Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 21 – Just as many
Americans define all Latin Americans as “Mexicans,” so too Han Chinese when
they think about the peoples of Central Asia at all – and the numbers of these
groups are so small as to make them invisible in much of China -- define them
as Muslims much like the Uyghurs rather than as distinct nations.
That linking of Central Asians to
the Uyghurs, of course, one Russian commentator says, means that the Central Asians
are often assumed to be the same and to represent the same anti-Chinese
attitudes that the Uyghurs long have manifested (zen.yandex.ru/media/centralasia/chto-kitaicy-dumaiut-o-narodah-srednei-azii-5dc964edaf919452a14ab56c).
At present, there are approximately 190,000
Kyrgyz in China, 10,000 Uzbeks, and 1.5 million Kazakhs. Only the latter are
numerous enough to attract much attention, the commentator says; and even they
rarely appear on television or in the media and so remain part of an undifferentiated
“Muslim” population.
Indeed, the Russian commentator
says, few Chinese including educated ones give much thought to these peoples.
They are simply too small a fraction of the population of China to have made
much of an impression. And many Han Chinese relate to them much as they do to
other smaller Asian peoples like the Koreans, Indians or Vietnamese.
What such attitudes mean, of course,
although the commentator does not say so directly, is that Chinese who come
into contact with Central Asians view them as potential Uyghurs, a nation whose
members have routinely resisted Chinese power and who have been subject to the most
severe kinds of Chinese repression to this day as a result.
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