China Bans Uyghur Language in Xinjiang Schools
July 28, 2017 - Authorities in northwest China’s Xinjiang region have issued a directive
completely banning the use of the Uyghur language at all education levels up to and
including secondary school, according to official sources, and those found in violation of
the order will face “severe punishment.”
The new ban marks one of the strongest measures yet from Beijing aimed at assimilating
ethnic Uyghurs, who complain of pervasive ethnic discrimination, religious repression, and
cultural suppression by the China’s ruling Communist Party in Xinjiang.
In late June, the Education Department in Xinjiang’s Hotan (in Chinese, Hetian) prefecture
issued a five-point directive outlawing the use of Uyghur at schools in favor of Mandarin
Chinese “in order to strengthen elementary and middle/high school bilingual education.”
Under the directive—a copy of which was obtained by RFA’s Uyghur Service—schools must
“insist on fully popularizing the national common language and writing system according to
law, and add the education of ethnic language under the bilingual education basic
principle.”
Beginning in the fall semester this year, Mandarin Chinese “must be resolutely and fully
implemented” for the three years of preschool, and “promoted” from the first years of
elementary and middle school “in order to realize the full coverage of the common language
and writing system education.”
The directive instructs schools to “resolutely correct the flawed method of providing
Uyghur language training to Chinese language teachers” and “prohibit the use of Uyghur
language, writing, signs and pictures in the educational system and on campuses.”
Additionally, the order bans the use of Uyghur language in “collective activities, public
activities and management work of the education system.”
Any school or individual that fails to enforce the new policy, that “plays politics,
pretends to implement, or acts one way and does another,” will be designated “two-faced”
and “severely punished,” it said, using a term regularly applied by the government to
Uyghurs who do not willingly follow such directives.
‘Encouraging’ Mandarin
Four different officials anonymously confirmed the directive to RFA and said their local
county governments were preparing to implement it ahead of the fall semester.
A Han Chinese official at Hotan’s Qaraqash (Moyu) county Education Bureau said that the
directive was issued on June 28 and distributed to all county education bureaus two days
later.
“I can give you the contents of this directive, but only the Prefectural Educational
Department has the right to explain them,” he said, referring further questions to the
department.
A Uyghur official with Hotan’s Chira (Cele) county government said she had heard about the
directive, but was not fully aware of its contents.
“I heard that all teaching in elementary and middle/high schools will be done in the
Chinese language, beginning in September, and Uyghur language will not be used,” she said.
A Uyghur official at the same county’s Education Bureau was able to provide more
information about the new policy, which he said his bureau was “urgently discussing the
implementation of.”
“All teachings will be conducted in the Chinese, not Uyghur, language in the upcoming
semester,” he said.
“Even the Uyghur textbooks will be replaced with Chinese textbooks from inland China. All
teachers and students are required to speak the Chinese language only in the school and
education system,” he added.
The Uyghur official said that while Hotan prefecture had repeatedly tried to implement a
bilingual education policy over the past 10 years, “the national language hasn’t become
popularized.”
“As a result, the Prefectural Education Department issued this directive to deal with this
situation,” he said.
A Han Chinese official from the Education Bureau for the seat of Hotan prefecture told RFA
that the directive is being implemented throughout the prefecture to “encourage” the
learning of the national language.
“Education authorities decided to ban the use of the Uyghur language in order to create a
favorable environment for minorities to study the national language,” he said.
“This is, in fact, good for Uyghurs to study the national language. Uyghur students will
not study Mandarin if they learn from Uyghur language materials in the school system. That
is why they should immerse themselves daily in Chinese language announcements, propaganda,
signs and other materials.”
“All meetings and collective activities” in the school system will be held in Mandarin in
the future, the official added.
Illegal policy
While Beijing has attempted to implement a “bilingual” system in Xinjiang’s schools over
the past decade, Uyghurs say the system is monolingual and reject it as part of a bid to
eliminate their mother tongue and increase their assimilation into Han Chinese culture.
Additionally, the bilingual education policy is in violation of both China’s constitution
and regional ethnic autonomy laws.
Article 4 of the first chapter of China’s constitution states that “the people of all
nationalities have the freedom to use and develop their own spoken and written languages,
and to preserve or reform their own ways and customs.”
Article 121 of the charter’s sixth section states that in performing their function, the
organs of self-government in China’s autonomous regions should “employ the spoken and
written language or languages in common use in the locality.”
Additionally, Article 10 of the first chapter of China’s Regional Ethnic Autonomy Law on
Language states that agencies in ethnic autonomous areas “guarantee the freedom of the
nationalities in these areas to use and develop their own spoken and written languages and
their freedom to preserve or reform their own folkways and customs.”
Article 37 of the law’s third chapter states that “schools (classes) and other educational
organizations recruiting mostly ethnic minority students should, whenever possible, use
textbooks in their own languages and use these languages as the media of instruction.”
Ilshat Hassan, president of the Washington-based Uyghur American Association, told RFA
that Beijing is attempting to skirt its own laws by labeling the new policy part of a
bilingual education, while it works to “eradicate one of the most ancient Turkic languages
in the world.”
“In fact, by enforcing this new policy at the preschool level, the Chinese government
intends to kill the Uyghur language at the cradle,” he said.
“It is nothing short of cultural genocide. The international community must not allow
China to destroy our beautiful language and culture, which has thrived for several
millennia.”
Reported by Eset Sulaiman for RFA’s Uyghur Service. Translated by Alim Seytoff. Written in
English by Joshua Lipes.
View this s tory online at:
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/uyghur/language-07282017143037.html
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