Moderation trumps prejudice
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The biggest negative stereotype for people from Xinjiang is not violence but petty stealing. This was borne out by a map floating in cyberspace a few years ago. In it, every province or province-level jurisdiction was filled out with a few descriptions supposedly culled from polling.
This form of bigotry, disguised as humor, is often based on a few samples of news stories or gossip that have little statistical backup. But it is in human nature to grasp something big by digesting what you've seen or heard into manageable tips or factoids that can be a guide.
Let's imagine a Chinese farmer living in the landlocked interior. One day, a Caucasian backpacker wandered by and sought accommodation from him. The farmer played host and they communicated for a few days. That tourist, willy-nilly, was actually serving as the representative of all non-Chinese in the world.
Nobody elected him for this function, and he might not even be aware of this role. But to this particular Chinese farmer, whatever virtues or foibles that young foreign man exhibited were extrapolated to billions of other people the farmer had never met.
Ignorance is the breeding ground for stereotypes, good or bad. By the time that Chinese farmer encounters 1,000 foreigners, (let's imagine his hometown later morphed into a tourist hotspot) there's no way he would see every one of them as a chip from the same block. He would have realized that each of them has his or her unique personality and way of doing things. He may be comfortable with some of them, but not with others, most possibly not along national or geographic lines.
Years ago, I spent a few days in Urumqi. I talked to taxi drivers and business owners, among others. It was by no means a scientific survey.
But one thing struck me: Those who spoke ill of other ethnicities tended to be new arrivals in the city, from the rest of Xinjiang or the rest of the country. Those who had lived in the city for many years almost unfailingly defended other ethnicities, often speaking in a mildly complaining tone about the pervasive ignorance.
The inevitable backlash in the aftermath of the Kunming incident has been met with a sweeping grassroots campaign to inject common sense into self-righteous bigots. The first story that popped up on my weibo (micro blog) account was about a Uyghur youth in Dali, a tourist town in Yunnan. As soon as someone said his landlord was evicting him and his restaurant that was in business for eight years was being shut down, many jumped to his rescue, including several minor celebrities. Later, it was clarified that there were no systematic evictions and some people called on the public to patronize Uyghur-owned businesses to let them know we are all in the same boat and that terrorists are our common enemy.
Yu Minhong, a prominent business leader, posted a tweet on March 4: "After the bloody incident in Kunming, some places started to drive away Uyghur compatriots. I'm making an appeal here that most Uyghur people are law-abiding citizens who work diligently for their lives. I have many Uyghur friends and my company employs some as well. They all work hard to maintain racial teamwork. We must not resort to mutual hatred and repulsion because of the monstrosity of the terrorists. We must work together to win back racial harmony."
Among the thousands of responses, most understand the logic that there are bad apples in every ethnic or geographic group and most people anywhere and everywhere are kind and decent. But understandably, there are also voices on both extremes, either condemning the whole region or ethnicity or justifying the attackers with a broader take on race relations. For the time being, the most pressing issue is to prevent further terrorism and to separate the evildoers from the majority of good people who share their race, religion or hometown.
For those who bad-mouth a whole ethnic or geographic group, the sharpest retort I've seen was: "How many Xinjiang or Uyghur people do you know?" It's quite possible those people who spread hate have not met in person a single one from the group they are demonizing.
A hashtag on a micro blog called "I'm a Xinjiang person" has attracted tens of thousands of participants, each recounting his or her perspective as a resident of that region. Anyone who cares to scroll through those statements, often with photos, will get a better picture of this beautiful place and its wonderful people and will think twice before making sweeping generalizations.
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