THE COMMUNIST CHINA IS THE ONLY COUNTRY IN THE
WORLD THAT BANS ITS CITIZENS FROM PERFORMING FASTING IN THE HOLY MONTH OF
RAMADAN
by
Syarif Hidayat
While the Christian majority countries in the
West and the other non-Muslim countries around the world give their Muslim
citizens freedom to perform fasting in the holy month of Ramadan and observe the
other religious rites, the Communist
China is the only country on this planet that bans its citizens from fasting
during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.
It’s
not exactly breaking news that China has serious issues with freedom of
religion and as an officially Atheist state is often very repressive against
those observing religious rites. China has once again leveled restrictions on
the persecuted Uighurs when it comes to practicing Ramadan. Unlike millions of
Muslims around the world, Uighur students returning for summer vacations in
northwestern China are banned from fasting during the holy month of Ramadan.
Chinese authorities in the northwestern
province of Xinjiang have banned Muslim officials and students from fasting
during the month of Ramadan, prompting an exiled rights group to warn of new
violence. Guidance posted on numerous government websites called on Communist
Party leaders to restrict Muslim religious activities during the holy month,
including fasting and visiting mosques.
Concerning the problem that Muslims are
facing in performing religious obligations in China and the world, the God
Almighty Allah has warned in Al Qur’an:
بِسۡمِ ٱللهِ ٱلرَّحۡمَـٰنِ ٱلرَّحِيمِ
سُوۡرَةُ الصَّف
يُرِيدُونَ لِيُطۡفِـُٔواْ نُورَ ٱللَّهِ
بِأَفۡوَٲهِهِمۡ وَٱللَّهُ مُتِمُّ نُورِهِۦ وَلَوۡ ڪَرِهَ ٱلۡكَـٰفِرُونَ (٨)
هُوَ ٱلَّذِىٓ أَرۡسَلَ رَسُولَهُ ۥ بِٱلۡهُدَىٰ وَدِينِ ٱلۡحَقِّ
لِيُظۡهِرَهُ ۥ عَلَى ٱلدِّينِ كُلِّهِۦ وَلَوۡ كَرِهَ ٱلۡمُشۡرِكُونَ (٩)
Xinjiang is home to about nine million
Uighurs, largely a Muslim ethnic minority, many of whom accuse China’s leaders
of religious and political persecution. The region has been rocked by repeated
outbreaks of ethnic violence, but China denies claims of repression and relies
on tens of thousands of Uighur officials to help it govern the province.
A statement from Zonglang township in
Xinjiang’s Kashgar district said that “the county committee has issued
comprehensive policies on maintaining social stability during the Ramadan
period. “It is forbidden for Communist Party cadres, civil officials (including
those who have retired) and students to participate in Ramadan religious
activities.”
The statement, posted on the Xinjiang
government website, urged party leaders to bring “gifts” of food to local
village leaders to ensure that they were eating during Ramadan. Similar orders
on curbing Ramadan activities were posted on other local government websites,
with the educational bureau of Wensu county urging schools to ensure that
students do not enter mosques during Ramadan.
Ramadan prayer and fasting restrictions on
Muslims
Kim Wall in an article titled: “China
enforces Ramadan prayer and fasting restrictions on Muslims” published
in www.scmp.com writes “Rights groups are
calling on the central government to lift restrictions that they say have been
preventing Uygurs in the region of Xinjiang from observing Ramadan since the
Muslim holy month began on Tuesday.”
They say Beijing’s security crackdowns
after recent outbreaks of violence in the restive region have discouraged
Muslims from praying at mosques and interfered with their requisite daytime
fasting. World Uygur Congress spokesman Dilxadi Rexiti said yesterday that
government officials had entered Uygur homes to provide them with fruit and
drinks during daylight hours, when Muslims were supposed to abstain from food,
drink and sexual activity.
Meanwhile, authorities have banned
organised study of religious texts and placed religious venues under close
watch, including an “around-the-clock” monitoring of mosques in the northern
city of Karamay, the Karamay Daily reported. Dr Katrina Lantos Swett, of the US
Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), said such moves would
not alleviate ethnic unrest. “Launched in the name of stability and security,
Beijing’s campaigns of repression against Uygur Muslims include the targeting
of peaceful private gatherings for religious study and devotion,” Lantos Swett
said. “These abuses predictably have led to neither stability nor security, but
rather instability and insecurity.”
Xinjiang Autonomous Region spokesman Luo
Fuyong denied yesterday that the government had imposed restrictions on Ramadan
observations.
“We
respect [Uygur] religious beliefs and customs – we’re very clear on this,” Luo
said. However, he acknowledged that Uygur pupils, especially those in
elementary school, “are discouraged from fasting during Ramadan” for health
concerns.
In the USCIRF’s annual report, Uygur
Muslims continue to serve prison terms for engaging in independent religious
activity and government employees, professors and students are fined if they
observe the fast.
Another
report by the Washington-based Uygur American Association (UAA) in April cited
a Uygur restaurant owner from Hotan as saying while Ramadan is an opportunity
for Muslims to handle repairs and redecoration in their businesses, any
restaurant closing for repairs during the month may be fined.
“The extremely aggressive and intrusive
religious restrictions even into the private lives of Uygurs by the Chinese
state will only further provoke the anger of the Uygur people,” UAA president
Alim Seytoff said. “Violence may erupt again due to such systematic repressive
measures.” Dr Reza Hasmath, an Oxford researcher with a focus on China’s ethnic
minorities, said that struggle with the government over religious freedoms had
become a symbol of the Uygur identity. “These measures will only solidify the
distance between the ethnicities in Xinjiang,” he said.
Other experts warn that the situation
in Xinjiang is more than a localised security issue. “China needs to manage its
minorities better,” said Ronan Gunaratna, head of the International Centre for
Political Violence and Terrorism Research in Singapore. “At this point, threats
to the government comes primarily from its ethnicities.” For now, the response
from Beijing has frequently been to crack down further on dissidents and
tighten security, occasionally blaming other countries such as the United
States and Turkey for instigating what it calls religious extremism and
terrorism.
“Over the past few weeks, the central
leadership has had only one idea – to use as much security as possible,” said
Kerry Brown, director of Sydney University’s China Studies Centre. “And it’s a
very questionable strategy.”
He said
the current approach was a “vicious circle” that only created more resentment.
“The government has a paranoid mindset, but this is a real problem that has
nothing to do with outsiders,” he said.
He added that resource-rich Xinjiang –
which now has roughly as many Han Chinese as Uygurs – may be especially prone
to a mass uprising with potential to spill over on a regional, or even
national, level. “China could explode anywhere, but Xinjiang is at the
forefront,” said Brown. “It’s the perfect storm.”
‘Administrative methods’
During Ramadan, Muslims fast from dawn
to dusk and strive to be more closer to God, pious and charitable. An exiled
rights group, the World Uyghur Congress, warned the policy would force “the
Uighur people to resist [Chinese rule] even further.” “By banning fasting
during Ramadan, China is using administrative methods to force the Uighur
people to eat in an effort to break the fasting,” said group spokesman Dilshat
Rexit in a statement.
Xinjiang saw its worst ethnic violence
in recent times in July, 2009, when Uighurs attacked members of the nation’s
dominant Han ethnic group in the city of Urumqi, sparking clashes in which 200
people from both sides died, according to the government.
Uighur Muslims are suffering
Amid fresh arrests, restrictions on
fasting and prayers at mosques, Uighur Muslims are suffering under the latest
episode of Chinese government crackdown on their ethnic minority in the
northwestern region of Xinjiang. “If any religious figure discusses Ramadan
during the course of religious activities, or encourages people to take part,
then they will lose their license to practice,” Dilxat Raxit, spokesman for the
Munich-based World Uighur Congress, told Eurasia Review.
“The more serious cases will result in
arrests for incitement to engage in illegal religious activity,” he said. A day
before the start of the holy fasting month for China’s Muslims, at least 11
people were killed in a series of attacks in the north-western region of
Xinjiang. Chinese authorities blamed the attacks to the ethnic minority, after
which the Chinese police shot dead two Muslims. The attacks came less than two
weeks after 18 people were killed in an attack in the restive Xinjiang region.
Following the unrest, more than 100
uighurs were detained by Chinese authorities. Most of those detained as
suspects were committed Muslims who attended mosque and whose wives wore veils,
residents say. Xinjiang’s capital, Urumqi, was the scene of deadly violence in
July 2009 when the mainly Muslim Uighur minority vented resentment over Chinese
restrictions in the region.
In the following days, mobs of angry Han
took to the streets looking for revenge in the worst ethnic violence that China
had seen in decades. The unrest left nearly 200 dead and 1,700 injured,
according to government figures. But Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking Muslim
minority, say the toll was much higher and mainly from their community. China’s
authorities have convicted about 200 people, mostly Uighurs, over the riots and
sentenced 26 of them to death.
No Fasting
Beijing slapped severe restrictions on
Chinese Muslims as the holy fasting month of Ramadan started. As for Muslim
members of the government throughout Xinjiang, the government forced them to
sign “letters of responsibility” promising to avoid fasting, evening prayers,
or other religious activities.
“Fasting during Ramadan is a traditional
ethnic custom, and they are allowed to do that,” an employee who answered the
phone at a local government neighborhood committee office in the regional
capital Urumqi said confirming the restrictions. “But they aren’t allowed to
hold any religious activities during Ramadan,” she added. “Party members are
not allowed to fast for Ramadan, and neither are civil servants.”
As for private companies, Uighur Muslim
employees were offered lunches during fasting hours. Anyone who refuses to eat
could lose their annual bonus, or even their job, Raxit added. Officials have
also targeted Muslim schoolchildren, providing them with free lunches during
the fasting period. A Uighur resident of Beijing said students under 18 are
forbidden from fasting during Ramadan.
Moreover, government campaigns forced
restaurants in the Muslim majority region to stay open all day. More
restrictions were also imposed on people trying to attend prayers at mosques. Everyone
attending prayers has to register with their national identity card, he added. “They
have to register,” he said. “[After prayers] they aren’t allowed to [congregate
and] talk to each other.”
In
Ramadan, adult Muslims should abstain from food, drink, smoking and sex between
dawn and sunset. The sick and those traveling are exempt from fasting especially
if it poses health risks. Muslims dedicate their time during the holy month to
be closer to Allah through prayers, self-restraint and good deeds.
“It was totally backwards” for Muslims in China
At
a teachers college in far northwestern China, students were irritated to find
that their professors were escorting them to lunch in the fasting month of
Ramadan— an odd occurrence since they were more than capable of finding the
cafeteria themselves. There was an ulterior motive, students told travelers who
recently visited the city of Kashgar: The college wanted to make sure that the
students, most of them Muslims, were eating rather than fasting in daylight
hours during the holy month of Ramadan.
Then, something even stranger happened, the
students said. When the last Ramadan ended last year, launching the three-day
Eid al-Fitr feast, all the restaurants and the cafeteria on campus were shut
down. Students were barred from leaving the campus. On the next two days of the
holiday, the cafeteria was open, but the students were locked in, unable to
leave to celebrate with their families.
“It was totally backwards,” complained a
20-year-old Muslim student who was forced to skip the holiday. In the aftermath
of violent protests this year by Uighurs, the ethnic Turkic and Muslim minority
living in northwestern China, authorities have deepened their campaign against
religious practices — particularly during Ramadan.
For years, China has restricted
observance of Ramadan for Communist Party members and government cadres. On one
website for an agricultural bureau, for instance, employees were reminded “not
to practice any religion, not to attend religious events and not to fast.”
This year, the local Communist Party
also ordered restaurants to remain open during the day, even though chefs and
most of their potential customers were fasting. Failure to keep their doors
open made restaurants subject to fines of up to $780, the equivalent of several
months’ salary.
So
restaurateurs made token gestures, assigning one waiter to sit in the doorway
and a chef to make a single dish that would be either eaten cold at night or
discarded.
In Kashgar, across from the Id Kah
Mosque, the largest in China, travelers described a bored teenage waiter in a
Muslim skullcap sitting in the doorway of a darkened restaurant looking out
onto the dusty sidewalk as if waiting for the customers he knew wouldn’t come. Along
the entire strip, restaurants were similarly unlit and empty, with none of the
usual smells of roasting lamb wafting from the kitchens.
“They just offer what they can to avoid
trouble,” said a doctor in his late 20s, who asked not to be quoted by name for
fear of retaliation. He described the compromise at one of his favorite
restaurants, where the chef made only rice pilaf. “The chefs can’t even taste
the food to make sure it is delicious.”
The policy extended deeper into Xinjiang
province than just Kashgar. In Aksu, 250 miles to the northeast, the municipal
website warned that restaurant owners “who close without reason during the
‘Ramadan period’ will be severely dealt with according to the relevant
regulations.”
Residents of Xinjiang province say that
Chinese policies regarding Ramadan have become steadily more draconian over the
years.
“It has
been bad since 1993 and it is getting worse,” said Tursun Ghupur, 33, who comes
from Kashgar but has been living in Beijing. “Usually for ordinary people it is
OK. You can pray and you can observe Ramadan. But if you go to school and have
a job with the government, you can’t be religious.”
Political scientists say the government’s
strategy is likely to backfire.
“Particularly
with the government crackdown on religion in Xinjiang, this has made more
people see religion as a form of resistance rather than personal piety,” said
Dru Gladney, a professor of anthropology at Pomona College specializing in
Central Asia. “From the authorities’ standpoint, it’s really
counterproductive.”
In recent months, Xinjiang has witnessed
the deadliest ethnic violence since huge riots in the regional capital, Urumqi,
in 2009. On the last weekend in July, the eve of Ramadan, Uighur protesters
staged a series of ambushes directed against Chinese authorities, leaving 22
people dead.
At the
very least, the restrictions on Ramadan undermine personal relations between
Uighurs and Han Chinese.
The Kashgar doctor related an incident
involving his nephew, a student at a junior high school. During the holiday,
the boy was given a piece of candy by his teacher, who is Han Chinese. “I’m
doing well in school. The teacher likes me. She gave me candy,” the boy told
his father late that day.
The father
scoffed at the explanation. “She is only trying to tell if you’re fasting for
Ramadan.”
The Atheist state is often very repressive against
Muslims
It’s not exactly breaking news that
China has serious issues with freedom of religion and as an officially Atheist
state is often very repressive against those observing religious rites. China
has once again leveled restrictions on the persecuted Uighurs when it comes to
practicing Ramadan. Unlike millions of Muslims around the world, Uighur
students returning for summer vacations in northwestern China are banned from
fasting during the holy month of Ramadan.
“They are extracting guarantees from
parents, promising that their children won’t fast on Ramadan,” Dilxat Raxit,
Sweden-based spokesman for the exile World Uighur Congress (WUC), told Radio
Free Asia on Thursday, June 13. Chinese authorities have reportedly imposed
restrictions on Uighur Muslim students returning for summer vacations in the
northwestern region of Xinjiang ahead of Ramadan.
Under the restrictions, Uighur students
under 18 are banned from fasting during Ramadan or taking part in religious
activities. Students defying the restrictions are being reported to authorities
for punishment.
“They have
also made groups of 10 households responsible for spying on each other, so that
if a single child from one family fasts for Ramadan, or takes part in religious
activities, then all 10 families will be fined,” Raxit said.
Religious officials have confirmed that
Ramadan fasting is banned for Uighur Muslim students. “[Fasting] is not
allowed,” an official at a religious affairs bureau in Hotan’s Yutian County
told Radio Free Asia. “The students and the teachers have to report to their
schools every Friday, even during the vacation. “It’s like regular lessons,” he
said, adding that the students would also be eating there. Activists have also
complained that Uighur students are being stripped off their mobile phones
ahead of Ramadan.
“After the students get back to their
hometowns, those with cell phones and computers must hand them in to the police
for searching,” said Raxit.
“If they
don’t hand them over and are reported or caught by the authorities, then they
will have to bear the consequences.” The pre-Ramadan restrictions come ahead of
the fourth anniversary of deadly riots in Xinjiang, which left nearly 200
people dead. Chinese authorities have convicted about 200 people, mostly
Uighurs, over the riots and sentenced 26 of them to death.
China Restrictions Stifle Uighurs' Ramadan
Restricting the entry of Uighur Muslims
to mosques and interfering with their requisite daytime fasting, Chinese
restrictions during the holy month of Ramadan are inviting the outrage of human
rights groups. "Launched in the name of stability and security, Beijing’s
campaigns of repression against Uighur Muslims include the targeting of
peaceful private gatherings for religious study and devotion," Dr Katrina
Lantos Swett, of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF),
was quoted as saying by The Muslim Village on Monday, July 15.
“These abuses predictably have led to
neither stability nor security, but rather instability and insecurity.” Ahead
of the start of Ramadan, Chinese authorities have imposed restrictions on
Muslim prayers at mosques and interfered with their requisite daytime fasting. According
to World Uighur Congress spokesman Dilxadi Rexiti, the government officials
have repeatedly entered Uighur homes to provide them with fruit and drinks
during daylight hours to force them to break their Ramadan fast.
Rexiti accused the authorities of
banning organized study of religious texts and placed religious venues under
close watch, including an “around-the-clock” monitoring of mosques in the
northern city of Karamay, the Karamay Daily reported. The worrying restrictions
were confirmed in the USCIRF’s annual report which said many Uighur Muslims
served prison terms for engaging in independent religious activity.
Government employees, professors and
students were also fined if they observe the fast. Another report by the
Washington-based Uighur American Association (UAA) in April cited a Muslim
restaurant owner from Hotan as saying that any restaurant closing, even for
repairs, during the holy fasting month, is fined. “The extremely aggressive and
intrusive religious restrictions even into the private lives of Uighurs by the
Chinese state will only further provoke the anger of the Uighur people,” UAA
president Alim Seytoff said.
“Violence may erupt again due to such
systematic repressive measures.”
Ramadan,
the holiest month in Islamic calendar, started last Wednesday, July 10. In
Ramadan, adult Muslims abstain from food, drink, smoking and sex between dawn
and sunset. The sick and those traveling are exempt from fasting especially if
it poses health risks. Muslims dedicate their time during the holy month to be
closer to Allah through prayers, self-restraint and good deeds.
Identity Struggle
Struggling with the Chinese government
to guarantee religious freedoms, Islamic practices were becoming a symbol of
Uighur identity.
“These
measures will only solidify the distance between the ethnicities in Xinjiang,”
Dr Reza Hasmath, an Oxford researcher with a focus on China’s ethnic
minorities, said. Other experts warn that the situation in Xinjiang is more
than a localized security issue.
“China needs to manage its minorities
better,” said Ronan Gunaratna, head of the International Centre for Political
Violence and Terrorism Research in Singapore. “At this point, threats to the
government comes primarily from its ethnicities.” By cracking down repeatedly
on Uighur Muslim identity, China has entered a “vicious circle” that only
created more resentment.
“Over the past few weeks, the central
leadership has had only one idea – to use as much security as possible,” said
Kerry Brown, director of Sydney University’s China Studies Centre. “And it’s a
very questionable strategy.
“The
government has a paranoid mindset, but this is a real problem that has nothing
to do with outsiders,” he said. These measures were actually threatening mass
uprising with potential to spill over on a regional, or even national, level. “China
could explode anywhere, but Xinjiang is at the forefront,” said Brown.
“It’s the perfect storm.”
Uighur Muslims are a Turkish-speaking
minority of eight million in the northwestern Xinjiang region. Xinjiang, which
activists call East Turkestan, has been autonomous since 1955 but continues to
be the subject of massive security crackdowns by Chinese authorities. Rights
groups accuse Chinese authorities of religious repression against Uighur
Muslims in Xinjiang in the name of counter terrorism.
Muslims accuse the government of
settling millions of ethnic Han in their territory with the ultimate goal of
obliterating its identity and culture.
Analysts
say the policy of transferring Han Chinese to Xinjiang to consolidate Beijing's
authority has increased the proportion of Han in the region from five percent
in the 1940s to more than 40 percent now. (HSH)
Sources:
1.OnIslam
2.
Aljazeera
5.International news agencies
It is heartbreaking when one hears that governments deprive even one person of their religious rights. From 1967 through 1990, Albania was officially atheist and from 1975 through 1979, so was Cambodia. Many religious rights have been curbed in the People's Republic of China and, while the activities of the Roman Catholic Church and the Falun Gong have been in the news, the rights of Muslims, in particular their rights to fast in Ramadan, have not. This is referred to as lying by omission -- if the media does not choose to report on it, people assume it is not happening and it is the media's fault for omitting it. This mistake must be corrected and pressure must be made to bear on the Chinese government to allow our brothers and sisters in Iman to have their rights restored. Insha'Allah they will.
ReplyDeleteEric Neil Koenig, Hajji
Islam is a religion of mercy and justice. It teaches its adherents to interact with all people and to cooperate with them for the betterment of mankind. More than ever today, Muslims need to work together with other groups that oppose oppression, bloodshed, corruption, promiscuity and perversion. They should also cooperate with non-Muslims in upholding truth and combating falsehood, in supporting the oppressed, and eliminating such dangers as pollution and disease.
ReplyDeleteOnly enemies who harbor hatred and contempt against Islam are addressed by those Quranic verses that warn Muslims against taking them as intimates and allies. Muslims are compassion as members of the human brotherhood. They are always to behave kindly toward any non-Muslim who are not hostile, whether by offering financial help, feeding the hungry, giving loans when needed, or interceding in connection with permissible matters, even if only by speaking kindly and advising them. The Quran addresses believers, saying:
” Allah does not forbid you from those who do not fight you because of religion and do not expel you from your homes – from being righteous toward them and acting justly toward them. Indeed, Allah loves those who are just.” (Quran, 60: 8 )