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The Silk Road:
The Ancient Highway for
Globalisation
Keyvan Tabari
Copyright Keyvan Tabari 2006. All Rights
Reserved.
The
information contained in this article may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten, or otherwise distributed without the
prior written authorization of Keyvan Tabari .
Abstract: There could
be no greater wall between the two major civilizations of
the ancient world: one in Persia and the other in China. The
Pamir Mountains rose up to thousands of feet. Yet they were
bridged by the sheer cooperative instinct of humanity. Last
fall, I crossed the Irkeshtam Pass as I looked on both sides
of the fabled Silk Road which I traveled from Xinjiang all
the way to Beijing on the East and from Kyrgyzstan and
Uzbekistan all the way to Khiva on the West. I saw the
genius of our common heritage long-ago exchanged in what
remains of the once fabulous Samarkand, Bukhara, Osh,
Kashgar, Turpan, Dunhaung, and Xian. They conjured up
parables suitable for our times of need. I brought back
memories which I would like to share with you here.
keywords:
Silk Road* Globalization*
Persia* China*
The wall separating the two
great civilizations of the ancient world, Persia and China
was real; it was physical. The Pamir Mountains are so
called, meaning the "foot of Mitra", because they were so
high: they were the closest that man got to the Sun God of
Mithraism, the ancient Persian religion. Passage through
these mountains is still extremely difficult.
(1)
I experienced this on the
morning of September 12 of last year. I was at the Irkeshtam
Pass. We had to cross the Kyrgyz Republic on a rutted
segment of the Silk Road to get from China to Uzbekistan.
Beyond the barbed wire that separated us, Kyrgyzstan looked
forbidding. An unshaven young man with an automatic weapon
slung on his shoulders was ruffling through the pages of my
passport. He said a few words to another man standing next
to him. My eyes were averted to the grey brown parka the
latter was wearing. There were food stains on it. I did not
understand what was spoken between them. There were two more
young men. They were short and stocky. They were curious
about us. There were 13 of us, tourists who had come from
China. Our bus had left. We could not return to China, for
we had gone through the Chinese immigration checkpoint. Our
luggage was on the ground.
We were waiting for our Kyrgyz
guide without whom we could not enter this country.
Inexplicably, there was no sign of him. The landscape was
scraggy and barren - no trees. A dirt road led to the
horizon.
That day we did make it to Sari
Tash and then to Osh at the border of Uzbekistan and beyond.
(2) The real miracle was that people had done it as
early as centuries before Christ. A good evidence for this
is the Manichaean manuscripts found in the ancient city of
Goachang, near Turpan, Xinjiang (Chinese Turkestan). They
reveal the exodus from Iran of the followers of Mani, the
ancient Persian prophet who challenged the official creed,
Zoroastrianism. Goachang, which I had visited just a few
days before, was in a desert 260 feet below the sea level!
(3) Note, however, the equally remarkable fact that
from early on the exchange across these formidable barriers
was not just of goods but also of ideas.
As it is in human history, the
basic ideas have not changed that much; their applications
have changed due to the change in the circumstances. Take
the first insertion of Persian power to this area. It was to
eliminate the terror caused by the marauding Sakas (Sycthians)
that in 530 B.C brought Cyrus the Great here. Some two
centuries later, Alexander the Great came this way in his
relentless ambition to expand his empire. A hundred years
after that, the Chinese Emperor Wudi sent his emissary,
Zhang Qian, to Ferghana valley in present day Uzbekistan in
a quest for alliance with the Yuezhi people against their
common enemy, the Huns.
It was not only security,
peace, and stability that preoccupied the travelers of the
Silk Road. The territory they traversed in Central Asian was
controlled by the Sogdians, who were Persian speaking and
Zoroastrian. They were, however, tolerant of other creeds,
and received in their midst the followers of other
religions: Manichaeism, Judaism, Christianity, Nestorianism,
and Buddhism. In Samarkand’s Afrosiob History Museum I saw a
series of magnificent 7th century Sogdian murals,
more than six feet high, that covered a circular room. A
bridal procession depicted a princess astride a white
elephant who led several maids, camel-riders, horsemen, and
swans. The ruler of Samarkand was in another panel,
accepting offerings from foreigners: Chinese with gifts of
silk, Turks with long hair, Koreans with pigtails, and
villagers from the mountain of Pamir. In the next frame was
a Chinese beauty sailing in a boat and, on the banks of the
water, several horsemen hunting a leopard.
The Sogdians were pivotal as
the channel for the transmission of Buddhism to China from
the Kushans in India. In Dunhaung
(4), west of Xinjiang in China, I
visited caves that have yielded invaluable manuscripts about
this phenomenon. Due to shortage of paper, these Buddhist
religious texts were written on whatever scarps which could
be found, including the reverse side of ordinary commercial
and personal correspondence. Based on these documents,
Dunhuangology has become a special field that has revealed
as much about Chinese Buddhism as it has about the social
and economic history of the globalizing highway that passed
through here. Many of these documents are in the old Persian
language of the Sogdians. In the fifth and sixth centuries,
glass, horses, and perfumes were imported here from the West
and raw silk was exported from China. (5-1 and 5-2)
In other parts of the Silk Road, westbound caravans brought
furs, ceramics, cinnamon bark, rhubarb, and bronze weapons;
while the eastbound traffic contained gold, precious metals
and stones, textiles, ivory, and coral.
By the 8th century
the Persians had learned the art of sericulture from the
Chinese. They, in turn, transferred a most valuable
technology of their own to China, the irrigation system of
karez (6) which I saw in the outskirts of
Turpan. A succession of wells connected by underground
channels which used gravity to bring water from high
elevations, karez (a Persian word, interchangeable
with qanat) was vital for the agrarian society of
these arid lands.
The Silk Road continued to be
the main channel for Globalization even after the sea routes
gradually eroded its commercial role. By the end of the 8th
century ships from the Middle East were regularly calling on
the Chinese city of Guangzhou (Canton). The spread of Islam,
however, came by land. After the battle of Talas in 751
sealed its domination of Central Asia, Islam introduced a
complex mix of religion, art, and architecture, imbued with
local elements, which spread to the frontiers of Xian
(7-1 and 7-2), the ancient capital of China. For many
centauries, the polyglot and multiethnic peoples of
Turkestan, a vast territory that extended west from Xian to
the Caspian Sea, identified themselves simply as Muslims.
With Samarkand (8) and Bukhara (9-1 and 9-2)
as their pivot, from the 10th century to the mid
15th century they established the most advanced
civilization of the time, the Persian Islamic civilization.
With the exception of the Persian Samanids, the rulers were
mostly Mongol and Turks -- nomads who adopted Persian
culture and language. The scope of their ambition was
universal. Genghis Khan’s descendants -- who even ruled
China for sometime -- were succeeded by Tamerlane and his
descendants, and then the chiefs of various Turkic tribes.
The luminaries who had major
roles in developing that glorious civilization are now
claimed by disparate groups in this fragmented region. I
noted in the Museums of Tashkent and Samarkand that
Uzbekistan has appropriated the legacy of many as its own.
Thus, among its favorite sons (10) are: Rudaki who is
considered to be "the founding father" of Persian poetry;
Al-Khorezmi" who invented algorithm, which is his namesake;
"Avicenna" whose Qanun had been the standard medical
textbook in Europe for half a millennium until the 19th
century; and Farabi, the greatest of all Muslim
philosophers, who was the channel for transmitting
the thoughts of Plato and Aristotle to the modern world.
These same luminaries, however,
are claimed by Iran because they were from Persian families
and spoke Persian; they were indeed the principles in Iran’s
"Golden Century" under the Samanids. On the other hand, the
scientists Farabi and Avicenna mostly wrote in Arabic --
because it was the official language of the realm, and the
creation of Persian as a technical language was still taking
shape. That fact has given the Arabs a reason to also claim
these luminaries.
How does one resolve the
dispute that follows when several nations assert an
exclusive right to the legacy of these men? The only
solution may be to describe them as the heritage of (all)
humanity, to paraphrase UNESCO’s appellation given to so
many monuments on the old Silk Road.
Let us now pause a moment and
ponder the word globalization, the broader subject of this
presentation. It evokes the shape of the globe. Depending on
where you are on that globe, the rest of the globe looks
different: it is on your right, or left, or above or below
you. This metaphor gains huge significance when regarded as
the phenomenon of ethnocentricity. In that light, it is
noteworthy that the Silk Road did not really exist until it
was coined by the German explorer Richthofen in 1877, as
Seidenstrasse. The ancient superhighways, with their
multitude of tributaries (11), which were the
conduit of many exchanges of goods and ideas between the
Persian and Chinese civilizations, did not have any specific
name. The silk that went to Rome was not, in fact, a very
significant part of this process of globalization. For the
European scholars of the 19th century, however,
it was the focus of attention. In that sense, theirs was a
warped view. On the other hand, in the books on China, the
attention is focused on the significance of the Silk Road
for that country. The difference is understandable. So is
the reason for the claims by various Islamic nations to this
region’s luminaries as noted above. What all these
perspectives suffer from is the fragmented vision of the one
earth we all share. What is needed -- for the common good --
is the integration of those visions.
About the
Author
Keyvan Tabari is an international lawyer in San Francisco.
He holds a PhD and a JD, and has taught at Colby College,
the University of Colorado, and the University of Tehran.
Address:
ktabari@sbcglobal.net
Copyright Keyvan Tabari 2006. All
Rights Reserved.
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