Xinjiang is a wild, beautiful, fascinating place whose apparent multiple-personality disorder only makes it more intriguing.
It's also surprisingly hospitable to ignorant weiguoren who can't speak the language.
Um, not that I would know, or anything.
Travelling through Xinjiang feels a bit like inhabiting two parallel universes: Each place has two names--one Uyghur and one Chinese--so if you go to the Han receptionist at a bus station and tell her you want to go to Bourtela, she looks at you with total incomprehension until a passerby takes pity on you and gets you a ticket to "Bole." If you ask a Uyghur minibus driver if he can take you back to Yining, he gives you a dirty look and drives off, leaving you stranded until you find someone who will take you to "Gulja."
Even more perilous is telling the time: Although officially Xinjiang, like every other Chinese province, is on Beijing time, locals are on "Xinjiang time," which is two hours earlier. This kind of makes sense--the distance is farther than that between Vancouver and Toronto--but throws you off completely because all the bus and train stations will run on one time, and taxis, restaurants and stores will have something completely different. Because my sense of time is total crap, I spent much of the week feeling like I was stuck in a time warp.
Except now, the major structures are Chinese banks and office buildings for
petrochemical companies--the bazaars, with skinned dead goats strung upside-down alongside carts of raisins and stacks of metal pots, are still around but off the main streets. Both the petrochem CEOs and the goat-sellers have cell phones.
Almost all the signs here are bilingual--in Chinese and Uyghur, a Turkic language whose writing looks a lot like Arabic--and many are trilingual: The far north and west of the province are home to sizable Kazakh and Mongol minorities, and many of the signs are in Mongolian, as well. Some of the more ritzy touristy places had Russian-language signage. I of course understood none of this, and my ability to read Chinese-language street signs grew immensely. So did my tolerance for being extremely lost for long periods of time.
Gulja is a lot prettier than Urumqi, and a little less harried-feeling. It's also a telling product of Beijing's plan for large-scale western development, which has brought foreign investment and business from Inner China pouring in. The city's divided almost in half at the bus station: On one side is the modern, upscale new neighbourhood, populated primarily by Han Chinese; on the other is the older area, where most of Gulja's Uyghur population lives. Although Gulja's economy has grown by leaps and bounds over the past decade, some Uyghurs say they aren't benefitting from the boost, and are just hit by higher prices thanks to inflation.
When I was there everyone was celebrating Eid--visiting each other and, in the men's case, going to mosque and to the cemetery to pay respects to deceased relatives (the cemeteries here are separate, too). Beijing has been keeping a much closer eye on religious activity in Xinjiang since the August attacks, and people here aren't sure when stricter restrictions on things like mosque attendance and religious practice by public officials will be lifted.
From Gulja/Yining, it's an eight-hour bus ride through the Tian Shan mountains to Bourtela/Bole. The bus winds along a precarious, dirt-and-stone road, passing construction workers building a wider paved road that will tunnel through the mountains when it's finished (I think it's a testament to my distinctly Canadian brand of racism that whenever I see Chinese people building major transportation routes through mountain ranges under questionable safety and working conditions, I think of the Canadian Pacific Railway. Yeah, I'm an terrible person).
Bourtela and Oursan/Wenquan, which is apparently famous for its really boring hot springs, weren't super interesting. But getting to and from the cities was an experience and a half, which kind of encapsulates what the entire trip was like.
The towns around Turpan are famous for their grapes and their cotton--and, now, their oil. The two industries don't go terribly well together, and a lot of farmers are worried they're being pushed out as their land is bought up for oil exploration and extraction.
Sounds kind of familiar, doesn't it?
The tiny villager of Lianjin was beautiful and fascinating because there were literally oil derricks in people's backyards, and enormous oil trucks would pass three-wheeled taxis on dirt roads. The small-scale grape and cotton farms belonged primarily to traditional Uyghurs who, like just about everyone else I saw that week, couldn't seem to figure out what on earth I was doing there.
That's when, for some inexplicable reason, I was almost arrested: I was wandering an alleyway marketplace, taking photos of oil workers and minding my own business, when all of a sudden a uniformed policeman grabbed my arm and started speaking to me rapidly in Chinese. He then motioned for me to follow him to a police station across the street. That's when I kind of freaked out--both because I had a train to catch in two hours and because the prospect of a Chinese jail cell was less than appealing.
For some reason the fact that I was Canadian--"Wo shi Jianadaren!"--and my impending train convinced him to let me go. He wouldn't tell me why they had dragged me in there in the first place, and to be honest I wasn't all that keen to stick around and ask.
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1 comment:
Wow. Picked up by the police in the most remote corner of China, while taking pictures of oil fields.
Abandoned along the side of the road as your bus splits. Great stories.
Taking pictures of people and places far removed from the China we ever get to see.
Thank you!
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