Friday, June 24, 2016

Naadam: Our Final Festival

One of the best things about not living in a larger Chinese city like Beijing, Shanghai, or even Hangzhou is the presence of other cultures. In many parts of the country, the traditional Han Chinese culture is dominant and other cultures (Tibetan and Uyghur in particular) are many times discouraged and swept under the carpet. However, here in Bayannur somehow the Han culture and the Mongolian culture have managed to work together to create a very unique culture all its own that compliments one another.

During our May Holiday trip to Hohhot we got our first taste of Mongolian culture and today, we got our second taste with the Mongolian Student Association holding their very own Naadam Festival.

Naadam (Наадам in Mongolian and Naɣadum in Traditional Mongolian) literally means "games." It is an Eastern version of the Olympics and has three different events (which is why it is sometimes called "эрийн гурван наадам" or "the three games of men")--wrestling, archery, and horseback riding. Traditionally (just like the Olympics), this festival is reserved only for men, however, in recent years, women have begun to take part in both archery and horseback riding all throughout Mongolia. 


The largest festival, known as the National Naadam, is held in the capitol of Mongolia, Ulaanbaatar (ᠤᠯᠠᠭᠠᠨᠪᠠᠭᠠᠲᠤᠷ), from July 11-13. It is believed that the Naadam Festival has roots that date back thousands of years in one way or another--once connected to celebrations such as births and weddings as well as a way to train soldiers. However, today it is the official celebration of the 1921 Revolution where Mongolia declared its independence from China. 

Mongolia is just north of China and south of Russia
Supposedly, Genghis Khan's nine horse tails are still brought ceremoniously to the National Stadium for the opening ceremony. The nine horse tails are meant to represent the nine Mongol tribes. Of course, no one knows where Genghis Khan is buried so I'm not so sure where they found his horses...

Genghis Khan... Father of all Mongols.
The first event for the Naadam games is wrestling and it's only open for men to participate. Mongolian wrestling is different from other types of wrestling like those found in Japan and America. It is untimed and the only rule is that (other than your hands and feet) no part of your body can touch the ground. There are various rounds with one winner and one loser in each round. The wrestlers wear a two piece outfit--a tight shoulder vest called a "zodog" and shorts  called "shuudag." And each wrestler has an encourager or a "zasuul." They cheer on their wrestler and sing a song of praise and congratulations to the winner. 

You can see the zasuul as well as the tight shoulder vest and awkwardly short shorts.
The second event is archery and it is open for both men and women. Archery is a vital part of the Mongolian culture despite persecution in the past. The Mongols were some of the best archers in the world and even still today. The competition is split into teams of ten where men shoot from 75m away and women from 65m away. Unlike our traditional ideas of what archery tournaments look like (thank you, Robin Hood), Mongolian archery tournaments are very different. They have many different targets called "surs." The surs are woven or wooden cylinders and they are stacked three high. The goal is to knock out as many surs from the different stacks as possible in the round your team shoots. The goal is to hit 33. If there is a good hit, the judge will yell out "Uuhai!" which means "Hooray!" The winners of this game are given the title of National Marksman/Markswoman.

Women have finally begun to take part in the Naadam Festival as of 2005.
The third and final event is a bit different from the other two. It is open to both men and women but it is only open to those between the ages of 5-13 years! Just like archery, horses have been an integral part of Mongolian history and culture and that is clear even in the Naadam Festival. Just like archery tournaments, horse races in Mongolia are very different from those in America. In America, races are generally short (maybe 2km) and held within an enclosed track. In Mongolia, it is more of a cross-country event rather than a sprint. The length of the race depends on the age of the horse (a younger horse may only race for ten miles and older horses might go for seventeen miles). The child who wins the race is given the title "tumny ekh" or the "leader of ten thousand."

The little jockeys.
Now when I was first looking up things for Adam and me to do in Inner Mongolia, my heart sank when I saw the dates for the Naadam Festival, knowing full well that we'd already be back in America at this point. However, today we got a surprise message telling us that the Mongolian students at HeTao College were holding their own games before everyone goes home for the summer. We knew we wouldn't be able to get up to Ulaanbaatar so we were happy to go to the school's stadium and check it out.

At first, I felt bad--we were literally the only people there (I get the feeling that there is a big divide between the Chinese students and the Mongolian students here) but eventually more people came out to show their support. 

The Festival opened with a dance by a group of students dressed in beautiful traditional Mongolian dresses. Spinning around and even using dance moves to symbolize the ever important horses from their culture, it was a beautiful way to start the celebration of the Mongolian people and culture. 

The blue scarves in their hands are a Buddhist custom also seen in Tibet and even Nepal. However, instead of the traditional white, these scarves were blue. Blue is a very sacred color in Mongolian culture representing eternity as well as the sky so it would make sense their scarves would be blue. 
From there, four members of the Mongolian community, dressed in traditional clothing (called "deel"), made their way slowly around their very own ovoo (shrines scattered throughout the grasslands, usually made of stones, where people come to pray for rain). The four men walked around the ovoo three times, just as we were taught to do when we visited the grasslands. Each of them held one of the blue scarves as well as different plates of food. As usual, we had no idea what was going on, but I'm thinking it was some sort of offering given up to bless the games. After all, the Naadam games were once seen as a Buddhist celebration until influence from Communist Russia affected the games in the 1930s and made them much more secular.

The two very different ovoos--one in the grasslands and one in our stadium.
The men walking around the ovoo three times before offering up different plates of food.
Of course, our Naadam Festival did not have horseback riding as an event (no children, no horses, no cross-country). The majority of the festival was watching the young men wrestle one another. Some got really into it and others just let their opponent throw them over their shoulders within the first three seconds. They wore their "zodog" tight shoulder vests but, thankfully, the shorts were replaced with jeans and sweatpants. 


We were originally up in the stands but then one of the Mongolian teachers came up to us and brought us back down to the VIP seats right on the field. Nice!

I'll admit, archery was a bit lame. For how much history has built up the Mongols as these incredible archers, most of the guys shooting didn't even seem to know how to hold a bow! I guess times have changed... However, there was still a "sur" for them to shoot at and they drew back with their thumb as opposed to their pointer finger like we were taught out in the grasslands!

Let the foreigners show you how it's done! 

Descendants of the great Khans and Mongols!

Of course, our school's little Naadam Festival was nowhere close to what you would see at the National Festival. However, I'm really proud of the students who came together during finals week to celebrate their culture in a place where it's sometimes hard to be proud of who you are. I could see from the dancing to the wrestling to the smiles that they were having fun, being themselves, and sharing their proud Mongolian culture with us. 

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

Well, this is the last you'll hear from me for a little while. Tomorrow we are flying out of Bayannur and making our way to one of the happiest places on earth--Hong Kong Disneyland! A few days of magic and then it is back to the land of the free and the home of the brave. 

See you all in four days!!

Until Next Time,
Amanda

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Gobi Desert Greetings

While the terrain down in the south of China where I've lived for years was very similar from place to place with the occasional mountain popping out on the horizon, the terrain here in Inner Mongolia is wild. You'll be in the middle of the plains for hours and suddenly there are mountains rising high above you only to be followed behind by a desert. That's why Adam and I were excited to find that the tour we had chosen took advantage of the varying terrain.

After spending the night drinking and laughing around a poop fire and sleeping in our yurt (seriously one of the coziest places I have ever slept!), we boarded our trusty bus and headed out of the grasslands, passed the big city, left the mountains in the dust, and stepped out in the Gobi Desert.

The Gobi Desert spans across both China and Mongolia. In Chinese it is referred to as 戈壁 (Gebi) and in Mongolian, it is Говь or "Gevi." The Gobi Desert is the fifth largest desert in the world and the largest one in Asia at 500,000 square miles. It is both sandy and rocky and it tends to be a very cold desert (I know! I assumed all deserts were hot too... until I was freezing in one!)

We were in the part of the desert called Ordos Desert. You can see the city of Hohhot to the northeast of us.
The Gobi Desert is the home of many different species despite the harsh climate including gazelles, Mongolian wild ass, and sometimes even snow leopards, wolves, and brown bears! And of course, a desert would be incomplete without camels. 

There are two species of camel in the world. The one humped dromedary camel, also known as the Arabian camel, is from (you guessed it!) the Arabian Peninsula and is found all through Northern Africa today.  The camels found in Inner Mongolia are known as Bactrian camels and are only found in small pockets in Central Asia. They are considered critically endangered in the wild and are almost entirely domesticated today. 

The Bactrian camel population VS. the Arabian camel population.

Now it's been a dream of mine ever since I was a little girl with hopes of being an Egyptologist to ride a camel through the desert. Fourteen years in the making, you can be darn sure I was going to get on the back of a camel while living in the middle of the Gobi Desert. 

After putting on unnecessary protective covers for our shoes, we hopped into a large (for lack of a better word), sand dune rover (it almost resembled those amphibian trucks that can enter into the water on those super touristy Duck Tours). The driver with no fear of hydroplaning (or the sandy equivalent), zoomed down the road and up and over the dunes. As we traveled further from our bus and deeper into the desert all vegetation seemed to vanish and nothing but golden rolling sand dunes surrounded us for as far as we could see. 



We arrived at a little oasis where we were greeted by our own little herd of camels. I was the first to hop up on a camel's back and I quickly dubbed him Clyde. 

Fun fact: when camels stand up with you on their back, it is terrifying. You lean forward and then fall back, all the while with this massive creature beneath you. But my heart quickly stopped pounding from fear and started beating for the incredible views I could see from Clyde's back. 

Cross off #103 from My Life List! 
Following behind in a perfect little line (except for Clyde who didn't like waiting his turn), we wandered through the desert. The wind was brutal and the sand got everywhere (seriously, I am still finding it, three showers later) but the relaxed amble of the camels and the wave-like patterns in the sand were incredible. 


I've always had a love for horses (I think many girls go through a stage in their younger years where they dream of owning a horse before they actually realize the cost behind it) but for some reason, I've found that my love for riding a camel runs far deeper than riding a horse (it could be that the horse's trot was merciless on my bottom and the camel's slow stroll pitied my bum). You can see why for thousands of years different people in different parts of the world have chosen the camel as their companion through the harshness of the desert. 


Being a girl from Buffalo, New York, I am very much familiar with sledding. I had my Pocahontas sled growing up that I would take down to the river with my mom and my brother. It was wet. It was cold. It was white. 

If you can sled down a hill in the snow, why not try it in the sand too?

Taking one of the super beat up, broken, and completely falling apart "sleds" one by one each of us conquered the dunes of the Gobi Desert. Standing at the very top, it's a bit intimidating. You see how steep the hill is. The wind beats at your back, threatening to push you over before you're ready. But you know how it goes--when in Rome! 


I only managed to slide down twice because once down, we had to climb back up the hill. It sounded easy but about halfway up, myself and a young French girl just turned and looked at each other and decided that right there on the dune was a perfect place to die. 

It's just incredible seeing sights like this--they belong in books or movies or your imagination. How can they be real? How can you touch them? Hear them? Smell them? As I push myself down the sand dune, I couldn't help but feel like Rey on Jakku from The Force Awakens (sorry for the major nerd out but it's true!). 

I can see the similarity.

While the grasslands were beautiful, it is the desert that I would demand that everyone gets to see at least once in their lifetime--to see that what is harsh can also be beautiful and life changing. 


Until Next Time,
Amanda

PS: Happy Hump Day!! See what I did there? ;)
55 days... 

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

In the Footsteps of the Khans


The spring in China is definitely in need of as many holidays as we get in the fall semester. Luckily, this past weekend was the May Holiday (basically our Labor Day). Two years ago, The Big Four journeyed to ZhangJiaJie (Avatar Mountains). 


This year, we wanted to explore a bit more of the Mongolian culture that is on the fringe of life here in Bayan Nur so we decided to head east to the capital of the Inner Mongolian autonomous region (and the namesake of a pretty delicious restaurant), Hohhot.


Hohhot (ᠬᠥᠬᠡᠬᠣᠲᠠ in Mongolian and 呼和浩特 in Chinese) is the capital of Inner Mongolia and just two cities next door from Bayan Nur. The name of the city actually means "Blue City" and by exploring Inner Mongolia for just a day, you can easily see the significance of the color in Mongolian culture. Blue represents the sky (in China, the color of the sky is referred to as "Inner Mongolia Blue") but it also represents eternity and purity.

By Chinese standards, the history of Hohhot is not very long. Established in 1557 by Altan Khan (descendant of the famed Kublai Khan), Hohhot was initially a small town that sprang up around the still standing Da Zhao Temple 大召寺. At the time, the town was known as "Blue Town" (similar to it's nickname today, "Blue City"). Altan Khan used the temple and the small town to try and convince the Ming Dynasty of his right to rule the Western and Southern Mongol tribes at the time. Over the next 200 years, the Mongols and Han Chinese teetered back and forth between peace and war until the beginning of the 18th Century, when the Qing Dynasty Emperor, Kangxi, sent in troops into the region, keeping Mongol attacks at bay.
Altan Khan, founder of Da Zhao Temple and Hohhot

Perhaps it's the fact that we've been in China for so long, but both Adam and I agree that the Mongolian culture is far more exotic than the Chinese culture we've grown so accustomed to. Because of that, we didn't really have a deep desire to explore yet another large, industrial, Chinese capital city. The allure of the Mongols was too strong for us, so joining a tour with a local guesthouse (Anda Guesthouse if anyone is ever in the city--the BEST hostel I've stayed at in China), we left the city of Hohhot in the dust and journeyed three hours northwest to the rolling grasslands of Inner Mongolia.

Now as you're driving through the grasslands of China, you do tend to notice that almost every aspect of any culture in China has somehow become a tourist attraction--temples, shrines, mountains, and in the case of the Mongolian culture, even yurts. There are dozens and dozens of yurt resorts dotting the grasslands. As we continued to drive, I was beginning to get a bit nervous seeing the hoards of concrete yurts everywhere.

Resort yurts made of concrete, not animal skins
First mentioned by Herodotus over 3,000 years ago, a yurt, or sometimes also known as a ger (гэр), is a round structure meant to be moved from place to place. It has been used by nomadic people all throughout Central Asia for centuries. Using wood or bamboo, they weave the wood together in a sort of latticework all throughout the perimeter of the structure and then cover the frame with wool. Today, tarps add a second layer of protection, especially against the wind.

Adam, Kevin, Alyssa, Kristen, and Andy
When we arrived at our final destination, we were greeted by a Mongolian family at their personal farm. Cows, sheep, dogs, and chickens roam freely, and nothing but the green grasslands surround you for as far as you can see. There were four "small" yurts that could hold up to eight people in one as well as a larger yurt that was to be the main dining area. Scattered through the small camp were Tibetan prayer flags flapping in the wind, a fire pit, and poop. Lots and lots of poop.



After a delicious homemade lunch of mutton stew with potatoes and carrots, we pulled on our traditional Mongolian boots (I'm pretty sure I had two left shoes on) to go horseback riding through the great plains of the grasslands.

It is said that "A Mongol without his horse is like a bird without wings." Horses are a key part of the Mongolian culture and have been since the 13th Century when the Mongols began conquering most of Asia and even parts of Europe under the rule of Genghis Khan.

Horses have also made their way into spiritualism and mythology of Mongolia--a blue ribbon tied around a horse's neck shows that it is the sacred horse of the herd; when a warrior died, his horse would be killed and buried with him to help him in the afterlife; mare's milk is used for rituals and blessings; if a horse was happy in life, his spirit will help the herd after him flourish; and even a person's very soul is called a "wind horse" and it can be seen on the Mongolian coat of arms.


Today, horses are used for races, herding, milk and meat products, as well as tourism. Many of the resorts along the grasslands also offer horseback riding excursions and even though we claim to be adventurers and not tourists, sometimes you just have to swallow your pride and ride a horse through the Mongolian grasslands.

The Mongolian horses we rode were a lot shorter than the horses we're used to seeing in America. My favorite part was the fact that they still had their winter coats so they were all fluffy too.

Edgar and Tango


It was amazing riding on the back of a horse quite possibly descended from so many of the horses that ran through the grasslands alongside the warriors and khans through the centuries. They confidently carry you along the grasses going back and forth between a nice slow amble and a trot (my horse, Edgar, actually busted out into a gallop which was the most terrifying five seconds of my life). You just scan the horizon--your eyes drinking in the sea of green--and wonder what history you are walking through in this place (and I also felt like a Dothraki warrior... or better yet... a Khaleesi!).

One of the aspects of Mongol culture that goes hand in hand with the horses is the art and warfare of archery. Now I don't mean to boast, but I was halfway decent at archery in high school but I willingly acknowledge that I would be dead in an instant if I faced a Mongol on horseback with his bow.

Archery has always been an integral part of Mongol culture. According to legend, it is said that, Erekhe Mergen, a great Mongolian archer, saved the Mongolian people from a drought by shooting down six suns with his arrows. 


History speaks of the Mongol's bows and arrows just as much as legend. In the 17th Century the Manchu people invaded and conquered Mongolia and ruled from 1644-1911 and at this time outlawed archery. The banning of archery almost destroyed the traditional art of bow making in Mongolia which has now been preserved since Mongolia's independence in 1921. Today, the famous Naadam Festival (Наадам in Mongolian, Naɣadum in classical Mongolian) helps to preserve the ancient games of Mongolian wrestling, horseback riding, and archery. Similar to the Olympics, it is held in the summer, usually in July. 

Mongol archers were also known for their deadly skill with the bow and arrow while riding on horseback. The world was conquered by Genghis Khan sitting on the back of a horse and archery had a hand in that. While riding full speed on the back of a horse, Mongol warriors were able to shoot off as many as six arrows in less than a minute. That, along with impeccable aim helped conquer a large part of the world. The Mongolians would draw their bows back with their thumb (the strongest digit), not their pointer and middle fingers. Using the Mongolian draw instead of the European draw, this allowed them to hold up to three arrows with their other fingers, helping to quickly shoot multiple arrows. 


Well, we were in the grasslands and our butts were sore from riding our horses... the only thing left to do was shoot some arrows while the grassland winds tried to knock us off our feet. Our newly made friend, Andy from Scotland, was a veritable Robin Hood hitting the target over and over again. While Adam and I didn't embarrass ourselves too much, Genghis Khan would still probably be disappointed in us. 



After a quick hike through the grasslands, a dinner of noodles, tofu, and some questionable meatballs, and a bottle of wine shared with the members of the cool kids yurt, it was time for our crappy fire. 

You think wood burns nicely? That's cute. No, here out on the grasslands, we like to burn poop. Not cow poop--that burns too quickly. We like goat and sheep poop. It burns for a long time and makes a mighty nice fire. And surprisingly... it doesn't smell at all. 

The weary travelers from the four yurts all came together in the cold night, sitting around a poop fire, listening to Janice Joplin and Simon and Garfunkel, drinking Snow beer, and laughing at the adventure that life is. 

Until, Next Time,
Amanda