China is turning 70 years the very day I’m
writing this! Besides gargantuan parades and tightened security controls all
over the country, the birthday also brings a whole week of public holidays. My
colleague and I added another three gap days so that in total we’d have 12 days
at our disposition. That’s enough time to go beyond China’s well-connected
coastal areas into its vast wild west. The five provinces Qinghai, Xinjiang,
Gansu, Tibet and Inner Mongolia make up about half of the country’s surface but
contain less than 8% of its population. Their territory is marked by deserts, high
plateaus and some of the world’s highest mountains. The Chinese government is
investing huge amounts of money in their infrastructure to spur economic
development and strengthen “national unity “, but despite those efforts most
places there are still only accessible by plane or endless bus rides through extensive
and empty landscapes.
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Flying into Qinghai... |
Even 12 days are not nearly enough to
really go deep in this far-off part of China, but we tried our best to get off
the beaten track for a couple days.
Going west in China means seeing people and
places that don’t resemble the dominant Han Chinese culture at all. It is for
that reason the party puts in extra efforts to mark these territories as
definitely and rightfully Chinese by means of innumerable China flags and
propaganda posters wherever you look. The relation between the 90% Han
population and the 10% that make up China’s 55 official minority groups ranges
from sentimentalizing to patronizing to hostile. Some Chinese tourists still
act like they’re in a zoo with the minorities practicing their rituals being
the exotic animals, though this seems to be getting better. Especially in the
case of Muslims there’s the concern that foreign influence might radicalize members
of the communities. This is not entirely unfounded, but the means of dealing
with it are everything but liberal and continue to raise media attention in the
western world. I’m mentioning all this because most of China’s Muslims live in
the north west where we start off our journey. Not all Muslims are equal to the
party however, and the Hui group that is making up a big part of Qinghai’s
population enjoys considerably more freedoms than their unfortunate Uighur
counterparts in the adjoining Xinjiang province. The deal is basically that minority
groups respect the party’s primacy over everything and in exchange are allowed
to practice their non-Han culture as long as it doesn’t call for independence
or opposes party positions.
Besides Islam, Buddhism is very visible in
the foothills of the Himalayas and the closer you get to Tibet, the more stupas
and fewer mosques appear around you. The bordering areas of Qinghai and Sichuan
are merely different from Tibet itself, with the advantage that you don‘t need a special permit or travel
group to be allowed to enter. Though you will definitely get a lot of curious
looks if you’re white, because you’ll be one of a very few. Mandarin will also
be essential, unless you happen to speak Tibetan.
The reward for full-day bus rides and
altitude induced headaches is first and foremost a stunning scenery, which in
turn makes the time spent in vehicles a lot more sufferable. Due to the
elevation vegetation just like human settlements is scarce, so most of the time
you‘ll be glancing
at endless mountain ridges with gentle slopes and grass growing on them. Here
and there you see pristine mountain lakes sprinkled into the landscape and in
the background you might catch sight of a couple snow-capped 6000+m high peaks.
Our first stop was at Chaka Salt Lake, which
is a tourist spot and salt mine at the same time. Chinese tourists love it for
its instagrammable (e.g. Wechattable) surface reflections and there are many hawkers
at its entrance selling brightly colored scarfs to fully capture the
photographic potential of the scenery for one’s social media feed. It’s easy though
to walk past the impromptu photo shootings and catch a glimpse of the vast unaffected
lake surface beyond the entrance are. The strong wind on the high plateau is reminiscent
of a sea breeze and I caught myself expecting to hear seagulls any second.
Given the salinity of the water and the land surrounding it it’s surprising
there’s any life at all. But some bird swarms and grasses are unimpressed by
their extreme surroundings.
The climb from 50m altitude in Guangzhou to
3200m in Chaka caused some headaches in the literal sense, so after a day we
headed back down to Xining (2500m) for recovery and one night with the
amenities of a big city before heading into the wild. Well, not exactly wild
maybe, but certainly less developed than what I’ve been used to in China. The
overnight bus from Xining to Yushu takes an impressive 16 hours for the 800km.
With passengers hopping on and off and parcels being stored and unloaded at
street corners, the trip reminded me a bit of traveling in India or South East
Asia. It was also an olfactory experience since many people in rural western
China still don’t have access to warm water, shower less and thus create an
odor that resembles a mixture of stale diary products and sweat. As the bus
driver decided to take his own 3 hour nap on the highest point of the trip at
4400m, sleeping was all but impossible while I fought a pesky headache and
nausea.
Yushu is the kind of place you’d imagine
when thinking about Tibet or maybe Nepal. There are buddhist monasteries and
stupas everywhere and the mountains surrounding it are dotted with prayer
flags. Most Han Chinese you see are tourists themselves, the locals live in an
entirely different cultural sphere where religion still plays a central role in
life. What’s indubitably Chinese are the massive government buildings as well
as ever present flags and propaganda. Yushu has been nearly eradicated by an
earthquake in 2010 with thousands of casualties. The government’s response was
swift and after only 4 years the city center was rebuilt, more tidy and modern
than before and with possibly even bigger administrative buildings.
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Prayer flags wrapping a holy site near Yushu |
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Yushu's main temple complex |
After a day in the city’s European-autumn
like climate with barely any altitude sickness, we drove over the highest pass
of our route. Reaching 4700m, it separates Qinghai from Sichuan and is
considered a sensitive area. In our case this meant increased police presence
and lots of roadside checks. The police got really curious – not in a negative
sense – when they spotted me, but even more surprising to them was the
existence of Karin. A Chinese looking girl with ethnic Chinese parents that is
not a Chinese?? How could this be possible?? Her attempts to explain why she
only had a foreign passport instead of a Chinese ID – parents migrated, born in
Germany, never lived in China – were more or less futile, her passport was
accepted but you could recognize that our interrogators didn’t actually comprehend
what she told them. Chinese still very much define themselves by bloodline, not
by identification documents. If you look Chinese, speak Chinese and your elders
came from China, well how could you not be Chinese? On the other hand, if you
look foreign and have foreign parents, you definitely can’t be Chinese. Not
that I’d want to, but this clear-cut distinction that would be considered
racist in the West is totally unquestioned here and applied by peasants in
Sichuan and urbanites in Shanghai alike. The comparison is not fair – China is
a very homogenous, developing country with little immigration in recent history
– but the fact that Chinese deny racism even exists in their country because it
is a “western construct” always gets me pissed in the face of these
experiences. Just imagine how unacceptable a German 6-year-old pointing its
fingers at random Asian and Black people excitedly shouting “Ausländer!” would
be.
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The highest elevation on our trip - the border between Sichuan and Qinghai |
Either way we made it through the numerous roadside
checks and spent a night in Shiqu, the capital of Sichuans westernmost, highest
and poorest county. There’s not a lot to see and do. Matter of fact, there are
barely restaurants to have dinner and only two hotels that accept foreigners (and
even there we’d be such a rare attraction that police was coming over from their
local headquarters to personally question and register us). The place was just
a quick stopover to catch a bus to the bigger and more developed city of Ganzi
300km further. The ride there was full of stunning landscapes and herds of yaks
being driven down the main road, thus blocking all traffic. There are certainly
more yaks than humans in these areas! Ganzi then was the last stop for us in
primarily Tibetan-Buddhist West-Sichuan and though there are not a lot of
tourist spots either, we stayed for two days simply to enjoy the serenity,
crisp air and space for one last time before diving back into the crowds of
your typical 10 million people Chinese metropolis.
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A crowd of locals waiting for a bus in Ganzi |
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Chengdu is also home to the world's largest shopping complex... |
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...with an integrated indoor water park. |
Of course, we didn’t miss out on the two
bucket-list items for anyone travelling to Chengdu: Yelping at the cute
clumsiness of pandas and groaning at the numbing spiciness of local the local
hotpot, said to be among the spiciest in China.
I’ll just let the pictures speak for
themselves here. Watching a Panda climb a tree shows very clearly they never
had to face predators in the wild, otherwise this species would long be
extinct. As for the hotpot, you should have an emergency response plan with
toilets in close proximity for the 12 hours following consumption…
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Pandas are many things, but elegant animals they are not |
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What spicy looks like |
After 3 days in Chengdu, work was calling and so on a Sunday morning we hopped on a bullet train and just 8 hours / 1600km later (you’re probably getting tired of my endless praise for Chinese high speed rail but ugghh I want this in Europe) arrived in Guangzhou were temperatures and humidity still defy the fact it’s autumn in the northern hemisphere.
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Nightscape in Chengdu |
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