 |
| The Hui Ethnic Minority |
 |
Population: 8,612,000
Major areas of distribution: Ningxia, Gansu, Henan, Hebei, Qinghai,
Shandong, Yunnan, Xinjiang, Anhui, Liaoning, Heilongjiang, Jilin,
Shanxi, Beijing, Tianjin
Language: Han (standard Chinese)
Religion: Islam
With a sizable population of 8.61 million, the Hui ethnic group
is one of China's largest ethnic minorities. People of Hui origin
can be found in most of the counties and cities throughout the
country, especially in the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region and Gansu,
Qinghai, Henan, Hebei, Shandong and Yunnan provinces and the Xinjiang
Uygur Autonomous Region.
History
The name Hui is an abbreviation for "Huihui," which
first appeared in the literature of the Northern Song Dynasty
(960-1127). It referred to the Huihe people (the Ouigurs) who
lived in Anxi in the present-day Xinjiang and its vicinity since
the Tang Dynasty (618-907). They were actually forerunners of
the present-day Uygurs, who are totally different from today's
Huis or Huihuis.
During the early years of the 13th century when Mongolian troops
were making their western expeditions, group after group of Islamic-oriented
people from Middle Asia, as well as Persians and Arabs, either
were forced to move or voluntarily migrated into China. As artisans,
tradesmen, scholars, officials and religious leaders, they spread
to many parts of the country and settled down mainly to livestock
breeding. These people, who were also called Huis or Huihuis because
their religious beliefs were identical with people in Anxi, were
part of the ancestors to today's Huis.
Earlier, about the middle of the 7th century, Islamic Arabs and
Persians came to China to trade and later some became permanent
residents of such cities as Guangzhou, Quanzhou, Hangzhou, Yangzhou
and Chang'an (today's Xi'an). These people, referred to as "fanke"
(guests from outlying regions), built mosques and public cemeteries
for themselves. Some married and had children who came to be known
as "tusheng fanke," meaning "native-born guests
from outlying regions." During the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368),
these people became part of the Huihuis, who were coming in great
numbers to China from Middle Asia.
The Huihuis of today are therefore an ethnic group that finds
its origins mainly with the above-mentioned two categories, which
in the course of development took in people from a number of other
ethnic groups including the Hans, Mongolians and Uygurs.
It is generally acknowledged that Huihui culture began mainly
during the Yuan Dynasty.
Warfare and farming were the two dominant factors of this period.
During their westward invasion, the Mongols turned people from
Middle Asia into scouts and sent them eastward on military missions.
These civilians-turned-military scouts were expected to settle
down at various locations and to breed livestock while maintaining
combat readiness. They founded settlements in areas in today's
Gansu, Henan, Shandong, Hebei and Yunnan provinces and the Ningxia
Hui Autonomous Region. They later were joined by more scouts sent
from the west. As time went by they became ordinary farmers and
herdsmen. Among the Islamic Middle Asians, there were a number
of artisans and tradesmen. The majority of these people settled
in cities and along vital communication lines, taking to handicrafts
and commerce. Because of these activities a common economic life
began to take shape among the Huihuis. Scattered as they were,
they stuck together in relative concentration in settlements and
around mosques which they built. This has been handed down as
a specific feature of the distribution of Hui population in China.
The Huihui scouts and a good number of Huihui aristocrats, officials,
scholars and merchants sent eastward by the Mongols were quite
active in China. They exercised influence on the establishment
of the Yuan Dynasty and its military, political and economic affairs.
The involvement of Huihui upper-class elements in the politics
of Yuan Dynasty in turn helped to promote the development of Huihuis
in many fields.
Generally speaking, the social position of Huihuis during the
Yuan Dynasty was higher than that of the Hans. Nevertheless, they
were still subjected to the oppression of Yuan rulers. After going
through the hardships of their eastward exodus, they continued
to be in the hands of various Mongolian officials, functioning
either as herdsmen or as government and army artisans. A fraction
of them even were allocated to Mongolian aristocrats to serve
as house slaves.
Being people who came to China from places where social systems,
customs and habits differed from those in the east, the Huihuis
began to cultivate their own national consciousness. This was
caused also by their relative concentration with mosques as the
center of their social activities, by their increasing economic
contacts with each other, by their common political fate and their
common belief in the Islamic religion.
It was during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) that the Huihuis began
to emerge as an ethnic group.
Along with the nationwide restoration and development of the
social economy in the early Ming Dynasty years, the distribution
and economic status of the Huihui population underwent a drastic
change. The number of Huihuis in Shaanxi and Gansu provinces increased
as more and more Huihuis from other parts of the country submitted
themselves to the Ming court and joined their people in farming.
Other factors contributed to their dispersion: industrial and
commercial exchanges, assignment of Huihui garrison troops to
various areas to open up wasteland and grow food grain, nationwide
tours by Huihui officials and scholars, and especially the migration
of Huihuis during peasant uprisings. They still managed, however,
to maintain their tradition of concentration by setting up their
own villages in the countryside or sticking together in suburban
areas or along particular streets and lanes in cities. The dislocation
of military scouts dating from the Yuan Dynasty had enabled the
Huihuis to extricate themselves gradually from military involvement
and to settle down to farming, breeding livestock, handicrafts
and small-scale trading. Thus they established a new common economic
life among themselves, characterized by an agricultural economy.
During the initial stage of their eastward exodus, the Huihuis
used the Arab, Persian and Han languages. However, in the course
of their long years living with the Hans, and especially due to
the increasing number of Hans joining their ranks, they gradually
spoke the Han language only, while maintaining certain Arab and
Persian phrases. Huihui culture originally had been characterized
by influences from the traditional culture of Western Asia and
assimilation from the Han culture. However, due to the introduction
of the Han language as a common language, the tendency to assimilate
the Han culture became more obvious. The Huihuis began to wear
clothing like the Hans. Huihui names were still used, but Han
names and surnames became accepted and gradually became dominant.
Islamic Religion
The Islamic religion had a deep influence on the life style of
the Hui people. For instance, soon after birth, an infant was
to be given a Huihui name by an ahung (imam); wedding ceremonies
must be witnessed by ahungs; a deceased person must be cleaned
with water, wrapped with white cloth and buried coffinless and
promptly in the presence of an ahung who serves as the presider.
Men were accustomed to wearing white or black brimless hats, specially
during religious services, while women were seen with black, white
or green scarves on their head -- a habit which also derived from
religious practices. The Huis never eat pork nor the blood of
any animal or creature that died of itself, and they refuse to
take alcohol. These taboos originated in the Koran of the Moslems.
The Huis are very particular about sanitation and hygiene. Likewise,
before attending religious services, they have to observe either
a "minor cleaning," i.e. wash their face, mouth, nose,
hands and feet, or a "major cleaning," which requires
a thorough bath of the whole body.
Islamism also had great impact on the political and economic
systems of Hui society. "Jiaofang" or "religious
community," as once practiced among the Huis, was a religious
system as well as an economic system. According to the system,
a mosque was to be built at each location inhabited by Huis, ranging
from a dozen to several hundred households. An imam was to be
invited to preside over the religious affairs of the community
as well as to take responsibility over all aspects of the livelihood
of its members and to collect religious levies and other taxes
from them. A mosque functioned not only as a place for religious
activities but also as a rendezvous where the public met to discuss
matters of common interest. Religious communities, operating quite
independently from each other, had thus become the basic social
units for the widely dispersed Hui people. Following the development
of the Hui's agricultural economy and the increase of religious
taxes levied on them, some chief imams began to build up their
personal wealth. They used this to invest in land properties and
engage in exploitation through land rents. The imams gradually
changed themselves into landlords. Working in collaboration with
secular landlords, they enjoyed comprehensive power in the religious
communities, which they held tightly under their control. They
left routine religious affairs of the mosques to low-rank ahungs.
The last stage of the Ming Dynasty and the early years of the
Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) saw the emergence of a new system of
religious aristocracy among the Huis in Hezhou (today's Linxia
in Gansu Province). It came into existence as a result of intensified
land concentration which exceeded the boundaries of one single
religious community. This made certain imams rulers of a whole
series of religious communities, turning them into Islamic aristocrats.
They were deified. Kiosks were erected in their cemeteries for
Moslems under their jurisdiction to worship. Their position was
seen as hereditary. They enjoyed a series of feudalistic privileges
as well as absolute authority over their people. The system had
been in existence, however, only in some of the Hui areas in Gansu,
Ningxia and Qinghai. The Huis in hinterland China had always functioned
under the religious community system.
Contribution to Chinese Civilization
The Huis are an industrious people. Their development and progress
have been facilitated, however, by adopting the Han language and
living with the Hans. Since the Yuan and Ming dynasties, large
numbers of Hui peasants joined the Hans and people of other nationalities
in reclaiming wasteland, farming and grazing in the hinterland
and along border regions. Hui artisans were famous for their craftsmanship
in making incense, medicine, leather and cannons, as well as in
mining and smelting of ore. Hui merchants played a positive role
in the economic exchanges between the hinterland and border regions
and in trade contacts between China and other Asian countries.
Hui scholars and scientists made outstanding contributions to
China in introducing and spreading the achievements of Western
Asia in astronomy, calendars, medicine and a number of other academic
and cultural developments. These helped to promote the wellbeing
and productive activities of the people of China as a whole. Chinese
history has seen not a few outstanding Huis representing their
people in the fields of politics, economy and culture.
During the Yuan Dynasty, the astronomist Jamaluddin compiled
a perpetual calendar and produced seven kinds of astroscopes including
the armillary sphere, the celestial globe, the terrestrial globe
and the planetarium; Alaowadin and Yisimayin led the development
of a mechanized way of shooting stone balls from cannons, which
exercised an important bearing on military affairs in general;
the architect Yehdardin learned from Han architecture and designed
and led the construction of the capital of the Yuan Dynasty, which
laid the foundation for the development of the city of Beijing.
During the Ming Dynasty, the Hui navigator Zheng He led massive
fleets in making as many as seven visits to more than 30 Asian
and African countries in 29 years. This unparalleled feat served
to promote the friendship as well as economic and cultural exchanges
between China and these countries. Zheng He was accompanied by
Ma Huan and Ha San, also of Hui origin, who acted as his interpreters.
Ma Huan gave a true account of Zheng He's visits in his book Magnificent
Tours of Lands Beyond the Ocean, which is of major significance
in the study of the history of communication between China and
the West. Hui scholar Li Zhi (1527-1602) of Quanzhou in Fujian
Province was a well-known progressive thinker in Chinese ideology
history.
A number of outstanding politicians emerged among the Huis. Sayyid
Ajall Sham Suddin (1211-1279) of early Yuan Dynasty was one of
them. During his late years when he was serving as governor of
Yunnan Province, he laid stress on agriculture, setting up special
areas for peasants to reclaim wasteland and grow food grain. He
advocated the harnessing of six rivers in Kunming, capital of
the province; established communication posts extensively for
couriers to change horses and rest; initiated teaching in Confucianism
and made strong efforts in harmonizing relations among various
nationalities. All these benefitted political, economic and cultural
developments in Yunnan, helping to bring closer relations between
the province and the central government.
Hai Rui (1514-1587), a politician of the Ming Dynasty, was upright
throughout his life. He had the courage to remonstrate with Emperor
Jiajing about his fatuousness and arbitrariness that brought the
nation and the people to calamity. Hai also lashed out at what
he considered to be the evils of the court and inept ministers.
Later during his term of office as roving inspector directly responsible
to the emperor and as chief procurator of Nanjing, Hai enforced
discipline, redressed mishandled cases and checked local despots
in a successful attempt to boost public morale.
Since the Yuan and Ming dynasties, a great number of established
Hui poets, scholars, painters and dramatists emerged. These included
Sadul, Gao Kegong, Ding Henian, Ma Jin, Ding Peng and Gai Qi.
Life in the 20th Century
After 1949, the Chinese government has carried out a policy of
regional ethnic autonomy in Hui-populated areas. Because Huis
differ from place to place, such self-autonomy has taken on various
forms. Along with the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, the Linxia
and Changji Hui Autonomous prefectures in Gansu Province and the
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region came into existence. Also six
Hui autonomous counties were established in Zhangjiachuan of Gansu
Province, Menyuan and Hualong of Qinghai Province, Yanqi of Xinjiang
Uygur Autonomous Region and Dachang and Mengcun of Hebei Province.
In addition, there are three other autonomous counties jointly
set up by Huis with people of other ethnic groups. The right to
ethnic equality and autonomy has thus been realized among the
Hui people.
Officials from the Hui ethnic minority occupy an appropriate
percentage in the organs of autonomy at all levels. Most leading
positions in the power organs as well as leading positions in
various executive departments and professional bodies are taken
up by outstanding Huis. Emphasis has been laid on the training
of Hui office executives, professionals and technical personnel
who are competent in their work and politically progressive. All
Hui officials, executives and professionals are expected to work
for the advancement of industry, agriculture, animal husbandry,
culture and education in accordance with local conditions. Considerable
attention has been paid to the various Hui autonomous areas in
terms of investment in capital construction and of manpower, material
resources and technology.
Huis that live scattered across the country have the similar
right to enjoy ethnic equality and to direct their own affairs.
Their identity as members of an established ethnic group is respected.
The political status of the Hui people has been greatly raised.
An appropriate number of representatives have been elected from
the Huis to take part in National People's Congresses. People's
Congresses held at lower levels also have Hui representation.
Hui officials work in government departments at central and local
levels.
The majority of Huis believe in Islamism. Their religious freedom,
customs and habits are respected and guaranteed. Since 1979, the
policies on ethnic minorities and religion have continued in Ningxia
Hui Autonomous Region and elsewhere in the country after disruptions
caused by the Cultural Revolution (1966-76). By May 1984, 1,400
mosques had been restored in Ningxia. This has made it possible
for Moslems throughout the autonomous region to normalize their
religious activities. An institute for the study of Islamic scriptures
was established in 1982. It takes in students from among the ahungs
every year. An Islamism research society also was set up to conduct
academic and research activities on Islamism. In recent years,
many young Huis have made efforts to learn Islamic classics in
Arabic. Patriotic figures from Islamic circles have attended Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conferences and People's Congresses
at various levels. Many of them have taken up leading positions
in government organs.
The social and economic situation among the Hui people has undergone
fundamental changes during the last three decades. The Democratic
Reform in the early 1950s and the subsequent socialist transformation
put an end to the system of class oppression within the ranks
of the Huis. This made it possible for them to join hands with
the other ethnic groups of China in embarking on the road of socialism.
The Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region has established a number of
modern industries, covering such fields as coal, power, machinery,
metallurgy, chemicals, light industry, petroleum and electronics.
Industrial and agricultural production in the region has risen
continuously since 1979.
The production and livelihood of the Huis in the countryside
have improved continuously. Considerable progress has been made
by the Huis in farmland capital construction, construction of
water conservancy works and mechanized farming. They also have
made efforts to fight drought, waterlogging, soil salinization
and erosion and sand encroachment of farmland as well as natural
calamities. In Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region and Linxia Hui Autonomous
Prefecture of Gansu Province, irrigated farmland has been increasing
year by year as a result of the construction of large-scale key
water control projects at Qingtong and Liujia Gorges on the upper
reaches of the Yellow River and a series of reservoirs and irrigation
canals. Stripe-shaped fields suitable for tractor-ploughing, irrigation
and drainage have appeared in quite a few places. The fields will
serve as a foundation for the construction of commodity grain
production bases.
To improve the situation in the Liupan Mountain area plagued
by serious water shortage almost every year, the central government
has allocated funds for the construction of pumping projects.
These are in Tongxin, Guyuan and Haiyuan and will extract water
from the Yellow River and life it step by step onto the age-old
dry lands. The projects are expected to solve the problem of drinking
water and irrigation water among the broad masses of Hui and Han
peoples.
Mechanization of farming has progressed in Hui villages. Farming
methods and cultivation techniques, too, have undergone marked
improvements.
The Hui people as well as people of other ethnic groups in Ningxia
have accumulated rich experience in checking sand erosion by means
of afforestation in the course of their protracted struggle against
desertization. In 1978, the central government decided to build
a large-scale shelter-forest that would run across the length
of the autonomous region. The forest belt, when completed, will
help control the sand and thus change the climate and other natural
conditions of Ningxia. This in turn will speed the modernization
of the region's agriculture.
Since the founding of the People's Republic in 1949, elementary
education has on the whole been made universal among the Huis.
In Hui-populated areas, the Hui people have set up their own primary
and secondary schools in their communities. Their children are
able to attend schools close to their homes. They also have their
own professors, engineers, doctors, scientists, writers, artists
and specialists. In 1958 the first college was founded in the
autonomous region. Today, specialized personnel of Hui and other
ethnic groups are being trained at Ningxia University, Ningxia
Medical College and Ningxia Institute of Agronomy. Ending 1982,
the autonomous region had more than 5,000 schools at various levels
with a student population of about 800,000.
Numerous fetters that had been forced upon Hui women over the
years have been gradually removed as a result of improved education.
Secondary and primary schools for female students have been established
in some of the Hui-populated areas. An increasing number of Hui
women are attending evening schools and schools arranged during
slack winter seasons. Having acquired education at varying degrees,
many of them are now skilled workers, and more are officials of
various levels, as well as actresses, doctors, teachers and engineers.
Mass literary, artistic and sports activities have been spreading
among the Huis, resulting in the emergence of outstanding artists
and sportsmen. The skills of veteran Hui artisans in producing
such traditional special handicrafts as carved ivory, cloisonne,
Suzhou embroidery, carved bricks and carpets have been carried
on and developed.
Medical and public health establishments have been widely set
up in Hui-populated areas. Hui medical workers have been trained
in large numbers. In major cities like Beijing and Tianjin, where
the concentration of Huis is relatively larger, special hospitals
have been provided for them. Mobile medical teams have been organized
in some places to tour the countryside and mountainous areas where
the Huis live. Many of the local epidemic diseases either have
been put under control or eliminated. This, coupled with the improvement
of economic and cultural life among the Huis, has greatly raised
the general level of their health.
|
 |