Hao Bizarre, como Bazaar
XINJIANG
Um Crossroads do Bazaar
Do dusk' até que o alvorecer em mercados muçulmanos teeming de Xinjiang você immersed em uma mistura antiga de culturas orientais e ocidentais
Talvez a razão foremost porque assim poucos viajantes fazem a viagem à província de Xinjiang de China noroeste é completamente simplesmente seu vastness. Com exceção de ser ficado situado no exato oposto ao lado do país de Beijing, que próprio é uma viagem longa mesmo pelo plano, a região autônoma arid é o território o maior em China, medindo sobre one-sixth do segundo continente o maior no mundo. É também uma viagem longa nos termos do deslocamento que cultural o viajante experimentará especialmente quando se gasta um dia inteiro em seus mercados de rua. E inversamente, considerando sua proximidade a Ásia central, compartilhando de beiras com oito outras nações astonishing, uma não acreditariam que Xinjiang é a república de pessoa touristed o mais menos a província. Mas é este solitude no fato que faz ao deserto provincial um oasis distinto em Ásia.
Não longe das areias escaldando de Tarim a bacia é o centro político e comercial da região, Kashgar. Que Marco o polo chamou Cascar e o Han consultam agora a porque Kashi o outpost Asian se formou sobre os séculos em um do crossroads internacional o mais vital de seda de estrada que liga China com o Paquistão do norte e o Afeganistão oriental por a estrada de Karakorum. Como esta'n, Kashgar assemelha-se mais pròxima ao Mid-East do que a cultura que de Han nós somos familiares com; a cidade é um tapestry veritable de culturas Asian centrais, como refletido em seu bazaar semanal maciço. Located in the Kona Sheher old town, the famous Sunday market is, like all things Xinjiang, China’s largest.
Approaching the market district, one is immediately beset by a commingled scent of smoke and fruit. If China is famous for its cuisine, then Xinjiang is responsible for half of its success. Lamb kabob roasted throughout the day over sizzling coals against an undulating landscape of spicy lamian noodles topped with peppers, tomatoes and garlic, goat’s head soup, deep-fried fish and yellow mountains of pilaf rice, all washed down with boiling vats of satiating cinnamon tea.
There may not be as much bread in the whole of China as there is in Kashgar and one is oft tempted by stacks of lightly seasoned nan or pyramids of sesame seed bagels fresh out of the oven. Scarlet slices of watermelon, Xinjiang’s most abundant fruit and pink peaches blushing like a child’s cheeks are the perfect desert dessert, with market patrons walking away with comically dripping chins.
If China is famous for its cuisine, then Xinjiang is responsible for half its success
Gorged on the regional fare, one must then dodge the merchant calls of "kilinglar!" (Turkish for "come!") while browsing the endless displays of useful household wares, useless souvenirs (genie lamp anyone?), outdated electronics, knockoff clothing and eye-catching textiles, the latter being the most popular among the women of Kashgar. It’s quite a sight to see a Muslim lady shrouded in an hijab headscarf burrowing through hills of shimmering silk and other fine fabrics to further veil herself in.
Xinjiang’s predominant nationality, the Uyghurs, flavor the region with both their unique Turkish-influenced culture and devout religious faith. With more then twelve million Muslims in China, Xinjiang naturally accounts for over half the national total. Kashar’s Id Kah is the largest mosque in the People’s Republic; the city literally comes to a halt five times a day when the faithful respond to the calling of the adhan and rush to mosque for a congregational series of Mecca-facing prostrations and Islamic prayer. Half an hour later, the city is again screaming with activity and commerce.
Despite the traditional lifestyle of the Uyghurs, Kashgar has developed itself over the years into a white-tiled mercantile metropolis, where even the famed weekly bazaar is now held in a modernized indoor facility of thousands of identical stalls. Though still quite a spectacular site, this refinement has left many enthusiasts desiring something a bit more…authentic. Not to be discouraged, the answer to anyone dissatisfied by the comparatively tamer and more contemporary Kashgar is Xinjiang’s lesser known, yet arguably more impressive souk in Hetian, a day’s scenic drive south along the lethally hot Taklamakan, the second largest desert in the world. The shaded, tree-lined respite is renowned throughout China for its jade, silk and carpets – the three treasures of Hotan (as the Uyghurs spell it), which translates into "place that abounds in jade".
Beyond the medieval blacksmiths pounding on their anvils asphalt turns to dust
Hetian- A souk beyond
Indeed the first site anyone will happen upon at the Hetian marketplace is an entire street of jade dealers, either from storefronts, on blankets spread out on the ground, in the trunks of cars, or out of their pant pockets. The rabid riots of precious stone peddlers and prospective buyers haggling in their Turkish tongue over every size and color of jade imaginable add to the chaos that is only the beginning of Hetian’s bazaar. Extending countless kilometers in all four directions, the traffic-stopping market literally takes over the city streets; ass-drawn carriages contending with big bad buses and motorcycle taxis navigating through scores of preoccupied people. An entire boulevard of fragrant fruits and prismatic vegetables intersects an avenue lush with carpets and rugs, which is then separated by the canals of the Hotan River.
Beyond the medieval blacksmiths pounding on their anvils asphalt soon turns to dust. Livestock both alive and freshly slaughtered trample the dirt or turn it into crimson mud, and baying horses, camels, mules and bulls excrete freely onto the ground while being industriously inspected by interested human parties. To a pulsating background score of 200 beat per minute Arabic tabla drums and the two-stringed dutar, the bizarre bazaar dramatically segues into heaps of faux jewelry, henna hair dye and cheap cosmetics ravaged by young, olive-skinned women wearing heavy black eyeliner who prefer neck and arm-revealing (gasp!) western fashion to their more conservatively concealed counterparts. Meanwhile the local men get a shave and their head scalped by an outdoor barber or go browsing for a new knife or an embroidered dopi cap.
The blazing desert climate begins to cool at sunset, which in the summer months is about 11pm, and the mad market in Hetian winds down. Beggars seek those last few alms, exhausted vendors relax with a few chapters of the Qur’an, and the rest of us return home to look through our treasures.
Tom Carter, http://www.tomcarter.org/



































