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A Journey to Xinjiang

Nov 18, 2025

Xinjiang  

When our university announced a field trip to China's Xinjiang, I was extremely excited. Xinjiang has vast territory bordering eight countries: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Mongolia, and Russia.

Our days in Xinjiang unfolded as a vivid tapestry of encounters: conversations switching fluidly between Mandarin, Russian, and English; dances where steps needed no translation; shared meals that spoke the universal language of hospitality. I was deeply moved by the warmth of the people we met.
Nionella Nikonenkova takes a photo with locals in Tacheng Prefecture in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
In Tacheng, we saw customs facilities and freight terminals that are part of an integrated corridor linking western China to Central Asian markets and, ultimately, Europe. This is the practical face of regional integration: not just high-level agreements signed in Beijing and Astana, but physical infrastructure enabling the daily movement of goods, services, and people.
Photo shows the cultural exhibition hall for Baktu Land Port — one of the key China – Kazakhstan land ports, linking Tacheng in China's Xinjiang with the Pavlodar Region of Kazakhstan.
Here, Russian, Kazak, Uygur, and Han traditions intersect in daily life — in food, music, and architecture.
In Tacheng and Karamay, I found a sense of home where I had never thought to look for it; in the kindness of strangers, in the shared language of music and bread.
Nionella Nikonenkova is a Master of Arts in International Relations and Politics at the Yenching Academy of Peking University.
Producer: Xiao Chunfei
Supervisors: Ding Tao and Jie Wenjin
Planners: Jie Wenjin and Cheng Li
Reviewers: Cheng Li and Hou Weili
Editor: Gvlzar Mijit
Source :Tianshannet

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