May 7, 2002: Uyghur
tightrope walker Adil Hoshur performs
stunts 35 meters (115 feet) above Jinhai
Lake on the outskirts of Beijing. Photo:
AFPt
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A Uyghur acrobat who
has already crossed one of China’s rugged Yangtze
River gorges by tightrope has now set his sights
on a stretch of water between the toe of Italy’s
boot and the island of Sicily..
Adil Hoshur was invited to perform the daring
3.6-km (2.2-mile) crossing by an Italian film
company that wants to include him in a documentary
film about wire-walking, he told RFA’s Uyghur
service from his home in Urumqi, northeastern
China.
Adil Hoshur was
invited to perform the daring 3.6-km (2.2-mile)
crossing by an Italian film company that wants to
include him in a documentary film about
wire-walking, he told RFA’s Uyghur service from
his home in Urumqi, northeastern China.
“An Italian film company expressed interest in my
walking a high-wire over the sea near the island
of Sicily, as they are planning to produce a film
about high-wire walking,” Hoshur, known among
Uyghurs as the “King of the Sky” or “Skywalker,”
told reporter Aqida..
“They asked me to inspect the area to see if I
could do the walk. So I went to the spot. I felt
that it was really difficult to walk it,” he said.
Sicilian challenge
The Messina Strait, between Sicily and the
Italian mainland, measures 3.65 kms (2.27 miles)
across, and Hoshur said he would be working at an
elevation of around 300 meters (1,000 feet), with
an
international container port below much of the
crossing.
The film recording the feat, “Dawaz: la fune
sul mare” (in English, “Dawaz: Wire above the sea”),
will be shot by Italian director Domenico Distilo,
backed by film producers l’Eskimoza and Rai
Cinema. Distilo, who hails from the Messina region
himself, travelled all the way to Urumqi to
approach Hoshur about the project.
They asked me to
inspect the area to see if I could do the
walk. So I went to the spot. I felt that it
was really difficult to walk it.
Adil Hoshur
“When I saw that the place is also quite windy,
my first impression was that it was dangerous to
cross over the region on a tightrope,” said Hoshur,
who made his name wire-walking across one of
China’s Three Gorges during the 1990s.
But after conferring with his brother, Erkin
Hoshur, an expert in setting up high-wire cables,
Hoshur agreed to make the hazardous crossing,
which has been scheduled for Sept. 1-10, he said.
Dawaz, the Uyghur word for tightrope-walking,
is a traditional art among the eight million
Turkic-speaking Muslim Uyghurs, whose homeland is
currently ruled by China.
More than just an art form, the activity
epitomizes the struggle for Uyghur culture to hold
its own, especially under the shadow of China,
which gets a large proportion of its national
resources from Xinjiang. Hoshur’s family has done
wire-walking for 430 years.
But local Italian governments are hoping the
event, and particularly the film, will showcase
the places and people of the region alongside
Hoshur’s daring, attracting tourists to Calabria
and Sicily, on either side of the Strait.
Permission needed
“At this time, we have decided the event is
going to take place. But the main concern is that
the navy has to agree that we can put up the wire.
I am told that if allowed, we can request that sea
traffic be stopped for 12 hours. If it is allowed,
we are planning to do the event between Sept. 1
and Sept. 10,” he said.
Hoshur said he also had plans to open a
wire-walking school near his home in Yingisar
county, near Kashgar, in the Xinjiang Uyghur
Autonomous Region of China.
He also wants to introduce wire-walking as an
Olympic sport, perhaps in time for the 2012 or
2016 Games, he said.
Hoshur, who comes from an ethnic group in which
strong anti-Beijing feeling is voiced repeatedly,
said he wouldn’t discriminate in the students he
took on at his new academy.
“I will teach anyone, regardless of where he or
she is from around the world,” he said. “I will
not discriminate based on their ethnicity,
nationality, or origin.”
“I will be staying at the school for six months
of the year, to teach my courses. For the rest of
the year, I have to do my own activities. Before I
get older, I want to fulfill my plans,” said
Hoshur, who said there were still a large number
of walks he would still like to make.
Original reporting in Uyghur by Aqida. RFA
Uyghur service director: Dolkun Kamberi.
Additional reporting in Italian by Francesca
Mengarelli. Written for the Web in English by
Luisetta Mudie and edited by Sarah Jackson-Han