Subscribe to free Email Newsletter

 
  Chinese Way>Custom
 
 
 
Xinjiang: Melting Pot of World Religions

 

 

In the late 9th century and the early 10th century, Islam spread to the south of Xinjiang through Central Asia. In the middle of the 10th century, the Islamic Karahan Kingdom waged a religious war against the Buddhist kingdom of Yutian, which lasted for more than 40 years. It conquered Yutian in the early 11th century, and introduced Islam to Hotan.

In the middle of the 14th century, under the coercion of the Qagatay Khanate (a subservient state created by Qagatay, the second son of Genghis Khan), Islam gradually became the main religion for the Mongolian, Uygur, Kazak, Kirgiz and Tajik people in that region.

 

In the early 16th century, Islam finally became the main religion in Xinjiang, replacing Buddhism. After that, Zoroastrianism, Manichaeism and Nestorianism, the main religions of the Uygur and other ethnic groups, gradually disappeared in Xinjiang, but Buddhism and Taoism continued to make themselves felt.

Beginning in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), Tibetan Buddhism grew in Xinjiang into a major religion on a par with Islam. In the late 17th century, Apak Hoja, chief of the Aktaglik sect of Islam, wiped out the forces of his political enemy Hoja of the Karataglik sect, by dint of Tibetan Buddhist forces, and destroyed the Yarkant Khanate (a regional regime established by Qagatay's descendants between 1514 and 1680, with modern Shache as its center). This shows how powerful Tibetan Buddhism was at that time.

Around the 18th and 19th centuries, Protestantism and Catholicism spread to Xinjiang, their followers being mainly among the Han people.

Historically, the dominance of a particular religion has kept changing from time to time in Xinjiang, but the coexistence of multiple religions following the introduction of outside religious faiths has never changed. The major religions in Xinjiang today are Islam, Buddhism (including Tibetan Buddhism), Protestantism, Catholicism and Taoism. Shamanism still has considerable influence among some ethnic groups.

Editor: Dong Jirong

1 2
 

 


 
Email to Friends
Print
Save