Early history During the fall of the
Dzungar Khanate in the mid-18th century, the
Manchus of the
Qing Dynasty massacred the native
Dzungars of
Dzungaria in the
Dzungar genocide, and afterwards colonized the depopulated area with immigrants from many parts of their empire. Among the peoples who
migrated into depopulated Dzungaria were the Kazakhs from the
Kazakh Khanates, although this migration was small and disrupted by the later
Sino–Kazakh Wars that also saw Kazakhs massacred. In the 19th century, the advance of the
Russian Empire troops pushed the Kazakhs to neighboring countries. Russian settlers on traditional Kazakh land drove many over the border to China, causing their population to increase in China. During the
Russian Revolution, when Muslims faced
conscription, Xinjiang again became a sanctuary for Kazakhs fleeing Russia. During the 1920s, hundreds of thousands of Kazakh nomads moved from
Soviet Kazakhstan to Xinjiang to escape Soviet persecution, famine, violence, and forced
sedentarization. Kazakhs that moved to China fought for the Soviet Communist-backed Uyghur
Second East Turkestan Republic in the
Ili Rebellion (1944–1949). Toops estimated that 326,000 Kazakhs, 65,000 Kyrgyz, 92,000 Hui, 187,000 Han, and 2,984,000 Uyghur (totaling 3,730,000) lived in Xinjiang in 1941. Hoppe estimated that 4,334,000 people lived in Xinjiang in 1949. In 1936, after
Sheng Shicai expelled 30,000 Kazakhs from Xinjiang to Qinghai,
Hui Chinese led by General
Ma Bufang massacred Kazakhs, until there were only 135 of them left.
Modern history The arrival of the People's Republic of China at the end of the
civil war led to significant changes in Xinjiang. The Kazakhs and other ethnic groups in the region were granted autonomy around governance, language, and religion at first, but the end goal was for the Kazakhs to integrate into the new Chinese State. In the early stages, this meant high spending on infrastructure and education, aiming to boost agricultural output and literacy respectively. In more outward ways, Xinjiang began to change as well. The
Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps began a series of projects aimed at urbanising the region. But, there were limitations to the loosening of restrictions. The 1990s saw a wave of popular unrest and terrorist attacks that led to the Chinese Government instituting the Strike Hard campaign aimed at suppressing separatism and restoring security. This and the political climate after 9/11 led to a change in policy away from cultural assimilation to securitization, as the Chinese state increasingly cracked down on separatists and Islamist terrorists. ==Distribution==