By Henry
Srebrnik, [Summerside, PEI] Journal Pioneer
Samuel
Huntington’s seminal work, The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World
Order, published more than two decades ago, posits that in the twenty-first
century, most major conflicts will pit cultural regions against each other.
One such
potential area of contention would be at the boundary between the Islamic world
and that of the east Asian Confucian-based civilizations.
Were that
to become the case, a small-scale version of this is already playing out in the
Muslim regions of the People’s Republic of China (PRC).
Xinjiang --
officially the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region -- in the far west of the
country has already become an arena of conflict.
Despite its
name, it is in fact historically part of Muslim Central Asia, the large region
once called Turkestan.
Most of
that area, the home of major Islamic civilizations, was conquered by the
Russian tsars in the 19th century and later became five separate
republics in the Soviet Union. They became independent countries in 1991.
Only Xinjiang,
once known as East Turkestan, and historically inhabited mainly by Uighurs,
remains under the domination of a non-Muslim state.
The Uighurs, along with Turkic tribes like the Kazakhs
(including some who also live in Xinjiang), converted to Islam beginning around
the year 1000.
Xinjiang is part of the PRC today because the Manchu-ruled
Qing empire conquered it in the eighteenth century, in the course of a westward
expansion. The local populations, however, were largely allowed to retain their
own cultures.
This benign
neglect continued into the 20th century. But with the emergence of
the Communist-ruled Chinese state in 1949, as Beijing sought to maintain
control over Xinjiang, a debate emerged pitting the old imperial
ethno-pluralism against Han Chinese nationalistic assimilationism.
At first
Beijing followed the Soviet model of ethno-federalism, granting non-Han
peoples official status as nationality or ethnic groups, with special rights
enshrined in the Chinese constitution.
Han civilization was, in theory, not considered superior. The
PRC celebrated China’s cultural diversity, encouraging publishing in non-Han
languages, putting minorities on the currency, and so on.
But many Chinese political theorists blamed the
disintegration of the USSR on Soviet nationality policies, so a reassessment of
the ethno-pluralist system began.
They argued that only after assimilating minorities into a
broader pan-Chinese ethnicity would China be truly stable.
Not only
would ethnic distinctiveness have to be eliminated, but the religion
underpinning it would have to also be wiped out, because religious
belief itself was contradictory to the unitary pan-Chinese identity.
In October 2017 the Xinjiang Communist Youth League used a
medical metaphor to malign the Uighur belief in Islam.
“There is always a risk that the illness will manifest
itself at any moment, which would cause serious harm to the public.” That is
why, they insisted, the devout “must be admitted to a re-education hospital in
time to treat and cleanse the virus from their brain.”
Hence the
introduction of today’s “re-education” centres – in effect, gulags and prisons
– and redefining independent Uighur groups as terrorist organizations.
Today there
are tens of thousands of security personnel in the region. As well, a
vast and expanding surveillance network of facial-recognition cameras, GPS
vehicle tracking, and fingerprint, voice-print, and even walking-gait scans are
linked to a database of personal information about the population.
Uighur religious and other cultural practices are
increasingly circumscribed or legally banned. School instruction in the Uighur
language has been eliminated.
Members of the Uighur cultural, academic, and business elite, including top administrators of universities and chief editors of presses, have been singled out for detention.
Over a million people are interned in the re-education
camps, where detainees must sing anthems of the Chinese Communist Party,
disavow Islam, watch propaganda films, and study Chinese language and history.
The state now increasingly finds Islamic faith and even
non-Han ethnic culture to be inimical to the goal of homogeneous Chinese
identity.
If
Huntington is right, and the Muslim and east Asian world will eventually
collide, this is a foretaste of what’s to come.
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