MCLC: Mongolians rap on coal and cash

Denton, Kirk denton.2 at osu.edu
Mon Sep 24 09:02:26 EDT 2012


MCLC LIST
From: kirk (denton.2 at osu.edu)
Subject: Mongolians rap on coal and cash
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Source: Mother Nature Network (9/21/12):
http://www.mnn.com/lifestyle/arts-culture/stories/chinas-mongolians-rap-on-
coal-and-cash

China's Mongolians rap on coal and cash
Members of China's Mongolian ethnic minority are turning to hip hop to
condemn the resources boom they say is wreaking havoc on their lands.
By Tom Hancock, AFP

In a sprawling industrial city in Inner Mongolia, three rappers surround a
microphone, dressed in the baseball caps, baggy trousers and branded
trainers favored by hip hop fans the world over.

 
The sparsely populated region in northeastern China counts mining and milk
among its main industries, and locals are more familiar with
throat-singing than rapping.

 
But members of China's Mongolian ethnic minority, whose ancestors were
first united byGenghis Khan, are turning to hip hop to condemn the
resources boom they say is wreaking havoc on their traditions and lands ‹
while avoiding the authorities' attention.

 
"Herders are bribed with cash, and our land is torn up by machines," the
trio, who go by the English name Poorman, rap in their track "Tears."
"Brothers and sisters, we need to wake up!"

 
Once an economic backwater, the development of thousands of coal mines to
tap Inner Mongolia's vast mineral reserves has made the region one of
China's fastest-growing.

 
But while some have prospered from the mining boom, other Mongolians
resent being displaced from their land to make room for the mines, which
they say scar the steppe and discriminate against them in recruiting.
 
"There are all these songs about the beauty of Inner Mongolia's
grasslands, but when people come to visit they realise it's being turned
into desert," said band member Sodmuren, 25, who like many Mongolians uses
a single name.

 
The region's rappers adopted the genre a decade ago from their ethnic
fellows in neighboring Mongolia, an independent country which has had a
thriving hip hop scene for more 20 years.

 
"Hip hop is the most honest kind of music there is," Sodmuren told AFP in
a recording studio in Inner Mongolia's capital, Hohhot, where swathes of
newly built concrete apartment blocks stretch into the grassy countryside.

 
China's Mongolians have seen their traditional way of life transformed by
government policies encouraging nomadic herders to abandon their grazing
lands for flats in the cities.

 
As a result, most of the region's rappers grew up in an urban environment.
But Sodmuren and his bandmates retain a fascination with nomadic culture,
incorporating pastoral imagery into their music.

 
One of Poorman's videos shows the band sitting outside traditional tents,
known as yurts, with one member wearing the deel, a Mongolian gown.

 
"Although we grew up in yurts, after years in the city we're forgetting
our culture," they sing.
 
A few minutes' drive away from their studio, a sprawling Gucci store is
testament to the new class of millionaires created by the mining boom, and
their splurging on luxury cars and clothing.

 
But Eregjin, a baseball-capped 27-year-old solo rapper who has been
singing under the name MC Bondoo since he was a teenager, said: "We don't
admire luxury culture. We hate materialism, and the worship of expensive
things."

 
He has the national symbol of independent Mongolia tattooed on his right
arm.

 
Mongolians are one of dozens of minority groups who live along China's
borders and speak Mandarin as a second language, seeing themselves as
culturally different from the majority Han Chinese ‹ now 79 percent of
Inner Mongolia's population.

 
Mandarin is increasingly popular for economic reasons even among
Mongolians, and the rappers see their songs as a way to keep their own
tongue alive.

 
"We're worried about the future of the Mongolian language, because there
are fewer and fewer children attending bilingual schools," Sodmuren said.
"The danger is that we'll lose our Mongolian identity."
 
Ethnic identification can be a sensitive topic in China, where the
government is anxious to avoid social unrest.

 
When a Han Chinese coal truck driver ran over a Mongolian herdsman in 2011
it triggered more than a week of protests by hundreds of people in cities
and towns across the region.

 
A rapper known as Syrlig was detained by authorities in 2011 after writing
a song called "Stand up, Inner Mongolians!" several singers told AFP. He
has since moved to Mongolia, the rappers said.

 
"There are some lyrics we'd sing in shows, but if we published them we'd
be arrested," MC Bater, a member of one of Inner Mongolia's most
successful hip hop groups, PTS, told AFP.

 
But the scene's low profile, combined with a degree of self-censorship ‹
declining to target individuals or the ruling Communist Party by name ‹
allows Mongolian rappers to escape censure from the authorities.

 
"I complain about government officials in my songs, but I don't name
anyone directly," Sodmuren said. "I have to be smart."









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