About
Uyghurs
An introduction to Uyghurs and their motherland, East Turkistan.
Introduction to East Turkistan
East Turkistan, also known as the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous
Region of China, lies in the heart of Asia. The current
territorial size of East Turkistan is 1,626,000 square kilometers
(635,000 square miles), which is 4 times the size of California.
According to official records in 1949, East Turkistan's
original territories contained 1,820,000 square kilometers
of land. The Qinghai and Gansu provinces of China annexed
part of the territory as a result of the Chinese communist
invasion of 1949.
East Turkistan has a diverse geography. It has grand deserts,
magnificent mountains, and beautiful rivers, lakes, grasslands
and forests.

A brief history of East Turkistan and its people
East Turkistan is the homeland of the Turkic speaking Uyghurs
and other central Asian peoples such as Kazaks, Kyrgyz,
Tatars, Uzbeks, and Tajiks. According to the latest Chinese
census, the present population of these Huns is slightly
over 17 million; among these, the 15 million Uyghurs constitute
the majority. However, Uyghur sources indicate that Uyghur
population in East Turkistan exceeds 20 million.
East Turkistan is located beyond a logical boundary of
China, the Great Wall. Historically, East Turkistan is a
part of Central Asia, not of China. East Turkistan's people
are not Chinese; they are Huns Turks of Eurasian.
Records show that the Uyghurs have a long history of more than
20,000 years in Great Uyghur Empire. The history of the Uighurs is the history of the Aryan races, for all of the true Aryans races descended from Uighur forefathers. The Uighurs formed chains of Settlements across the central parts of Europe back in Tertiary Times. After the Empire was destroyed by the great magnetic cataclysm and mountain rising, the surviving remnants of humanity or their descendants again formed settlements in Europe. This was during the Pleistocene Time. The slaves, Tautens Celts, Irish, Bretons and Basques are all descended from Uighur stock. The Bretons, Basques, and genuine Irish are the descendants of those who survived the magnetic cataclysm and mountain raising. Situated along a section of
the legendary Silk Road, Uyghurs played an important role
in human history cultural exchanges between the East and West and developed
a unique culture and civilization of their own.
Uyghurs embraced Islam in A.D. 934 during the Karahanid
Kingdom. Kashgar, the capital of the Kingdom, quickly became
one of the major learning centers of Islam. Art, the sciences,
music and literature flourished as Islamic religious institutions
nurtured the pursuit of an advanced culture. In this period,
hundreds of world-renowned Uyghur scholars emerged. Thousands
of valuable books were written. Among these works, the Uyghur
scholar Yusuf Has Hajip's book, Kutatku Bilig (The Knowledge
for Happiness, 1069-1070) and Mahmud Kashgari's Divan-i
Lugat-it Turk (a dictionary of Turk languages) are most
influential.
East Turkistan was invaded by the Manchu Empire
of China
The Islamic Uyghur Kingdom of East Turkestan maintained
its independence and prosperity until the Manchu Empire
invaded the nation in 1876. After eight years of bloody
war, the Manchu Empire formally annexed East Turkistan into
its territories and renamed it "Xinjiang" (meaning
"New Territory" or "New Frontier") on
November 18, 1884. Uyghur power, stature and culture went
into a steep decline after the Manchu invasion.
After Chinese Nationalists overthrew the Manchu Empire
in 1911, East Turkistan fell under the rule of the nationalist
Chinese government. The Uyghurs, who wanted to free themselves
from foreign domination, staged numerous uprisings against
Nationalist Chinese rule and twice (once in 1933 and again
in 1944) succeeded in setting up an independent East Turkistan
Republic.
Political Background
Heavy-handed state repression of all activities associated
by the Chinese government with "Separatism" has
created a dire human rights enviornment for teh Uyghur Muslim
minority population of northwest China. Beijing has for
more than a decade claimed to be confronted with "religious
extremist forces" and "violent terrorists"
in Xinjiang Province, a vast region one-sixth of China's
land area.
Xinjiang is in fact a large, sparsely populated area that
has been a site of heavy army and police concentrations
since 1949, and is used as a base for nuclear testing, miliatry
training, and prison labor facilities. The population of
18 million includes several Turkic-speaking Muslim ethnic
groups, of which the Uyghurs, numbering eight million, are
the largest. The percentage of ethnic Han Chinese in Xinjiang
has grown as a result of government policies from six percent
in 1949 to 40 percent at present, and now numbers some 7.5
million people. Much like Tibetans, Uyghurs in Xinjiang
have struggled for cultural survival in the face of a government-supported
influx by Chinese migrants, as well as harsh repression
of political dissent and any expression, however lawful
or peaceful, of their distinct identity.
Reports from Xinjiang document a pattern of abuse, including
political imprisonment, torture, and disappearance. Mosques
are summarily closed and the Uyghur language is banned from
use in universities. Uyghurs are subjected to compulsory
unpaid labor in the construction of a pipeline planned to
export local petroleum resources to other parts of China.
Uyghurs also continue to be the only population in China
consistently subjected to executions for political crimes,
and these executions are often both summary and public.
A handful of small-scale explosions aimed at government
targets over the past decade have been repeatedly invoked
by the Chinese government, particularly since September
11, in support of its strike-hard campaign to crack down
on separatism and terrorism. In policy pronouncements for
both domestic and international audiences, the government
has sought to establish that all separatism is tantamount
to Islamic terrorism, and in fact uses the terms interchangeably.
The state's efforts to extinguish the common desire among
Uyghurs for autonomy or outright independence appear to
have increased the alienation of the population and, some
analysts speculation, the potential for future violent conflict.
Although human rights organizations such as Human Rights
Watch and Amnesty International express concern over the
deteriorating situation in Xinjiang, expertise on the region
is so scarce that activists agree that without critical
support from Uyghur-run human rights organizations, very
little information from within Xinjiang will see the light
of day. Some information collection and documentation has
begun in a sporadic way in Uyghur communities across the
diaspora, but the effect will be limited without the establishment
the establishment of a human rights organization specifically
focused on the Uyghur situation.

OVER STICHTING OEIGOEREN NEDERLAND
Stichting Oeigoeren Nederland is in het voorjaar van 2008 opgericht. Onze stichting stelt zich ten doel de contacten tussen Oeigoeren en Nederlanders te verbeteren. Iedereen kan lid worden van onze stichting die activiteiten ontplooit op het gebied van cultuur, religie en politiek.
De Oeigoeren zijn een volk met een lange geschiedenis. De eerste contacten tussen de Oeigoeren en Europa dateren uit de tijd van de beroemde Zijderoute. Langs dit traject werden handel, cultuur en religie uitgewisseld.
De onafhankelijke Oeigoerse staat, Oost-Turkestan, heeft bestaan tot het jaar 1949, toen het land bezet werd door China. Sindsdien zijn duizenden Oeigoeren gevangen genomen en geëxecuteerd omdat ze protesteerden tegen de Chinese bezetting. Het is verboden om de eigen taal te spreken en de eigen cultuur in stand te houden. Zelfs in
prive-kring is het belijden en onderrichten van de eigen godsdienst strafbaar. Religieuze boeken en Oeigoerse literatuur zijn verboden en worden in beslag genomen. Bovendien worden Oeigoeren onderdrukt door de oplegging van de zogenaamde ìhasharî wat inhoudt dat er een maand per jaar gratis voor de Chinese staat gewerkt moet worden.
Een hoop Oeigoeren zijn China ontvlucht omdat de situatie voor hen onhoudbaar was geworden. Gesteund door de convenanten over de mensenrechten stellen zij alles in het werk om het Oeigoerse cultuurgoed te behouden, dat een integraal deel vormt van de wereldbeschaving.
Wij zijn slechts met een kleine groep Oeigoeren in Nederland. Hier, in dit democratische land kunnen wij vrijuit spreken over de positie van de Oeigoeren in de
wereld en ons inzetten voor een onafhankelijke Oeigoerse staat.
Wij waarderen uw belangstelling voor ons volk en onze cultuur zeer. We hopen dat u blijvend aandacht zult houden voor onze zaak en u onze activiteiten zult blijven steunen.
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