A cultural program for young Uyghurs in Germany
Activist Abduweli Ayup is attempting to keep Uyghur culture alive by teaching the younger generation their history and heritage.
While EU leaders try to improve relations with China and the war in Ukraine crowds out other crises, Europeโs Uyghurs are carving out a home for themselves. In early April, dozens of Uyghur children were gathered in Berlin by the scholar and activist Abduweli Ayup for an experimental program in cultural revitalization.
The group, with members from more than nine countries, visited the Humboldt Forumโs ancient monumental Uyghur paintings, the Berlin Jewish Museumโs Holocaust exhibit, and the ruins of the Berlin Wall. Almost a decade ago, Abduweli spent more than a year in prison for opening an Uyghur-language kindergarten in his native Kashgar, the capital of Uyghur culture. But now teaching children in Norway, he recognizes that places like his hometown โhave nothing to do with their daily life,โ he says. For Uyghur identity to survive, he believes, it must be made relevant for a new generation that has only ever known Europe.
On the first day, Abduweli took the group to see the cave murals at the Humboldt Forum. Relics of the last Buddhist Uyghur kingdoms, they were carted back to Berlin by German explorers over a century ago. Since their modern nationalist movement began in the 1920s, the paintings have allowed Uyghurs to declare, โYes, we had a great civilization and weโve been here much longer than the Chinese have,โ says Professor Johan Elverskog, a specialist in Uyghur religious history at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. โThey can point to the art and say, โWhatever, now itโs in Berlin, but they ripped it off the wall at Beziklik.โโ
Twelve-year-old Baris agrees. Seeing the paintings was โspecial,โ he says, โbecause now weโre Muslim, right? Back then, they were Buddhist. And I thought that was really cool โ seeing how we have changed.โ
Returning to the hostel that evening, Barisโs father โ a master of classic Uyghur music who trained with the legendary Abdurehim Heyt โ held an impromptu performance with his son in the hotel lobby. The manager, Abduweli reported, was not pleased, but relaxed when a group of Spanish tourists enthusiastically joined in. The concert โ held as a meshrep, a traditional gathering for communal entertainment โ became part of the daily itinerary for the rest of the program. Abduweli told me that the kids turned one nightโs meshrep into a surprise party for one of their new friends โ it was the first time heโd heard โHappy Birthdayโ played on the dutar.
The next day, with the younger kids away at the zoo, the programโs older participants and some of their parents visited the Jewish Museum. It was an emotional low point for everyone I spoke with. โWhat happened to the Jews is whatโs happening to us in a more modern way,โ Baris shared. โAt first, when I saw everything, I didnโt really think about it, but then when I came home, I just lay in my bed to sleep and just thought about that. And then I understood.โ
Abduweli related that later, when the children saw Germans their own age playing on the stone plinths of Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, โthey reacted really stronglyโ and immediately told them to come down. The Germans listened.
On the final day, the group reunited to cover the Berlin Wall with murals of their own. Together with an artist visiting from the Uyghur community in Kazakhstan, the children spent hours planning what they would paint. One design they chose, Abduweli says, was a bird. โThey said, โIf we are birds, we can see our grandmas. If weโre human beings, we canโt see them.โโ
Younger kids have a harder time making sense of whatโs happening to their families. Atike, a mother of four who chaperoned the programโs British contingent, says when her smallest children see friends spending time with grandparents and relatives, โTheyโre always asking why our own parents donโt come here, or why we canโt go thereโฆI canโt answer them.โ
Baris thinks the program succeeded. โBefore, I used to think weโre just a plain old folk group, yada yada,” he says. “But now I know we have a deep history and thatโs really cool.โ People โhave multiple cores that help them go through the day. I think one of them is being Uyghur.โ
But despite this new success, no one I talked to wants the Uyghur diaspora to be permanent. When I asked Atike if European Uyghurs are hopeful that theyโll be able to return to their homeland, she told me about her kidsโ piggy bank: โThey are collecting money right now. They say, โOne day, if we are going to East Turkestan, we will buy our ticket ourselves.โโ