Wild Pigeon - by Nurmuhemmet
Yasin.Part 1.
Translator's
note: This story was first published in issue No. 5 of
the 2004 Kashgar Literature Magazine by a young
freelance writer, Nurmuhemmet Yasin, to widespread
acclaim among the Uyghur people. The author has since
been detained by the Chinese authorities because of
its strong portrayal of a people deeply unhappy with
life under Beijing's rule. RFA broadcast a dramatized
version of the story in Uyghur earlier this year.
image:RFA
Dream or
reality?
Here I am, seemingly in flight in the deep blue sky.
I cannot tell if I am dreaming or awake. A bracing
wind cuts into my wing—my spirit is soaring and my
body is powerful and strong. The glow of morning seems
endless, and sun streams brightly, beautifully on the
world. Such beautiful landscapes! I climb ever higher
as my spirits soar.
The strawberry fields disappear from view, and the
world is suddenly broader, like a deep blue carpet
spread out beneath me. This is a wonderland I have
never seen before. I love this place as I love my
hometown—with all my heart—all of it so beautiful
beneath my wings.
Now houses and neighborhoods appear below, along
with living, moving creatures—they must be the humans
whom my mother warned me to avoid. Maybe my mother has
grown old. They don’t look dangerous to me—how could
such creatures, who crawl so slowly on the Earth, be
more powerful than birds who soar through the skies?
"Mankind's tricks are legion; their schemes are
hidden in their bellies; be sure that you do not
make carelessness your jailer."
The pigeon-mother's warning
Perhaps I am wrong, but they don’t look so
terrible. My mother has always told me they are
treacherous, scheming creatures who would as soon trap
and cage us as they would look at us. How can that be?
Perhaps I am not bright enough to understand this.
Suddenly I am overcome with the desire to see and know
these humans, and I fly lower, hovering above them and
seeing everything more clearly. And always my mother
says to me: "Mankind's tricks are legion; their
schemes are hidden in their bellies; be sure that you
do not make carelessness your jailer."
Suddenly I know that I want to see these schemes of
mankind. Why would they hide them in their bellies?
This is impossible for me to understand.
The descent
I descend gradually, hovering in the air above the
dwelling-places. The things below are now very clear
to me. I can see people, their cows, their sheep and
chickens, and many other things I’ve never seen before.
A group of pigeons is flying around, with some of them
perched on a branch.
I drop down to join in their conversation—or is to
have a rest? I can’t remember clearly now. My feelings
at the time were quite confused. But I want very much
to know more about their lives.
"Where are you from?" one pigeon asks me. He is
older than the rest, but I cannot tell for sure if he
is the leader of this group. Anyway, I am not one of
them, so his position is not that important to me. And
so I answer simply: "I am from the strawberry shoal."
I drop down to join in their conversation—or is to
have a rest? I can’t remember clearly now. My
feelings at the time were quite confused. But I
want very much to know more about their lives.
The pigeon's tale begins
"I heard about that place from my grandpa—our
ancestors also come from there," he replies. "But I
thought it was quite far away—and that it would take
months to fly here from there. We cannot fly so far.
Perhaps you are lost?"
Was he so old he couldn’t fly that small distance
in a few days, as I had done? Perhaps he was far older
even than he looked—or perhaps he was thinking of a
different, more distant strawberry shoal. If his
grandfather came from the same strawberry shoal, we
might even be relatives, I think. But to the old
pigeon I reply: "I am not lost—I was practicing flying
and came here intentionally. I’ve been flying for just
a few days, but I haven’t eaten anything since I left
home."
What is a soul?
The old pigeon looks surprised. "You must be a wild
pigeon," he says. "Everyone says we are not as brave
as you, that we think no further than the branches on
which we rest and the cages in which we sleep. I have
always lived here and have ventured no farther out—and
why should I? Here I have a branch for resting and a
cage for living, and everything is ready-made for me.
Why would we leave here—to suffer? Besides, I am
married. I have a family. Where would I go? My hosts
treat me well," he concludes, pecking a bit at his own
feathers.
"I have heard some say that mankind is terrible," I
reply. "They say that if humans catch us, they will
enslave our souls. Is this true?"
"Soul? What’s a soul, grandfather?" a young pigeon
sitting beside me asks. I am stunned that he doesn’t
know this word, doesn’t know what a soul is. What are
these pigeons teaching their children? To live without
a soul, without understanding what a soul is, is
pointless. Do they not see this? To have a soul, to
have freedom—these things cannot be bought or given as
gifts; they are not to be had just through praying,
either.
"Soul? What’s a soul, grandfather?" a young pigeon
sitting beside me asks. I am stunned that he
doesn’t know this word.
Nurmehemmet Yasin
Freedom of the soul, I feel, was crucial for these
pitiful pigeons. Without it, life is meaningless, and
yet they seem never even to have heard of the word.
The old pigeon touches the head of his grandchild,
saying: "I don’t know either what a soul is. I once
heard the word from my own grandfather, who heard the
world from his great-grandfather. And he perhaps heard
of it from his great-great-grandfather. My own
grandfather sometimes said: 'We pigeons lost our souls
a long time ago,' and perhaps this is the soul that
this wild pigeon mentions now—and today we possess not
even a shadow of such a thing."
The old pigeon turns to face me and asks, "Tell me,
child, do you know what a soul is?"
The pigeons' debate
I freeze, realizing that I cannot begin to answer
the very question my words have prompted. Finally I
reply, "I cannot. But my mother tells me I possess my
father’s daring and adventurous spirit…Once it matures,
I will certainly know and understand what a soul is."
The old pigeon replies, "That must be your father’s
spirit in you now. It’s not only our fathers’
generations we have lost, but the soul of the entire
pigeon community has already disappeared. My mother
and her family never mentioned the soul to us, either,
nor have I used the word with my own children. So
perhaps we have already entered an era without souls.
How lovely it would be, to to return that to that
earlier time." The old pigeon smiles, and falls into a
pleasant reverie.
"Without your souls," I tell him, "generations of
pigeons will be enslaved by human beings—who can make
a meal of you at any time. Even if they set you free,
you will not leave your family and your rations of
food behind. You do not want to throw away your
resting place, and a small amount of pigeon food. Yet
you let your descendants became the slaves of mankind.
You will need a leader, but first you must free your
soul—and understand what a soul is. Why don’t you come
with me and we can try to ask my mother?"
"I already have one foot in the grave," he tells
me, "and my pigeon cage is safe.
From "Wild Pigeon"
I cannot tell now whether it’s the old pigeon or
myself I want to educate about the soul. Perhaps it is
both.
"I already have one foot in the grave," he tells me,
"and my pigeon cage is safe. Where shall I look to
understand the soul? I wouldn’t recognize a soul if I
saw one, and I wouldn’t know where to look for it. And
how will it help me if I find mine? Here our lives are
peaceful. Nothing happens, and our lives are tranquil.
How can I ask others to give up such a life to find
something whose value we cannot see?"
I contemplate the old pigeon’s words—which sound
wise at first but, on reflection, are entirely wrong.
Suddenly I feel ashamed, embarrassed, to find myself
holding such a philosophical discussion with these
pigeons, these soulless birds. I decide to go and find
my mother.
Strange words replace mother's
milk
At this point, a group of pigeons descends to the
branch beside us. I hear them speaking among
themselves, but I cannot understand their words.
Perhaps they are using their own mother tongue. We
also have some such foreigners occasionally flying to
our place. Are they foreign vistors? Friends or
relatives of the old pigeon? I cannot tell. Nor can I
tell whether they wish to include me in their
discussion.
"How are you, my child," the old pigeon asks,
pecking at the feathers of a smaller pigeon.
"Not good. I'm hungry," the smaller pigeon replies.
"Why doesn’t my mother feed me any more?" The small
pigeon talks on about pigeon food—I think I hear the
word corn or millet, or hemp. They use many different
names for pigeon food that I don’t know. These tamed
pigeons are very strange—so many of their words I
don’t recognize.
These tamed pigeons are very strange—so many of
their words I don’t recognize.
"Your mother is trying to save all the nourishment
for the siblings you will have soon," the old pigeon
replies. "You have to wait for the humans to come and
feed us."
"I cannot wait—I should fly out to the desert and
look for myself," the young bird replies.
"Please listen to me, my good little boy. It is too
dangerous—if you go there, someone will catch you and
eat you. Please don’t go." The small pigeon tries to
calm its expression. These pigeons all seem to listen
to this elder of the group.
Acceptance of a caged life
These pigeons are living among humans who would
catch them and eat them, but how they can do this I
don’t understand. Have I misunderstood the word "eat"?
Maybe it means the same thing as "care for" in their
dialect. If this is a borrowed word, maybe I
misinterpreted it. And yet this is an important word—every
pigeon must know it. My mother tells me to be careful—"don’t
let the humans catch you and eat you." If these
pigeons fear being caught and eaten, how can they
possibly have lived among humans? Perhaps they have
even forgotten that they have wings, and perhaps they
wouldn’t want to leave the pigeon cage to which they
have grown so accustomed.
"So, how is our host?" the small pigeon begins to
ask the old pigeon.
"Very well," his elder replies.
"But perhaps our host is like other humans, and
would catch and eat us if given the chance."
"That is different," the elder replied. "The humans
keep us in the pigeon cage to feed us, and it is right
that they would eat us if necessary; it is a necessity
for mankind to be able to catch us and eat us. That is
the way it should be. No pigeon among us is permitted
to object to this arrangement."
Who is the enemy?
Now I understand that "eat" has the same meaning
here as it does at home. A moment ago I was trying to
guess what exactly they mean when they say the word "eat."
Now I don't have to guess any more.
"But our host has spilled all of our food—and the
largest pigeon has eaten it all. I cannot begin to
fight for the food I need. What can I do? I grow
weaker and thinner by the day. I cannot survive this
way for long."
"You too will grow up slowly, and you too will
learn how to snatch a little food from around the big
pigeon there. But you must on no account give away
anything edible to others. That is how to survive here."
Pigeons should learn to be satisfied with what
they have. Don’t try to argue for what is surplus
to requirements.
The pigeons debate the soul
"But, grandpa—" the young pigeon starts.
"That's enough, my child. Don’t say any more.
Pigeons should learn to be satisfied with what they
have. Don’t try to argue for what is surplus to
requirements."
A larger space
At this stage I feel compelled to speak, and I
interrupt. "You have cut away at his freedom," I say.
"You should give him a larger space. You should let
him live at according to his own free will." I simply
cannot remain silent. To live as the old pigeon
suggests would destroy all fellowship among our
species.
"Ah, you do not understand our situation," the
older pigeon dismisses me. "To anger our host is
impossible. If anyone disobeys his rules and ventures
out from his territory, all of us will land inside a
cage—staring out from behind bars for months. We would
lose the very branch on which we are sitting."
What exactly is this thing, a pigeon cage? I have
no hint, no clue. These pigeons say they are so
terrified of landing in the cage, but at the same time
they are afraid of losing it. Most perplexing of all
is how any of these pigeons could bear to live among
men. Have I discussed this with my own grandfather? I
don’t believe he ever gave me a clear answer.
What exactly is this thing, a pigeon cage? I have
no hint, no clue. These pigeons say they are so
terrified of landing in the cage, but at the same
time they are afraid of losing it.
Nurmehemmet Yasin
Instead I tell the older pigeon, "You sound exactly
like one them—one of the men. Taking food from weaker
and smaller pigeons and forbidding them to resist.
Then you try very hard to cover your bad behavior. How
can this environment provide for the growth and health
of future generations? You are depraved—ignorant and
stupid."
"Don’t insult the humans," he replies indignantly.
"Without them, we wouldn’t be here today. Take your
anti-human propaganda somewhere else."
How could he fail to see that I meant no harm—that
I intended only to help? Perhaps I should explain
further.
A dream of destiny
"You have no sense of responsibility—you are
condemning others to this existence; you are pushing
your legacy to the edge of the bonfire," I continue. I
want to go on, to press the same message even more
vividly. But suddenly I hear a piercing sound and feel
a vicious pain in my legs. I try to fly, but my wings
hang empty at my sides. All the other pigeons fly up
and hover above me.
"Look at you, stirring up trouble—now you will
taste life inside a pigeon cage," one of them shouts.
"Then let’s see if you carry on this way again!"
Suddenly I understand. The old pigeon drew me in
toward him to set me up so his host could catch me.
Pain fills my heart. The humans weren’t any danger to
me—it was my own kind who betrayed me in hope of their
own gain. I cannot understand it, and I am grieved.
Suddenly I am seized with the idea that I cannot give
in—as long as I can still break off my legs, I can
free myself. Using all of my strength, I fly one way
and another in turn.
Pain fills my heart. The humans weren’t any danger
to me—it was my own kind who betrayed me in hope
of their own gain.
"Don't be silly, child, stand up! What is the
matter with you?" The voice is my mother’s. She stares
at me and I realize that I am unhurt.
My mother says:" "You had a nightmare." "I had a
very terrible dream." I embrace my mother closely, and
tell her everything in my dream.
"Child, in your dream you saw our destiny," she
replies. "Mankind is pressing in on us, little by
little, taking up what once was entirely our space.
They want to chase us from the land we have occupied
for thousands of years and to steal our land from us.
They want to change the character of our heritage—to
rob us of our intelligence and our kinship with one
another. Strip us of our memory and identity. Perhaps
in the near future, they will build factories and
high-rises here, and the smoke that comes from making
products we don’t need will seep into the environment
and poison our land and our water. Any rivers that
remain won’t flow pure and sweet as they do now but
will run black with filth from the factories."
Setting out from the strawberry
shoal
"This invasion by mankind is terrible," she says.
"Future generations will never see pure water and
clean air—and they will think that this is as it has
always been. They will fall into mankind’s trap. These
humans are coming closer and closer to us now, and
soon it will be too late to turn back. No one else can
save us from this fate—we must save ourselves. Let’s
go outside. It’s time for me to tell you about your
father."
She leads me outside. Around us the land is covered
in wildflowers and a carpet of green—no roads, no
footprints, just an endless vast steppe. Our land sits
on a cliff that overhangs a riverbank, with thousands
of pigeon nests nearby. A pristine river flows beneath,
sending a sort of lullaby us to where we stand. To me,
this is the most beautiful and safest place on Earth.
Without humans encroaching upon us, we might live in
this paradise forever.
"This is your land," my mother says. "This is the
land of your ancestors. Your father and grandfather,
both leaders of all the pigeons in the territory, each
helped to make it even more beautiful. Their work,
their legacy, only raised us up even higher among the
pigeons. The weight on your shoulders is heavy, and I
hope only that you can follow in your father’s brave
footsteps. Every morning I have trained you, teaching
you to fly hundreds of miles in a day. Your muscles
are hard and strong and your wisdom is already great."
"This is your land," my mother says. "This is the
land of your ancestors. Your father and
grandfather, both leaders of all the pigeons in
the territory, each helped to make it even more
beautiful.
"Your body is mature, and now your mind, your
intelligence, must catch up. Always, always be
cautious with humans. Don’t think that because they
walk on the ground beneath us that you are safe. They
have guns. They can shoot you down from thousands of
meters away. Do you know how your father died?"
"No," I tell her. "You started to tell me once but
then stopped, saying it wasn’t yet time."
"Well, now the time has come," she says. "A few
days ago, I saw several humans exploring around here.
They followed us carefully with their eyes. We must
find a safe place before they come here. It was at
their hands that your father died."
A proud heritage
"Please tell me, Mother. How did he fall into their
hands?" My mother contemplates—her face is sad.
"One day, your father led a group of pigeons
looking for food for us. Usually, they chose safe
areas with plenty of food. Your father always led
these missions—he was a strong and responsible leader.
So this time he led the others out, but after several
days he hadn’t returned. I was terribly worried.
Usually, if he found a place with a great deal of food
more than a half-day’s flight from here, we would move
our nest. He would never go so far or stay so long
away from home."
"In my heart I was certain he had had an accident.
At that time, you and your younger brothers and
sisters had only recently hatched, so I couldn’t leave
you to go and look for him. Eventually, after several
months, one of the pigeons who flew out with your
father returned. This only made me more certain that
that your father had fallen into some kind of trap.
Then all the rest of them returned safely—one after
another. All except your father."
All the while I expect my mother to wail or lament,
but here a brave glint comes into her eye.
"Your father was a pigeon king with a regal spirit.
How could he protect the others if he could not
protect himself? How could a pigeon who was trapped by
humans come back and fulfill his role as pigeon king?
The humans trapped him, kept him, and in keeping with
the traditions of the royal household, he bit off his
tongue. He couldn’t bear one more second locked in
that pigeon cage. The pigeon cage was dyed red with
his blood. He refused their food and drink, and he
lived exactly one week. He sacrificed himself. His
spirit was truly free. I hope only that you will grow
up to be like your father, a protector of freedom
forever."
"Mammy, why couldn’t my father find the opportunity
to escape like other pigeons?"
Freedom or death
"The humans hoped your father would pair with
another pigeon, a tamed pigeon, and produce mixed
offspring with her. But he could never have children
who were kept as slaves—it would be too shameful for
him. Those pigeons in your dream were the descendants
of those who accepted slavery and begged for their own
lives. Child, their souls are kept prisoner. A
thousand deaths would be preferable to a life like
that. You are the son of this brave pigeon. Keep his
spirit alive in you," she says.
My mother's words shock my soul for a long time. I
am infinitely delighted at being a son of such a brave
pigeon, but I feel a surge of pride and happiness. My
heart feels strong and proud. With all the love in my
heart, I embrace my mother.
"Now you must go," she tells me. "I give you up for
the sake of our motherland and all the pigeons. Don’t
leave these pigeons without a leader. The humans are
more and more aggressive, using all manner of tactics
to trap us. Go now and find a safe place for us, my
child."
My wings are wet with my mother's tears. Now the
meaning of my dream is clear: that I must go forth on
an expedition. But by no means, I think, will I fall
into a trap set by humans.
I fly farther and farther away, first along the
river and then into the area where the humans make
their homes. It is nothing like the dwelling place in
my dream, but I am careful—flying higher and higher.
My wings have enough power. I hear not human debate,
but the music of the wind in my ears.
In search of a new home
These humans are not so strong and frightening, I
think. If I fly too high, I fear I will miss my target.
If I fly too far, it will affect our migration plan.
To tell the truth, I disagree with my mother’s
migration plan. Our land is on a very high precipice—how
can humans climb here when it is even difficult for
pigeons? We were here, one after another, generation
after generation, living a happy life. Why should we
leave now, to run from humans who are weaker than we
imagine? Now I am flying over the human settlements. I
feel no danger. Perhaps my mother worries too much.
Now the sky is black. Everything around me is going
dark, and now the world disappears in utter darkness.
Everything disappears into the night, and I realize
that I have been flying for an entire day, and I am
exhausted. I must rest. I have already explored to the
West, North, and South, and still I have found nowhere
we can live. I haven’t yet find a good place to which
we can migrate.
Perhaps I have flown too high. Perhaps tomorrow I
can fly East, at a lower altitude. The stars flicker
in the sky. How can anyone who lives in such a world
of beauty be afraid? Slowly I descend, falling into a
tree. Tomorrow I will awaken, but I don’t know where.
Then I will start again, flying lower in the sky.
Perhaps then I will be able to find us a new home.
Translated by Dr. Dolkun Kamberi, RFA Uyghur
service director. Edited by Sarah Jackson-Han.
Produced for the Web in English by Luisetta Mudie. |