems to be as a
contact between the Kyrgyz and Kabul.
There is now formal religious organization, and most Kyrgyz in the
Wakhan now practice a mixture of shamanism and Islam.
The group has a barter economy based
on the sheep. A yak costs ten sheep; a good horse, 50; a camel, 100 – which is
equal to the bride price there. There
are some modern innovations: Despite lacking a network, the Wakhan Kyrgyz buy
cellphones for a sheep each, using the phones to take pictures rather than to
contact others.
Two or three times a year, the
Kyrgyz travel to settlements in Afghanistan proper and trade opium for what
they need but cannot produce. According
to the Tolkovatel article, every Kyrgyz must sell approximately 100 grams of
opium to raise enough money for such products. Mostly they rely on what they
can produce themselves: yak milk and wild vegetables.
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