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Tatar population: Over 5000
Tatars in China,
most of whom live in Yining, Tacheng and Urumqi in
the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
Tatar Custom: Most
Tatars in cities live in flat-roofed mud houses equipped with flues
for heating. They like to hang tapestry inside their homes, which
are usually very clean and tidy. Courtyards planted with flowers
and trees have the appearance of small gardens. The Tatars in pastoral
areas have adapted to a nomadic life, and live in tents.
Tatar cuisine, popular in Xinjiang, includes
various kinds of pastries. At festivals, they serve pastries called "Gubaidiai" and "Yitebailixi," the
former being cured with cheese, dried apricots and rice, and the latter
with pumpkin, meat and rice. Both kinds have crisp crusts and soft
contents. Tatar drinks include beer-like "keerxima," made of fermented
honey, and "Kesaile" wine brewed from wild grapes.
Tatar men usually wear embroidered white
shirts under short black vests or long gowns. Their trousers are also
black. They often wear small black-and-white embroidered caps, and
black fur caps in winter. Women wear small flowery caps inlaid with
pearls, and long white, yellow or purplish red shirts with pleats.
Their jewelry includes earrings, bracelets and necklaces of red pearls.
Since liberation, more modern styles have influenced both men's and
women's clothing, and a growing number of Tatars are now wearing Western
style clothes.
Most of Tatars in cities belong to small
monogamous families. Sons and daughters live apart from their parents
after they get married, but they still support their parents until
they die, showing great respect for their elders. Intermarriages between
Tatars and other ethnic groups believing in Islam are quite common.
Marriages between cousins occur but are uncommon.
A wedding is held at the bride's home in
accordance with religious rules. The newlyweds must drink sugar water
from the same cup, symbolizing a long sweet life together. Usually,
the groom must live for some time at his parents-in-law's home, and
in some families, must not go to his own home until the first child
is born.
Babies receive a formal religious blessing
three days after birth, and their names are usually taken from the
Islamic classics. A child usually takes the surname of father or grandfather.
The cradle rites are held seven weeks later, with the cradle and clothes
provided by a grandmother.
Tatar History : in
China dates from the Tang Dynasty (618-907), when the Tatar tribe
was ruled by the nomadic Turkic Khanate in northern China. As this
state fell into decline, the Tatars grew in strength, and their
name was used to refer to several tribes in the north after the
Tang Dynasty. Their homeland was later annexed by Mongols, and
when the Mongols pushed west, many Central Asians and Europeans
called them Tatars.
?In the mid-13th century, Batu, the grandson
of Genghis Khan, established the Golden Horde Khanate in Central
Asia. It began to decline in the 15th century, and the Kashan Khanate
began to rise on the middle reaches of the Volga River and in areas
along the Kama River. The rulers of the Kashan Khanate, to boast
their strength, began calling themselves Tatars, the sons of the
Mongols.
??Tatar gradually became the recognised name
for the inhabitants of Kashan Khanate. Today's Tatar ethnic group
was formed through a mixture of the Baojiaer people, Kipchacks
and Mongolians over a long period.
??After the 19th century, the serfdom crisis
in Tsarist Russia worsened, and serf owners intensified their plundering
of land. Most of the Tatars' land along the Volga and Kama was
grabbed, and the inhabitants forced to flee. Some went south to
Central Asia and then on to southern Xinjiang.
?In the late 19th century, Tsarist Russia
expanded into Xinjiang, and won trade privileges there. For a time,
Russian merchants traveled to Xinjiang, and were followed by Tatar
merchants from Kashan. Many stayed in Xinjiang to trade. During
this period, many Tatar intellectuals and clerics moved to Xinjiang.
Up to the early 20th century, a continuous stream of Tatars came
to Xinjiang from Russia.
??The Tatar language belongs to the Turkic
language family of the Altaic language system. Because the Tatars
mix freely in Xinjiang with the Uygurs and the Kazaks, the three
languages have had strong effects on one another, and have produced
various local dialects. The Tatars' written language is based on
Arabic letters.
?In the late 19th and early 20th centuries,
some wealthy Tatar merchants netted great profits and forced smaller
traders to the brink of bankruptcy. Of the few Tatars engaged in
animal husbandry, most were poor herdsmen who had few animals and
no pastures.
?As a result of exploitation by Tatar and
Kazak feudal masters, some poor Tatar herdsmen were forced to become
hired hands, whose families suffered great hardship, and others
were taken on by feudal masters as "adopted sons," who
had to work as hired herdsmen? but without pay.
?In addition, there were also a smaller
minority of Tatars engaged in handicrafts, chiefly in leather-making,
tailoring and embroidery.
?These trades were carried out as household
sidelines.
?Since 1949, the Tatar people have enjoyed
equal political rights in Xinjiang, where many ethnic groups live
in tightly-knit communities. They have representatives on the National
People's Congress and various tiers of regional and local government.
A series of social reforms has extricated the poor Tatar farmers
from feudal exploitation and oppression. Some have now become industrial
workers.
?The Tatars' educational development began
in the late 19th century when Tatar clerics opened schools in several
areas. Besides the Koran, Islamic history and Islamic law, these
schools taught arithmetic and Chinese language. The Ining Tatar
School, set up in 1942, was one of the earliest modern schools
for ethnic minorities in Xinjiang.
?It played an active role in reforming the
old religious education and teaching science and culture.
?Many Tatar intellectuals earlier this century
worked hard to set up and run schools. Some went deep into rural
areas, and played a big part in establishing Xinjiang's educational
cause. Their efforts benefited not only the Tatars, but also the
Uygur, Huis, Kazaks, Xibes and Ozbeks.
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