| The Mosque is a major spot for religious activities of over 60.000
Moslems in Xi’an, likewise, an important cultural relic protected
by the Provincial People’s Government. Unlike the Arabic mosques,
with splendid domes, the minarets reaching into the clouds, the coulourful
engraved sketches with dazzling patterns, the Mosque here in Xi’an
possesses much Chinese traditional touch in both its design and artistic
outlook; besides the style peculiar to Islamic mosques, this Mosque
also holds characteristics of Chinese pavilions with painted beams
and engraved ridgepoles.
However, any further discussion about the Mosque will be futile
unless anything of the introduction of Islam into China is brought
up.
Islam as a religious order was founded in the early period of
the 7th century A.D. and was introduced to China in the mid-600s.
At that time, Arabian merchants and travelers came to the northwest
of China by way of Persia and Afghanistan and thus established diplomatic,
trade, and military contacts with China. In the meantime, another
route saw a batch of sea voyagers through Bangladesh Bay and the
Malacca Strait to China’s Guangzhou, Quanzhou, Huangzhou, Yangzhou
and other cities where many of them settled down and married the
local women who later gave birth to babies who then became Moslems.
However, massive immigration of the Moslems to China did not
take place until as late as the early period of the 13th century,
when Genghis Khan, as a result of his expedition against the west,
had conquered vast expanses of land stretching from Central Asia
to Eastern Europe, including the north of Iran. Many of the Moslems
in the conquered areas were thus forced to enlist and later settled
in China.
Among the enlisted many were soldiers, and some were smiths and
officials who were called the Hui people in the history books on
the Yuan dynasty. The Hui people later followed Kublai Khan down
to the south, helping him unifying China and then establish the
Yuan dynasty. In the wake of the conquest, Islam spread all over
China and mosques began to appear everywhere. In the Yuan dynasty,
many Moslems held positions both in the military and civilian organs
of the country. And a lot of the Moslems took part in Zhu Yuanzhang’s
uprising in the early 14th century and made great contributions
to the founding of the Ming Dynasty. Therefore, all the emperors
of the Dynasty issued mandates to protect Islam, and to set up mosques
in praise of the Moslems for their feats. In the early 16th century,
Islam predominated Qinghai on the minority nationalities including
the Huis, the Uygurs, the Kazaks, the Kirgizes, the Tajiks, the
Tartars, the Ozbeks, the Dong Xiangs, the Salars and the Bonans.
The Moslems in Xi’an are mainly the Huis, being a small portion
out of the ten million in China.
The Mosque at Hua Jue Lane is the largest in Xi’an, and at the
same time, it is also one of the earliest built on a comparatively
large scale, and well preserved mosques in China.
According to “the Stele on the Building of the Mosque”, the mosque
is said to be built in the Tang Dynasty. However, the architectural
style of the mosque suggests a possible building dating back to
the Ming Dynasty. The four courtyards of the mosque cover an area
of more than 12,000 square meters, out of which about 4,000 are
occupied by various structures. The still intact wooden front memorial
gateway of the front yard, built at the turn of the 17th century,
with glazed tiles on the top, spectacular corners and upturned eaves,
is about 9 metres high, and has a history of about 360 years. The
stone memorial gateway in the center of the second courtyard is
flanked with a tail stele on either side with dragons carved on
each, recording the repair work ever since the building of the Mosque.
On the back of one of the steles are engraved characters by the
master calligrapher Mi Fu, “May Buddhism Fill the Universe”, on
the other, “Royal -Bestowed”by Dong Qichang, another master of the
same art of the Ming dynasty. They are treasures in Chinese calligraphy.
At the entrance of the third courtyard is an imperial built hall,
where a “month tablet”, showing the calculation of the Hui Calendars
in Arabic, is stored. It was compiled by a man in charge of the
mosque called Xiao Mining in the early period of the Qing dynasty.
A three –storeyed octagonal wooden structure called “Retrospection
Tower”also stands in the center of the courtyard, which has the
same function as the minaret in Islamic temples in Arabic countries,
and which is a place from where orders were sent to call the Moslems
to come to worship. Respectively, on the south and north wings of
the tower, are a reception chamber and a Scripture Chamber, both
elegantly laid out. The five wooden houses, which are called “Water
Houses”in the southwest section of the Mosque are the place where
the believers bathe themselves before they attend their services.
And in side the fourth courtyard there is a structure called “the
Pavilion of Phoenix”, a place where the worshipers used to wait
for the services. The Pavilion, in fact, is a compound structure
of three small buildings. The six-gabled structure of the central
part, adjoining the two three-gabled buildings on each side looks
very much like a flying phoenix, and hence its name. Just at the
back of the Pavilion, there is a fishpond, beyond which is a platform
occupying an area as large as 700 m2. Across both ends of the platform
stands the 1,300 square metered service hall, holding over a thousand
worshipers at once. There are over six hundred sunk panels well
as the sunk panels, are decorated with patterns of painted trailing
plants and Arabic letterings. The imam leads his group of worshipers,
while facing in the direction of Mecca, to chant in Koran and to
pay their religious homage.
The Moslems in China share very much the same customs with their
brothers and sisters elsewhere in the world. They worship five times
a day: at dawn, at noon, in the afternoon, at dusk, and at night.
Female worshipers attend their services in a separated place from
their brothers, usually at home. Moslems pay special attention to
their health and see that they always wear clean clothes. They are
teetotalers not only of wine, but also of pork and animal blood
for in Koran pigs have been mentioned four times as being “unclean”.
According to Koran, a man can have four wives and women should wear
veils when they go out. However, except a few places in Xinjiang,
the Chinese practise monogamy and women are veiless when they go
out. Upon his death, a Moslem has to be “thoroughly cleaned”(thoroughly
bathed), has to be put on “Ke Fan”(to be shrouded with a piece of
white cloth) and has to be buried coffinless in the ground, with
an imam reciting Scriptures at the funeral.
The Chinese constitution promulgates that freedom of religion
of each citizen and freedom of preserving or reforming local customs
for every nationality are permitted. And of course, the Moslems
in China enjoy equal rights with peoples of other nationalities
and their religious beliefs and customs are respected everywhere
in the countr
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