This last week has been spent mainly going out to eat with friends, colleagues, and students and our remaining days hold out more of the same. Eating is the primary lubricant of Chinese social life and it seems like before we go everyone wants to take us out to eat. Today we'll be eating lunch with the deans and teachers of the
"I'm very happy to be your student. You are an excellent teacher. You are not only my English teacher, but also my good friend!"
Catherine (Xiao Min), myself, Grace, and Sam after lunch.
What will I miss about
We were talking about what I would do during my last week in
It happens that Catherine, although herself Han Chinese, grew up in the Muslim quarter of
Two days later Grace and I met Catherine in front of the Muslim Market. Catherine had brought her best friend from
We walked from the Muslim Market across a canal and into the heart of the Muslim section of
At lunch with Catherine, left, and Nanny, right.
During lunch I talked with Nanny about Hui culture. I assumed that the Hui--like other ethnic groups in
"It is Arabic," she said, "But not everyone speaks it." She told me that she knew only a few words and her parents didn't know any. "They do not teach it in the schools here, but you can learn it at the Mosque."
She told me that she wants to learn Arabic someday and travel to the
I asked her about the relationship between the Hui and the Uighur people who are also Muslim and live further west.
"We come from the same place and we have the same religion," she said, "but we are not the same."
She was surprised to hear that there were some Uighur communities in the
I tried diplomatically to raise the subject of Uighur nationalism, telling her that most of the Uighurs in
Nanny had never heard anything about Uighur nationalism or government persecution in
I learned very early on here that political conversations usually fall flat. I've become very good at suppressing my natural inclinations to discuss politics and history (which is really hard because that's what I do!), but sometimes I forget. But I always remember again during the awkward silence that normally follows a politically sensitive question.
After lunch we visited Catherine's Grandmother and “sister” nearby. The one-child policy does not allow most children to have brothers and sisters, so my students generally refer to their cousins as “brothers” and “sisters.” What is going to happen in the next generation when no one has cousins?
Then it was off for a tour of some Hui cultural sites. We first visited
At
Afterwards we visited Xiao Si (the Small Mosque), where Nanny worships every week. She took us to a store within the Mosque complex that sells beautiful Hui clothing--especially dresses and head coverings. Then we visited the Mosque itself where I felt sacrilegious snapping pictures, but it didn't seem to bother Nanny at all.
Walking towards Xiao Si (with green domes).
From there we walked to Da Si (the Great Mosque), where we saw Muslim families eating specially prepared foods in the canteen and older women studying Arabic in classrooms on the upper floor. Nanny felt no compunctions at all about banging on the classroom door, asking if we could watch the class, and then encouraging me to take pictures.
Teaching Arabic class at Da Si
Afterwards to the Muslim Market and then finally home. It was a fascinating glimpse into the Hui world here in
Da Si (The Great Mosque)
We had gained another kind of glimpse into the world of ethnicity--from a different perspective--a few nights earlier at dinner with
Jong Shu Hui (Nancy), who is Han Chinese, invited us to eat a "traditional Mongolian dinner." She took us to a place with horses, yurts, and Mongolian employees who sing, dance, and wear traditional regalia. Each dinner party sits in its own yurt drinking Mongolian milk tea and eating mutton. It would be the equivalent of dining in a "traditional Native American village," where non-Indians sit cross-legged in teepees chewing on venison while being waited on by pretty Native women in bright robes. There are no rides, but it kind of has that
As our van pulled into the parking lot,
If Americans have learned anything in their four hundred years of racial strife, slavery, legal discrimination, social segregation, and racial stereotyping, it is how to talk about race in ways that are mostly "politically correct." PC is a term I should not touch. It is used derisively by conservatives in their critiques of academic thought-police. PC can be taken to an extreme by doctrinaire multiculturalists at universities who implement speech codes and the like, and yet it also reflects, at a very basic level, a degree of racial sensitivity among Americans that does not always exist in more homogenous cultures. You don't have to be a radical multiculturalist on a college-campus to recognize that there are certain words and topics that are off-bounds. In other words, most Americans have learned over time how to keep their blatantly racist thoughts private and talk publicly about race in ways that are not always insulting.
This is not always the case in
I couldn't help laughing. This is not something that an American university professor would say even if she thought it. In fact, it's so cliché it is used as a sarcastic punch line among "enlightened" folk when mocking American racists: "They all look the same to me!"
We had actually been taken to this same restaurant--a tourist rite of passage
I sat next to three middle-school aged boys (sons of Nancy and her friends) who were eager to practice their English. The topics were familiar after seven months in
At dinner with
The conversation got even more interesting part way through the meal when Mr. Jong (no relation to Nancy), who lives in Qingdao and was visiting Hohhot on a business trip (his company manufactures coal-mining machinery), stood up and declared that he "likes Karl Marx" and is still a devoted Marxist. "I am a Marxist!" he proclaimed.
It turns out Mr. Jong is indeed a Communist Party member and he asked me if I thought
I told them that actually many Americans lean towards socialism in terms of education, health care, and social services.
"A lot of the way we think about socialism is rhetorical," I said. "Americans are taught from a young age to hate socialism just as the Chinese are taught to hate capitalism. But talk to most American students and they want to help the poor, they want workers to make good wages, they want free education and health care."
"It seems to me that the same is true with the Chinese," I said. "They say they are socialist but they want a capitalist economy."
We all agreed that the best political system would combine the good parts of both socialism and capitalism.
I said, "Marx understood that capitalism by itself generates a lot of wealth, but also inequality. On the other hand, socialism by itself has the capacity to enforce equality but not generate wealth. If you combine both systems, maybe you can have both wealth and equality."
I've made this speech before and it always seems to get good reviews. It worked one more time and I'll probably be using it again this week if needed.
So I guess it is farewell to
Cheers,
Dave
2 comments:
And we're awfully glad you're returning home!
My fortune teller says that you will return to China to continue your research. This shouldn't be the last you see your friends, Han, Hui or otherwise.
You'll probably be back in Richland before you read this, but I'm glad to hear that the trip wound down so well. Have a safe trip back.
Rob
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