Saturday, October 13, 2012

Kashgar/Kashi

Here in China, the first week of October is the mid-Autumn Moon Festival.  It is also called "The Golden Week" as the country takes a vacation, it's also golden because the weather at this time of year is generally the best out of any time during the year, and this year was no exception.  Former HRS student, and recent college graduate, Sam M. decided to travel in Asia for a few months before starting his job.  After a week here in Beijing, the two of us flew out to Xinjiang Province, or officially, Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China's largest up there in the Northwestern Corner.  We spent a week there, first stop, Kashgar (Kashi in Chinese).

China is a BIG Country.  It's a 4.5 hour flight from Beijing to Urumqi (the capital of Xinjiang) and then another 1.5 hours to Kashgar/Kashi, which is in WAAAAY western China.

Out here, we are NO LONGER in Han dominated China.  What one thinks of as looking "Chinese" doesn't apply.  We are in Muslim dominated central Asia.  The people in this part of "China" are Uyghurs.



These guys wanted to talk to Sam.  They asked where he was from.  Sam, not I, often got asked by other people to take pictures of him, just like I wanted to take pictures of them.

Any trip to Kashgar is not complete without a trip to the Sunday Livestock Market.

On the outskirts of town, over the course of a few hours in the morning, every animal in the area is squeezed into a two acre area.

Sam getting the call to help the unloading process.




Testing out the horses!!

Lining the goats up "bicycle style" I called it

These traders are standing in line (or in China, a blob)...

To get their sheep/goats weighed.


I was standing at the exit door and was called on to help keep the door closed.  Potential runaway sheep situation...AVERTED.

This young boy is now ready to do business.

I got a chance to talk to this man.  His native language is Uyghur, but he did speak some Mandarin.  We did the best we could, but I did learn that he comes from 2 hours away and he generally trades with people he knows/friends.  He was there that day to purchase young goats.  The going price was 500 RMB for the smaller goats and 700 RMB for the larger ones.  His plan was to take them home, raise them and then sell them at the market in the future.


There are VERY few woman to be seen at the market.  This was one of the few.

She let Sam try his hand at shearing, but quickly took away his scissors!!  Apparently, his technique led to the possibility of stabbing the animal.

Camels for SALE!  That was unexpected.  My first time seeing a two humped camel.

And over here....cows!

And lots of them.

After checking out the merchandise, time to negotiate.

We've got a sale.

At the end of the market, we got a ride back in the back of this little truck from this man.

The wind in our hair....

...and we were joined by a man who had just sold all his livestock!

When in Uyghur country....

...you have to go with the native hats.  So I bought one of each.

Jen Liu Kao (1922-2012)

My grandmother, after taking a severe fall and a couple surgeries that were difficult on her respiratory system, was allowed to pass away with dignity on Friday September 28th, 2012 in Seattle, WA.  By her side were a majority of my family members.  Here's a tribute that I wrote in her honor.

My maternal grandmother lived a life that spanned nine decades and two continents. To say that we, her family, are sad at her passing is simply human nature. However, what we tend to forget is that this woman, brought incredibly joy and humor to all of our lives.

For the first 20 years of my life, my grandmother resided in Taiwan before she moved to the States in 1990 and I would see her once or twice a year. But during those visits she was everything you would want a grandmother to be. She spoiled my sister and I by always giving us what we wanted and let us take care of her as well, as she would make giving HER a massage something that became something we GOT to do. I never was wise enough to ask about her life, however, and by the time I wanted to, her hearing had diminished to the point where communication with her was nearly impossible, often borderline comical. Trying to talk with her was a challenge and it became a regular laugh between my sister and when we compared notes on our attempts at our conversations with her. We both suspect that there was always a bit of selective hearing on hand as well. Grandma was a crafty one. 

But for me, the memory of her that will stay with me forever is her devotion to our beloved Seattle Mariners. For a woman who never mastered the English language, baseball was her connection to American culture. When the Mariners were great in the late 90's and early 2000's, she had fantastic (and often politically incorrect) nicknames for the players. And during these lean years, she always knew when the Mariners played and their opponents. Family events sometimes revolved around when a game was on television. One of my fervent wishes was for the Mariners to again be a winning team again not just for Seattle pride, but to make my grandmother happy. I will miss how my grandmother's first question to me is what I want to eat. I will miss her simply sitting there gazing at me as I sat there in her house. I will miss that look on her face when she understood what I had just yelled into her ear. But most of all, I will miss my grandmother's, a 90 year old Chinese woman, passion for baseball, a American game.