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This is an archive article published on April 1, 2009

Clocks square off in Chinas Xinjiang province

The clock in the lobby of the International Hotel shows it is almost 11 pm,too late for dinner and bad news for two hungry travelers....

The clock in the lobby of the International Hotel shows it is almost 11 pm,too late for dinner and bad news for two hungry travelers.

Not to worry. Take an underpass to cross the wide main street of Chinas westernmost city,turn down a dusty alley of crumbling ocher storefronts that opens up into a lively public square behind a mosque. Families with children are watching television at an open-air restaurant. The scent of cumin wafts from a grill where lamb sizzles on skewers. Next door,a chef makes noodles strung between his hands like a game of cats cradle.

Over here,its not quite 9 pm.

Kashgar,a city of 350,000 built around an oasis along the old Silk Road,has two time zones,two hours apart. How you set your watch depends not only on the neighborhood,but on your profession and ethnicity,religion and loyalty. People living on both sides of the time divide say there is little confusion because they have little to do with each other.

When communist China was formed in 1949,Mao Tse-tung decreed that everybody should follow a single time zone,no matter that the country is as wide as the continental US.

But Uighurs,the dominant minority in Chinas northwestern Xinjiang province,balked at running their lives on Beijing time,which would have them getting up in the pitch dark and going to sleep at sunset.

It is as ridiculous as having Los Angeles following New York time, said Alim Seytoff,who left Xinjiang in 1996 and is now secretary-general of the Uyghur American Association in Washington.

So the Uighurs follow their own unofficial time,which is two hours earlier in effect following the dictates of the sun rather than of Beijing,about 2,000 miles away.

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The separate time zones are in fact a metaphor for the chasm between the Uighurs and Han Chinese living in uneasy proximity in Xinjiang. Since 1949,the ethnic Chinese have grown from 9 to more than 40 of the provinces population,and Uighurs accuse the Chinese government of suppressing their culture and faith.

Schools,government offices,post offices all use Beijing time. So do the airports and railroad stations. Some bus lines use Xinjiang time and others Beijing time.

Local people have adjusted. Ali Tash,a tour guide,explained how he would set up a meeting with a Chinese friend and a Uighur friend: I say to the Chinese guy,come at 4 oclock,and to the Uighur guy,come at 2.

 

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