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The
Kirgiz ethnic minority, with a population of 143,500, finds 80
per cent of its inhabitants in the Kizilsu Kirgiz Autonomous Prefecture
in the southwestern part of the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
The rest live in the neighboring Wushi (Uqturpan), Aksu, Shache
(Yarkant), Yingisar, Taxkorgan and Pishan (Guma), and in Tekes,
Zhaosu (Monggolkure), Emin (Dorbiljin), Bole (Bortala), Jinghe
(Jing) and Gonliu in northern Xinjiang. Several hundred Kirgiz
whose forefathers emigrated to Northeast China more than 200 years
ago now live in Wujiazi Village in Fuyu County, Heilongjiang Province.
Origins and History
The Kirgiz language belongs to the Turkic
subdivision of the Altaic family of languages. It borrowed many
words from the Chinese language after the 1950s, and a new alphabet
was then devised, discarding the old Arabic script and adopting
a Roman alphabet-based script. The Uygur and Kazak languages
are also used by the Kirgiz in some localities.
The forefathers of the Kirgiz lived on the
upper reaches of the Yenisey River. In the mid-sixth century
A.D., the Kirgiz tribe was under the rule of the Turkic Khanate.
After the Tang Dynasty (618-907) defeated the Eastern Turkic
Khanate, the Kirgiz came into contact with the dynasty and in
the 7th century the Kirgiz land was officially included in China's
territory.
From the 7th
to the 10th century, the Kirgiz had very frequent communications
with the Han Chinese. Their musical instruments -- the drum,
sheng (a reed pipe), bili (a bamboo instrument with a reed mouthpiece)
and panling (a group of bells attached to a tambourine) -- showed
that the Kirgiz had attained quite a high level of culture.
According to ancient Yenisey inscriptions on stone tablets,
after the Kirgiz developed a class society, there was a sharp
polarization and class antagonism. Garments, food and housing
showed marked differences in wealth and there were already words
for "property," "occupant," "owner"
and "slave."
During the Liao
and Song dynasties (916-1279), the Kirgiz were recorded as "Xiajias"
or "Xiajiaz". The Liao government established an office
in the
Xiajias area. In the late 12th century when Genghis Khan rose,
Xiajias was recorded in Han books of history as "Qirjis"
or "Jilijis," still living in the Yenisey River valley.
From the Yuan Dynasty (1206-1368) to the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644),
the Jilijis, though still mainly living by nomadic animal husbandry,
had emigrated from the upper Yenisey to the Tianshan Mountains
and become one of the most populous Turkic-speaking tribal groups.
After the 15th century, though there were still tribal distinctions,
the Jilijis tribes in the Tianshan Mountains had become a unified
entity.
In the early
Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), the Kirgiz, who had remained in the
upper Yenisey River reaches, emigrated to the Tianshan Mountains
to live together with their kinfolk. Many then moved to the
Hindukush and Karakorum Mountains. At this time, some Kirgiz
left their homeland and emigrated to Northeast China. In 1758
and 1759, the Sayak and Sarbagex tribes of Eastern Blut and
the Edegena tribe of Western Blut, and 13 other tribes -- a
total of 200,000 -- entered the Issyk Kul pastoral area and
asked to be subjected to the Qing.
The Kirgiz played
a major role with their courage, bravery and patriotism in the
defense of modern China against foreign aggression.
The Kirgiz and
Kazaks assisted the Qing government in its efforts to crush
the rebellion by the nobility of Dzungaria and the Senior and
Junior
Khawaja.
They resisted
assaults by the rebellious Yukub Beg in 1864, and when the Qing
troops came to southern Xinjiang to fight Yukub Beg's army,
they gave them assistance.
However, under
the pretext of "border security," the Kuomintang regime
in 1944 ordered the closing of many pasturelands, depriving
the Kirgiz herdsmen of their livelihood. As a result, the Puli
Revolution broke out in what is now Taxkorgan Tajik Autonomous
County and part of the Akto area, and formed a revolutionary
government. This revolution, together with uprisings in Ili,
Tacheng and Altay, shook the Kuomintang rule in Xinjiang. More
than 7,000 people took part in the Puli Revolution, the majority
being Kirgiz, Tajiks and Uygurs.
Life Style
In the first half of the 18th century, most
of the Kirgiz in Xinjiang believed in Islam. Those in Emin (Dorbiljin)
County in Xinjiang and Fuyu County in Heilongjiang, influenced
by the Mongols, upheld Lamaism while retaining some Shamanistic
legacies: Shamanistic "gods" were invited on occasions
of sacrificial ceremonies or illnesses and the Shamanistic Snake
God was worshipped.
The Kirgiz material life is still closely
related to animal husbandry; garments, food and dwellings all
distinctively feature nomadism.
Men wear white round-collared shirts trimmed
with lace and covered by a sheepskin jacket or a blue collarless,
long cloth gown. Some wear camel wool fabrics with the sleeves
in fringed black cloth. Normally, a rawhide belt is worn at
the waist, attached to which is a knife and a flint for making
fire. Some sport jackets with a standing collar and front buttons.
They wear loose trousers and high boots. A characteristic Kirgiz
shoe is made of rawhide. Throughout the year, all men, old or
young, wear round corduroy caps in green, purple, blue or black
and covered by a high, square-topped animal skin or felt hat
with a rolled-up brim. The inside of the animal skin hat is
bordered with black velvet.
Kirgiz women wear loose collarless jackets
with silver buttons down the front. The long, pleated skirt
is bordered with fur. Some wear dresses with the skirt pleated
in the lower part, and covered with a black vest. Young women
like red dresses and skirts, red velvet round caps or red otter
skin hats decorated with pearls, tassels and feathers. While
young women prefer red or green scarves, the elderly ones like
white kerchiefs. Some of women's high boots are embroidered.
Unmarried girls wear their hair in many small plaits, reduced
to two after marriage. The pigtails are decorated with silver
chains, coins or keys interlinked with a chain of pearls. Bracelets,
earrings, necklaces and rings are made of silver. Girls in some
areas wear on their chests round silver pieces carved with patterns.
The diet of the Kirgiz herdsmen mainly consists
of animal byproducts, with some cabbages, onions and potatoes.
They drink goat's milk, yogurt and tea with milk and salt. Rich
herdsmen mainly drink cow's milk and eat beef, mutton, horse
and camel meat, wheat flour and rice. They store butter in dried
sheep or cattle stomachs. All tableware is made of wood.
The tents are made of felt, generally square
in shape, fenced around with red willow stakes. The tent frame
is first covered with a mat of grass and then a felt covering
with a one-meter-square skylight, to which a movable felt cover
is attached. The tent is tied down with thick ropes to keep
it steady in strong winds and snowstorms.
The nomad Kirgiz
live on the plains near rivers in summer and move to mountain
slopes with a sunny exposure in winter. The settled Kirgiz mostly
live in flat-roofed square mud houses with windows and skylights.
The Kirgiz family
is generally composed of three generations, with married sons
living with their parents. Marriage used to be arranged by the
parents, sometimes even before birth -- this was called "marriage
arrangement at pregnancy." Traditional courtship starts
when the bridegroom calls on the bride's family with a roasted
sheep. The relatives of the bride then tie the couple to posts
in front of the tent. They will be released only after the father
and brothers of the bridegroom ask for "mercy" and
present gifts. The wedding is presided over by an imam who cuts
a baked cake into two, dips the pieces in salt water and puts
them into the mouths of the newly-weds as a wish for the couple
to share weal and woe and be together for ever. The bridegroom
then takes the bride and her betrothal gifts back to his home.
There is distinct
division of labor at home: the men herd horses and cattle, cut
grass and wood and do other heavy household chores, while the
women graze, milk and shear the sheep, deliver lambs, process
animal by-products and do household chores. Before liberation,
the male was predominant and decided all matters of inheritance
and property distribution. When the son got married, he was
entitled to a portion of the family property which was usually
inherited by the youngest son. Women did not have the right
to inherit. The property of a childless male was inherited by
his close relatives. When there is a funeral, all relatives
and friends attend, wearing black clothing and black kerchiefs.
The Kirgiz are
very hospitable and ceremonial. Any visitor, whether a friend
or stranger, is invariably entertained with the best -- mutton,
sweet rice with cream and noodles with sliced mutton. Offering
mutton from the sheep's head shows the highest respect for the
guest. At the table, the guest is first offered the sheep tail
fat, shoulder blade mutton and then the mutton from the head.
The guest should in the meantime give some of what is offered
back to the women and children at the dinner table as a sign
of respect on the part of the visitor. Anyone who moves his
tent is entertained by his old and new neighbors as tokens of
farewell and welcome.
In the Kirgiz
calendar, similar to that of the Han people, the years are designated
as years of the rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, fish, snake, horse,
sheep, fox, chicken, dog and pig. The appearance of the new
moon marks the beginning of a month, 12 months form a year and
12 years is a cycle. At the beginning of the first month of
the year, the Kirgiz celebrate a festival similar to the Spring
Festival. There are also Islamic festivals. On major festivals
and summer nights, old and young, men and women, gather on the
pasturelands for celebrations: singing, dancing, ballad-singing,
story-telling and games which include competing to snatch up
a headless sheep from horseback, wrestling, horse racing, wrestling
on horseback, catching objects from racing horses, horseback
shooting, tug-of-war and swinging.
The Kirgiz are
renowned singers and dancers. The songs with rich content include
lyrics, epics and folk songs. There are many kinds of musical
instrument. A three-stringed instrument is uniquely Kirgiz.
Many poems,
legends, proverbs and fables have been handed down among the
Kirgiz for centuries. The epic, "Manas," is virtually
an encyclopaedia for the study of the ancient Kirgiz. It has
200,000 verses describing, through the deeds of several generations
of the Manas family, the bravery and courage of the Kirgiz in
resisting plunder by the nobles of Dzungaria and their aspirations
for freedom. It is also a mirror of the habits, customs and
ideas of the Kirgiz of the time.
Kirgiz paintings
and carvings feature animal horn patterns for decoration on
yurts, horse gear, gravestones and buildings. The Kirgizs like
bright red, white and blue colors. So their decorative art is
always brightly colored and eye-pleasing, and full of freshness
and vitality.
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