| In China, there are 83,000 people who fall under the ethnic
group category of Xibe. Most live in the fertile areas along the
Ili River in northwestern Xinjiang, especially in the Ili Kazak
autonomous prefecture's Qapqal Xibe autonomous county and the Huocheng
and Gongliu counties along the Ili River. The rest are scattered
over such areas as Shenyang, Kaiyuan and Yixian in northeastern
China.
Originating from different geographical and historical backgrounds,
the Xibe people in the northeast and northwest have developed vastly
disparate lifestyles. Those in the northeast have become increasingly
similar to the local Han and Manchu in cultural areas such as language,
costumes, food and in their general style of living. On the other
hand, those living in compact communities in Xinjiang have not strayed
far from their own customs.
The Xibe people believe in religions known as Shamanism and Lamaism.
They also have their own language and characters.
In early times, the Xibe people mainly engaged in hunting and fishing.
With a developing economy, they also turned to agriculture and trade.
The Xibe people depend on rice and wheat as their staple food, but
also favor naicha (tea with milk), ghee, mutton and beef. Eating
dogs is forbidden in their diet.
The traditional dress of the Xibe ethnic group is basically equivalent
to that of Manchus. Men often wear long robes or short shirts and
women wear cheongsam with laces mounted in the laps or cuffs. Today
most Xibe people have adopted Han fashion and only some elders in
Xinjiang maintain the traditional dress.
The Xibe people excel at singing and dancing. They are especially
adept at playing their musical instruments, the Dongbuer and the
Maken (harmonica). Xibe men are skilled archers. At festivals, sport
activities such as wrestling, toxophily, horse racing, sheep-tossing
and weight lifting are staged.
The traditional festival of the Xibe nationality is the "April
18th Festival." On April 18th, 1764, ordered by Emperor Qianlong
of the Qing Dynasty, 3,275 Xibe people were forced to relocate from
Shenyang to far Xinjiang. The Xibe people were relocated to the
frontier in order to serve as reserve soldiers at a military outpost
in the event that there was an invasion or unrest along the borderline.
After a one and half year trek, they arrived at Xinjiang and began
constructing their new homes.
In order to commemorate this historical event, Xibe people from
near and far gather to hold various activities, hence the "April
18th Festival."
Custom
The Xibe people in northeast and northwest China have each formed
their own characteristics in the course of development. The language
and eating, dressing and living habits of the Xibes in the northeast
are close to those of the local Han and Manchu people. Living in
more compact communities, those in Xinjiang have preserved more
of the characteristics of their language script and life styles.
The Xibe language belongs to the Manchu-Tungusic branch of the Altaic
Language Family. Legend has it that the Xibe ethnic group once had
its own script but has lost it after the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911)
was founded. A growing number of Xibe people came to learn the Manchu
and Han languages, the latter being more widely used. In Xinjiang,
however, some Xibe people know both the Uygur and Kazak languages.
In 1947, certain Xibe intellectuals reformed the Manchu language
they were using by dropping some phonetic symbols and adding new
letters of the Xibe language. This Xibe script has been used as
an official language by the organs of power in the autonomous areas.
The Xibe ethnic minority in Xinjiang believed in Polytheism before
China’s national liberation in 1949. In addition to the gods of
insect, dragon, land and smallpox, the Xibes also worshipped divine
protectors of homes and animals. Besides, some Xibe people believe
in Shamanism and Buddhism. The Xibe people are pious worshippers
of ancestors, to whom they offer fish every March and melons every
July.
In clothing, the Xibe women in Xinjiang like close-fitting long
gowns reaching the instep. Their front, lower hem and sleeves are
trimmed with laces. Men wear short jackets with buttons down the
front, with the trousers tightly tied around the ankle. They wear
long robes in winter. The Xibe costume in northeastern China is
basically the same as that of the Han people. Rice and flour are
staples for the Xibes. Those in Xinjiang who raise cattle and sheep
like tea with milk, butter, cream, cheese and other dairy products.
April 18 on the lunar calendar is the festival of the Xibes, who
would make flour or bean sauce on this day to mark the successful
conclusion of their ancestors' westward move. In autumn, they would
pickle cabbage, leek, carrot, celery and hot pepper. The Xibes enjoy
hunting and fishing during the slack farming season. They also cure
fish for winter use.
There are usually 100 to 200 households in each Xibe village,
which is enclosed with a wall two or three miles long. A Xibe house
usually consists of three to five rooms with a courtyard, in which
flowers and fruit trees are planted. The gates of the houses mostly
face south. Xibe women are good at paper cutting, and windows are
often decorated with beautiful paper-cuts.
In the past, each Xibe family used to consist of three generations,
sometimes as many as four or five generations, being influenced
by the feudal system. Marriage was, in most cases, decided by parents.
Women held a very low status and had no right to inherit property.
The family was governed by the most senior member who had great
authority. When the father was living, the sons were not allowed
to break up the family and live apart. In family life, the old and
the young each had his position according to a strict order of importance,
and they paid attention to etiquette. "Hala," a council
formed by male clan heads, handled major issues within the clans
and enforced clan rules.
History
The Xibes think they are descendants of the ancient Xianbei people,
and there are many versions of the origin of this ethnic group.
Xianbei was a branch of the ancient Donghu ethnic group in northern
China, roving as nomads over vast areas between the eastern slopes
of the Great Xinggan Mountains in northeast China. In A.D. 89, the
northern Xiongnus, defeated by the Han Dynasty troops, moved westward,
abandoning their land to the Xianbeis. Between A.D. 158 and 167,
the Xianbei people formed a powerful tribal alliance under chieftain
Tan Shihuai. Between the third and sixth centuries, the Murong,
Tuoba, Yuwen and other powerful tribes of Xianbei established political
regimes in the Yellow River valley, where they mixed with Han people.
But a small number of Xianbeis never strayed very far from their
native land along the Chuoer, Nenjiang and Songhua rivers. They
were probably the ancestors of the Xibe people.
Before the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), the Xibe ethnic group lived
in a vast area centering around the present-day Fuyu County in Jilin
Province and reaching as far as Jilin in the east, Hulunbuir in
the west, the Nenjiang River in the north and the Liaohe River in
the south. In the late 16th century, the Manchu nobility rose to
power. In order to expand their territory and consolidate their
rule, the Manchu rulers repeatedly tried to conquer neighboring
tribes by offering them money, high position and marriage, and more
often by armed force. Various Xibe tribes submitted themselves one
after another to the authority of the Manchu rulers. By the end
of the 17th century, the Xibe tribes in different areas had all
been incorporated into the "eight banners" of Mongolia
and Manchu. According to the "eight-banner system," soldiers
in the banners worked the land in time of peace and went to battles
during wartime, shouldering heavy military and labor services. In
less than 150 years after the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) was founded,
the Xibe people were removed from their native land in northeast
China to various other places as far as Yunnan and Xinjiang. The
Qing court also gave different treatment to various Xibe tribes
according to the time and way of their submission to show varying
degrees of favor and create differences in classification among
them.
In the mid-18th century, the Qing government quelled the rebellions
in Junggar and other localities of Xinjiang, and moved Xibes and
people of some other ethnic minorities from northeast China to Xinjiang
to consolidate and reinforce the northwestern border defenses. For
this garrisoning assignment which was to last 60 years, 1,016 Xibe
officers and soldiers were dispatched, and they took along more
than 2,000 family members. In one year and five months, the poorly-equipped
Xibes scaled mountains and forded rivers, eating in the wind and
sleeping in the dew, trekking across deserts and grasslands in Mongolia
to the faraway northwestern border. With striking stamina and tenacity,
they endured starvation, drought, diseases and difficulties brought
about by Qing officials, big and small, who embezzled army provisions
and goaded them on. This was how the Xibes came to live far apart
in northeast and northwest China. The heavy toll taken by the trip
sharply reduced the originally small Xibe population.
The ancient Xibe people lived by fishing and hunting generation
after generation. By the mid-16th century, the social organizations
of the Xibe ethnic group had shifted from blood relationship to
geographical relationship. The internal links in the paternal consanguineous
groups became very loose. In each Xibe village lived members with
different surnames. Because of the low productivity, collective
efforts were required in hunting and fishing. Members of the same
village maintained relatively close links in productive labor, and
basically abided by the principle of joint labor and equal distribution.
By the mid-17th century, the "eight-banner system" had
not only brought the Xibe people under the reign of the Qing Court,
but also caused drastic changes in their economic life and social
structure.
The Xibes are a hard-working and courageous people. Although geographical
isolation has given rise to certain differences between the Xibes
in northeast and northwest China in the course of history, they
have all made contributions to developing and defending China's
border areas. The Xibes in Xinjiang in particular have made great
contribution to the development of farming and water conservancy
in the Ili and Tacheng areas. Since the Qing court stopped supplying
provisions to the Xibes after they reached Xinjiang, they had to
reclaim wasteland and cut irrigation ditches without the help of
the government. They first repaired an old canal and reclaimed 667
hectares of land. With the increase of population, the land became
insufficient. Despite such difficulties as lack of grain and seeds
and repeated natural disasters, the Xibe people were determined
to turn the wasteland on the south bank of the Ili River into farmland
to support themselves and benefit future generations. After many
failures and setbacks, they succeeded in 1802 after six years of
hard work in cutting on mountain cliffs a 200-km irrigation channel
to draw water from the Ili River. With the completion of this project,
several Xibe communities settled along the channel.
Later, the Xibe people constructed another canal to draw water
from the upper reaches of the Ili River in the mid-19th century.
In the 1870s, they cut two more irrigation channels, obtaining enough
water for large-scale reclamation and farming. The local Kazak and
Mongolian people learned a lot of farming techniques from the Xibes.
While building irrigation channels and opening up wasteland, the
Xibes also joined soldiers from other ethnic groups in guarding
the northwestern border. In the 1820s, more than 800 Xibe officers
and soldiers fought alongside Qing government troops on a punitive
expedition against rebels backed by British colonialists. In a decisive
battle they wiped out the enemy forces and captured the rebel chief.
In 1876, the Qing government decided to recover Xinjiang from
the Tsarist Russian invaders. The Xibes stored up army provisions
in preparation for the expedition despite difficulties in life and
production inflicted by the marauders and cooperated with the Qing
troops in mopping up the Russian colonialists south of the Tianshan
Mountain and recapturing Ili.
The Xibe people in Xinjiang staged an uprising in support of the
Revolution of 1911 soon after it broke out. Those in northeast China
joined the Han and Manchu people in anti-Japanese activities after
that part of the country fell under Japanese rule in 1931. Many
Xibes joined such patriotic forces as the Anti-Japanese Allied Forces,
the Army of Volunteers and the Broad Sword Society. Quite a few
Xibes joined the Chinese Communist Party and the Communist Youth
League to fight for national liberation. In September 1944, struggle
against Kuomintang rule broke out in the Ili, Tacheng, Altaic areas
in Xinjiang. The Xibes there formed their own armed forces and fought
along with other insurgents.
Before 1949, the feudal relations of production in Xibe society
emerged and developed with the incorporation of the Xibes into the
"Eight Banners" of the Manchus, under which the banner's
land was owned "publicly" and managed by the banner office.
Irrigated land was mostly distributed among Banner officers and
soldiers in armor according to their ranks as their emolument. The
rest was leased to peasants. This system of distribution from the
very beginning deprived the Xibe people of the irrigated land which
they had opened up with blood and sweat.
In the 1880s, the "banner land system" for the Xibe
people in northeast China began to collapse, and the banner land
quickly fell under the control of a few landlords. Although the
banner system stipulated that the banner land could not be bought
or sold, cruel feudal exploitation gradually reduced the Xibe people
to dire poverty and deprived them of their land, and an increasing
number of them became farmhands and tenants, leading a very miserable
life.
Life After 1949
The founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949 ushered
in a bright future for the Xibe people, who have since enjoyed political
equality as one of the smaller ethnic minorities in China. In March
1954, the Qapqal Xibe Autonomous County was established on the site
of Ningxi County in Xinjiang, where the Xibe people live in compact
communities.
Since 1949, a series of social reforms have been carried out in
the Xibe areas. Industrial and agricultural production has grown
tremendously and people's living standards have gone up accordingly.
The economic and cultural leaps in the Qapqal Autonomous County
are a measure of the great success the Xibe people have achieved.
As a result of their hard work, grain output in the county in 1981
was nearly four times the pre-liberation average, and the number
of cattle three times as big. Small industrial enterprises including
coal mines, farm machinery works, fur and food processing mills,
which were non-existent before, have been built for the benefit
of people's life. There are in the county 12 middle schools and
62 primary schools enrolling 91.3 per cent of the children. The
Xibe people have always been more developed educationally. Many
Xibe intellectuals know several languages and work as teachers,
translators and publishers. Horse riding and archery are two favorite
sports among the Xibe people. Since 1949, endemic diseases with
a high mortality rate such as the Qapqal disease have been stamped
out, and the population of the Xibe has been on the increase. |