Harga Pakej Seorang MM : Makan Malam

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Harga Pakej Seorang MM : Makan Malam Hari 1 Kuala lumpur - beijing (mDp, MT, MM) Hari 4 jelajah beijing (mP, MT, MM) Berjumpa di KLIA, 3 jam sebelum masa berangkat Selepas sarapan, memulakan perjalanan ke untuk check-in bagasi. Olympic Stadium ,Bird’s Nest dan Water Cube. Tiba di lapangan terbang disambut oleh wakil di Kemudian kita akan ke Nandouya Mosque selepas Beijing. makan tengah hari. Lawatan anda akan bermula di Tian An Men Akhiri perjalanan dengan membeli-belah di Silk Square. Street. Berangkat ke Lapangan Terbang. Seterusnya anda akan ke Forbidden City dan Niujie Mosque. Hari 5 beijing - kuala lumpur (MP, mDP) Kemudian, kita akan berhenti di Muslim Supermarket. Sarapan pagi di hotel. Berangkat dari Beijing ke Lapangan Terbang Hari 2 jelajah beijing (mp, mt, mm) Antarabangsa Kuala Lumpur. Selepas sarapan, mendaki Tembok Besar Cina. Melihat Persembahan Akrobatik selepas makan malam. Hari 3 jelajah beijing (mp, mt, mm) Melawat Summer Palace pada waktu pagi. Seterusnya ke Fayuan Mosque. INFO Kemudian akan ke The Place-LED Screen. MDP : Makan Dalam Penerbangan MP : Makan Pagi MT : Makan Tengah Hari Harga pakej seorang MM : Makan Malam DEWASA BILIK berdua kanak-kanak (berkatil) kanak-kanak (tanpa katil) RM 2,590 RM 2,390 RM 2,290 *Harga, penerbangan, tarikh & program tertakluk kepada perubahan semasa. *Sebarang kenaikan harga akan ditanggung oleh peserta . Beijing HARGA TERMASUK HARGA tidak TERMASUK Makanan seperti jadual perjalanan Perbelanjaan peribadi CHINA Tambang & cukai oleh Malaysia Airlines Insurans perjalanan dari RM43 seorang 4* Hotel Surcaj Musim / Sambutan musim perayaan Bayaran masuk seperti jadual perjalanan Mana-mana ekstra makan & minum yang Lawatan & bersiar-siar seperti yang dinyatakan tidak dinyatakan Tip Bayaran masuk lain yang tidak dinyatakan peta jelajah Wakil dari syarikat yang berpengalaman Lebihan cas bagasi Pemandu pelancong yang berbahasa Inggeris Barangan yang tidak dinyatakan dalam program Makanan di dalam penerbangan 30 kg bagasi (pergi & balik) Visa China Maklumat penerbangan tarikh berlepas 16 - 20 Mac 2020 KUL/PKX 0040/0700 MH318 * Penerbangan tertakluk kepada perubahan semasa PKX/KUL 2155/#0425 MH365.
Recommended publications
  • In Pursuit of Islamic “Authenticity”: Localizing Muslim Identity on China's Peripheries Lesley Turnbull, New York Universi
    In Pursuit of Islamic “Authenticity”: Localizing Muslim Identity on China’s Peripheries Lesley Turnbull, New York University Abstract In this ethnographic sketch, I analyze the complex processes of Sino-Islamic identity formation by examining the variety and diversity of locally produced “authenticity,” situated within a global understanding of Islam. Even within a single province, among a single official minzu (nationality) that People’s Republic of China propaganda, media, and scholarship often construct as a unified, static group, localized practices and processes of identity formation are remarkably diverse. This article investigates how trans/national discourses and practices of Islamic authenticity are localized within two specific field sites: the provincial capital of Kunming and the rural Muslim enclave of Shadian. For the purposes of this article, I focus primarily on how life is temporally and spatially structured, both in everyday practice and in imaginings of one’s place in history, modernity, the Muslim world, and the Chinese state. By setting out details of the daily lives of two Hui Muslim women, I aim to elucidate how temporal and spatial structures of life, which are tied to urban or rural location, reflect and shape local identity formation. I argue that as actors involved in their own self-production, Hui Muslims in Kunming and Shadian negotiated, appropriated, and contested both monolithic notions of Islam and the official state- propagated minzu classificatory system, producing their own versions of authentic Hui Muslim identities. What constituted authentic Hui Muslim identity depended to a great extent on the residence of the individual. Keywords: Chinese Muslims, Hui, identity, modernity, trans/nationalism, comparative ethnography “We Huizu have a genetic link to the Quran, so we are Muslims whether or not we practice the teachings of Islam.” —Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Growth and Decline of Muslim Hui Enclaves in Beijing
    EG1402.fm Page 104 Thursday, June 21, 2007 12:59 PM Growth and Decline of Muslim Hui Enclaves in Beijing Wenfei Wang, Shangyi Zhou, and C. Cindy Fan1 Abstract: The Hui people are a distinct ethnic group in China in terms of their diet and Islamic religion. In this paper, we examine the divergent residential and economic develop- ment of Niujie and Madian, two Hui enclaves in the city of Beijing. Our analysis is based on archival and historical materials, census data, and information collected from recent field work. We show that in addition to social perspectives, geographic factors—location relative to the northward urban expansion of Beijing, and the character of urban administrative geog- raphy in China—are important for understanding the evolution of ethnic enclaves. Journal of Economic Literature, Classification Numbers: O10, I31, J15. 3 figures, 2 tables, 60 refer- ences. INTRODUCTION esearch on ethnic enclaves has focused on their residential and economic functions and Ron the social explanations for their existence and persistence. Most studies do not address the role of geography or the evolution of ethnic enclaves, including their decline. In this paper, we examine Niujie and Madian, two Muslim Hui enclaves in Beijing, their his- tory, and recent divergent paths of development. While Niujie continues to thrive as a major residential area of the Hui people in Beijing and as a prominent supplier of Hui foods and services for the entire city, both the Islamic character and the proportion of Hui residents in Madian have declined. We argue that Madian’s location with respect to recent urban expan- sion in Beijing and the administrative geography of the area have contributed to the enclave’s decline.
    [Show full text]
  • Copyrighted Material
    INDEX Aodayixike Qingzhensi Baisha, 683–684 Abacus Museum (Linhai), (Ordaisnki Mosque; Baishui Tai (White Water 507 Kashgar), 334 Terraces), 692–693 Abakh Hoja Mosque (Xiang- Aolinpike Gongyuan (Olym- Baita (Chowan), 775 fei Mu; Kashgar), 333 pic Park; Beijing), 133–134 Bai Ta (White Dagoba) Abercrombie & Kent, 70 Apricot Altar (Xing Tan; Beijing, 134 Academic Travel Abroad, 67 Qufu), 380 Yangzhou, 414 Access America, 51 Aqua Spirit (Hong Kong), 601 Baiyang Gou (White Poplar Accommodations, 75–77 Arch Angel Antiques (Hong Gully), 325 best, 10–11 Kong), 596 Baiyun Guan (White Cloud Acrobatics Architecture, 27–29 Temple; Beijing), 132 Beijing, 144–145 Area and country codes, 806 Bama, 10, 632–638 Guilin, 622 The arts, 25–27 Bama Chang Shou Bo Wu Shanghai, 478 ATMs (automated teller Guan (Longevity Museum), Adventure and Wellness machines), 60, 74 634 Trips, 68 Bamboo Museum and Adventure Center, 70 Gardens (Anji), 491 AIDS, 63 ack Lakes, The (Shicha Hai; Bamboo Temple (Qiongzhu Air pollution, 31 B Beijing), 91 Si; Kunming), 658 Air travel, 51–54 accommodations, 106–108 Bangchui Dao (Dalian), 190 Aitiga’er Qingzhen Si (Idkah bars, 147 Banpo Bowuguan (Banpo Mosque; Kashgar), 333 restaurants, 117–120 Neolithic Village; Xi’an), Ali (Shiquan He), 331 walking tour, 137–140 279 Alien Travel Permit (ATP), 780 Ba Da Guan (Eight Passes; Baoding Shan (Dazu), 727, Altitude sickness, 63, 761 Qingdao), 389 728 Amchog (A’muquhu), 297 Bagua Ting (Pavilion of the Baofeng Hu (Baofeng Lake), American Express, emergency Eight Trigrams; Chengdu), 754 check
    [Show full text]
  • An Ancient Mosque in Ningbo, China “Historical and Architectural Study”
    JOURNAL OF ISLAMIC ARCHITECTURE P-ISSN: 2086-2636 E-ISSN: 2356-4644 Journal Home Page: http://ejournal.uin-malang.ac.id/index.php/JIA AN ANCIENT MOSQUE IN NINGBO, CHINA “HISTORICAL AND ARCHITECTURAL STUDY” |Received December 13th 2016 | Accepted April 4th 2017| Available online June 15th 2017| | DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.18860/jia.v4i3.3851 | Hamada M. Hagras ABSTRACT Faculty of Archaeology, Fayoum University, Fayoum, Egypt With the rise of Tang dynasty (618–907), Ningbo was an important [email protected] commercial city on the Chinese eastern coast. Arab merchants had an important role in trade relations between China and the West. Ningbo mosque was initially built in 1003 during Northern Song period by Muslims traders who had migrated from Arab lands to settle in China. Through ongoing research of representative Muslim architecture, such as Chinese Mosques, this paper seeks to shed light on the artistic features of this mosque. Many of the key characteristics of this distinctive ethnic heritage are based on commonly held religious beliefs and on the relationship between culture and religion. This paper aims to study the characteristics of Chinese mosques architecture, through studying one of the most important planning patterns of the traditional courtyards plan Known as Siheyuan, and it will also make a practical study on Ningbo Yuehu Mosque. The result of this study shows that the Ningbo Yuehu mosque is like Chinese mosques which follows essentially the norms of Chinese planning, layout design, and wooden structures. KEYWORDS: Ningbo, Mosque, Plan, Courtyard, Inscriptions INTRODUCTION (626‐649) received an embassy from the last Sassanid rulers Yazdegerd III (631‐651) asking for help against WHY THE SELECTED NINGBO MOSQUE? the invading Arab armies of his country, however, the emperor avoid to help him to ward off problems that Although many Chinese cities contain more may result from it [8][9].
    [Show full text]
  • The Spreading of Christianity and the Introduction of Modern Architecture in Shannxi, China (1840-1949)
    Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura de Madrid Programa de doctorado en Concervación y Restauración del Patrimonio Architectónico The Spreading of Christianity and the introduction of Modern Architecture in Shannxi, China (1840-1949) Christian churches and traditional Chinese architecture Author: Shan HUANG (Architect) Director: Antonio LOPERA (Doctor, Arquitecto) 2014 Tribunal nombrado por el Magfco. y Excmo. Sr. Rector de la Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, el día de de 20 . Presidente: Vocal: Vocal: Vocal: Secretario: Suplente: Suplente: Realizado el acto de defensa y lectura de la Tesis el día de de 20 en la Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura de Madrid. Calificación:………………………………. El PRESIDENTE LOS VOCALES EL SECRETARIO Index Index Abstract Resumen Introduction General Background........................................................................................... 1 A) Definition of the Concepts ................................................................ 3 B) Research Background........................................................................ 4 C) Significance and Objects of the Study .......................................... 6 D) Research Methodology ...................................................................... 8 CHAPTER 1 Introduction to Chinese traditional architecture 1.1 The concept of traditional Chinese architecture ......................... 13 1.2 Main characteristics of the traditional Chinese architecture .... 14 1.2.1 Wood was used as the main construction materials ........ 14 1.2.2
    [Show full text]
  • Study on Traditional Beliefs and Practices Regarding Maternal and Child Health in Yunnan, Guizhou, Qinghai and Tibet
    CDPF Publication No. 8 Study on Traditional Beliefs and Practices regarding Maternal and Child Health in Yunnan, Guizhou, Qinghai and Tibet Research Team of Minzu University of China April 2010 Study on Traditional Beliefs and Practices regarding Maternal and Child Health in Yunnan, Guizhou, Qinghai and Tibet Research Team of Minzu University of China April 2010 Acknowledgments The participants of this research project wish to thank Professor Ding Hong for her critical role guiding this research project from its initiation to completion, and to Associate Professor Guan Kai for his assistance and guidance. This report is a comprehensive summary of five field reports in the targeted areas. The five fields and their respective reporters are: 1. Guizhou province: Yang Zhongdong and Jiang Jianing in Leishan, Ma Pingyan and Shi Yingchuan in Congjiang 2. Yunnan province: Yuan Changgeng, Wu Jie, Lu Xu, Chen Gang and Guan Kai; 3. Qinghai province: Xu Yan, Gong Fang and Ma Liang; and 4. Tibetan Autonomous Region: Min Junqing, Wang Yan and Ma Hong. We wish to acknowledge Yang Zhongdong, Min Junqing, Xu Yan,Yuan Changgeng and Ma Pingyan for preparing the first draft of the comprehensive report, and Yang Zhongdong and Min Junqing for preparing the final report. We thank the following persons in the six targeted areas for their contributions: Guizhou: We thank Professor Shi Kaizhong; Li Yanzhong and Wang Jinhong; Wu Hai, Yang Decheng and Wu Kaihua; MCH Station in Leishan and Congjiang counties and Guizhou University for Nationalities. Yunnan: We appreciate the following friends and colleagues: Chen Xiuqin, Professor Guo Rui, Professor Liu Fang, Dehong Prefecture official Lin Rujian, Yunnan University for Nationalitie, and Yunnan University of Finance and Economics.
    [Show full text]
  • Beijing Sic 4H3m
    4 Hari 3 Malam Beijing SIC ATURCARA LAWATAN HARI 01 KETIBAAN BEIJING (SP/MT/MM) Ketibaan di lapangan terbang Beijing (ketibaan hari Khamis). Dihantar ke hotel untuk daftar masuk. Selepas sarapan, lawatan ke National Theatre, Tiananmen Square, Forbidden City, dan selepas makan malam, dibawa untuk menyaksikan persembahan Acrobatic Show. Hotel: Odin Hotel atau setaraf HARI 02 BEIJING (SP/MT/MM) Selepas sarapan, lawatan ke Juyongguan Great Wall, bergambar di Olympic Stadium Bird Nest dan membeli-belah di Wangfujing Street. Hotel: Odin Hotel atau setaraf HARI 03 BEIJING (SP/MT/MM) Selepas sarapan, Lawatn ke The Summer Palace, Niujie Mosque dan Muslim Supermarket, The Place, sebuah pusat membeli-belah yang dihiasi dengan skrin LED. Hotel: Odin Hotel atau setaraf HARI 04 PERLEPASAN BEIJING (SP/MT/MM) Selepas sarapan, daftar keluar hotel. Membeli-belah di Qianmen Walk Street, Nandouya Mosque, Xiushui Market. Selepas makan malam, bertolak ke lapangan terbang untuk penerbangan pulang ke Kuala Lumpur. * Kedai Hentian Wajib (45 minit): Jewellery, Jade, Tea, Silk, Latex, Baoshutang (krim luka terbakar). * Aturcara lawatan dibuat berpandukan penerbangan dengan Malaysia Airlines atau AirAsia. * Ingatan: Aturcara lawatan adalah tentatif sahaja dan tertakluk pada perubahan mengikut masa penerbangan anda. Sebarang perubahan akan dibuat oleh pengiring pelancong semasa lawatan mengikut kesesuaian pengalaman mereka. HARGA LAWATAN PER SEORANG (RINGGIT MALAYSIA) DEWASA KANAK-KANAK Min per Berdua Seorang Dengan Katil Tanpa Katil Lawatan 820 TBA 820 N/A Min 4 * Had umur kanak-kanak dengan katil tambahan 6-11 tahun, tanpa katil 2-5 tahun sahaja * Tidak semua hotel ada katil tambahan, tiada katil bermaksud tiada sarapan. * Bayi di bawah umur 2 tahun adalah percuma.
    [Show full text]
  • Resources for the Study of Islamic Architecture Historical Section
    RESOURCES FOR THE STUDY OF ISLAMIC ARCHITECTURE HISTORICAL SECTION Prepared by: Sabri Jarrar András Riedlmayer Jeffrey B. Spurr © 1994 AGA KHAN PROGRAM FOR ISLAMIC ARCHITECTURE RESOURCES FOR THE STUDY OF ISLAMIC ARCHITECTURE HISTORICAL SECTION BIBLIOGRAPHIC COMPONENT Historical Section, Bibliographic Component Reference Books BASIC REFERENCE TOOLS FOR THE HISTORY OF ISLAMIC ART AND ARCHITECTURE This list covers bibliographies, periodical indexes and other basic research tools; also included is a selection of monographs and surveys of architecture, with an emphasis on recent and well-illustrated works published after 1980. For an annotated guide to the most important such works published prior to that date, see Terry Allen, Islamic Architecture: An Introductory Bibliography. Cambridge, Mass., 1979 (available in photocopy from the Aga Khan Program at Harvard). For more comprehensive listings, see Creswell's Bibliography and its supplements, as well as the following subject bibliographies. GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHIES AND PERIODICAL INDEXES Creswell, K. A. C. A Bibliography of the Architecture, Arts, and Crafts of Islam to 1st Jan. 1960 Cairo, 1961; reprt. 1978. /the largest and most comprehensive compilation of books and articles on all aspects of Islamic art and architecture (except numismatics- for titles on Islamic coins and medals see: L.A. Mayer, Bibliography of Moslem Numismatics and the periodical Numismatic Literature). Intelligently organized; incl. detailed annotations, e.g. listing buildings and objects illustrated in each of the works cited. Supplements: [1st]: 1961-1972 (Cairo, 1973); [2nd]: 1972-1980, with omissions from previous years (Cairo, 1984)./ Islamic Architecture: An Introductory Bibliography, ed. Terry Allen. Cambridge, Mass., 1979. /a selective and intelligently organized general overview of the literature to that date, with detailed and often critical annotations./ Index Islamicus 1665-1905, ed.
    [Show full text]
  • ISLAM on the WINGS of NATIONALISM the Case of Muslim Intellectuals in Republican China
    12 ISLAM ON THE WINGS OF NATIONALISM The case of Muslim intellectuals in Republican China Françoise Aubin Unceasing convulsions, chaos and troubles have shaken China, as it is well known, during the first half of the twentieth century: the Boxer rebellion in 1900, the overthrow of the Qing dynasty at the turn of 1912, the xenophobic anti-Christian (more precisely anti-Protestant) outburst in 1925, the breaking of a tactical alliance between Guomindang1 and Communists in 1927, the rapid mili- tarization of the politics and so on.2 While intellectuals were contending without end about the significance of the past, the throwing out of their so-called ossified spiritual legacy, the invention of a new way of life and thought, their political commitment, there were other groups of intellectuals who unostentatiously and unnoticed were conducting their own revolution, on the fringe of the main currents, especially in the coastal big cities. These intellectuals were Chinese believers in Islam.3 How Muslim intellectuals reacted to the surrounding turmoil With cultural associations The basis of their social activity was the creation of numerous cultural associa- tions, whose program focused on the modernization and the expansion of popu- lar religious education, on the improvement of higher religious formation, on the promotion of Islamic culture, and whose leaders were often the imams in charge of the cult (zhangjiao ), usually called in China the ahongs.4 Associations had too the merit of being a remedy for the dispersion of local communities, each of them congregated round a mosque, without links between one another. And, doing so, the activists were convinced that they put into practice their love of the Chinese motherland and their wish to help it, although without taking political 241 FRANÇOISE AUBIN stand, they say.
    [Show full text]
  • Centre on Migration, Policy and Society Working Paper No. 111
    Centre on Migration, Policy and Society Working Paper No. 111, University of Oxford, 2014 The Interactions of Ethnic Minorities in Beijing Dr Reza Hasmath WP-14-111 COMPAS does not have a centre view and does not aim to present one. The views expressed in this document are only those of its independent author The Interactions of Ethnic Minorities in Beijing Abstract Drawing on six years of fieldwork in Beijing, this article looks at the daily interactions of ethnic minorities in local neighbourhoods and places of economic activities. Moreover, it examines ethnic minorities’ negotiations with public institutions, the Han majority and other ethnic minority groups. The article suggests that celebratory ethno-festivals and ethnic-oriented restaurants that showcase minority traditions serve as a mechanism to encourage Han interactions with ethnic minority groups. However, the attendant risk in utilizing this practice is that the socio-economic struggles of many ethnic minority groups are being masked when a celebratory version of their culture and traditions are presented. This can potentially lead to reduce meaningful Han-ethnic minority interactions in the future. Keywords Beijing, China, commodification, ethnic minorities, interactions, representation. Contact Details Dr. Reza Hasmath School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies, University of Oxford 74 Woodstock Road, Oxford OX2 6HP United Kingdom Email: rhasmath [at] gmail.com The views expressed in this document are those of its author and should not be regarded as representing the views of COMPAS. 1 Introduction There are a growing number of studies focusing on China’s ethnic minorities and their interactions with the majority Han ethnic group. The available work suggests that the modern Chinese state has a tendency to depict ethnic minorities as exotic, practitioners of “backward” traditions, and prone to poverty and illiteracy.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Download
    PEACE AND JUSTICE: REACTION OF THE MUSLIM COMMUNITY IN SOUTH YUNNAN TO POLITICAL ADVERSITY1 Wang Jianping Shanghai Normal University, China Abstract The Muslims who live in the Yunnan province of China strive to follow the principles advocated in the Quran, while living as a minority in a non-Islamic society. Yet the cultural mainstream of contemporary Chi- nese life often clashes with the core beliefs of the Islamic tradition. There- fore, the Yunnanese Muslims frequently face political pressures as they try to maintain their distinct Islamic way of life. This paper investigates the methods that Yunnanese Musilims employ to confront an adverse, political environment. Particularly their use of the values of peace and justice. º·¤Ñ´ÂèÍ ¤Ø³¤èÒ¾×é¹°Ò¹¢Í§ÈÒʹÒÊèǹÁÒ¡ÁÑ¡ÁÕ ÊѹµÔ¸ÃÃÁ áÅÐ ¤ÇÒÁÂصԸÃÃÁ ÃÇÁÍÂÙè´éÇÂàÊÁÍ ÈÒʹÒÍÔÊÅÒÁ¡çÁÕàªè¹à´ÕÂǡѹ â´Â੾ÒÐÍÂèÒ§ÂÔè§ã¹¡Ã³Õ¢Í§ªÒÇ ÁØÊÅÔÁ«Öè§à»ç¹ª¹¡ÅØèÁ¹éÍÂÍÒÈÑÂÍÂÙèã¹Á³±ÅÂÙ¹¹Ò¹ «Öè§ÍÂÙè·Ò§·ÔȵÐÇѹµ¡à©Õ§ãµé ¢Í§»ÃÐà·È¨Õ¹ ªÒÇÁØÊÅÔÁàËÅèÒ¹Ñé¹ä´é´Óà¹Ô¹ªÕÇÔµ´éÇ¡Òû¯ÔºÑµÔµÒÁËÅÑ¡¡Òôѧ¡ÅèÒÇ «Ö觻ÃÒ¡¯ÍÂÙè㹤ÑÁÀÕÃì¡ØÃÍèÒ¹ÍÂèÒ§à¤Ã觤ÃÑ´ áÁé¨Ðà»ç¹ª¹¡ÅØèÁ¹éÍÂã¹á¼è¹´Ô¹·ÕèÁÔä´é ¹Ñº¶×ÍÍÔÊÅÒÁ ¡Ò÷ÕèÇÔ¶ÕªÕÇÔµ¢Í§ªÒǨչÃèÇÁÊÁÑÂä´é¶Ù¡¡ÃÐáÊÇѲ¹¸ÃÃÁ¤Ãͺ§Ó àªè¹ ¡ÒÃà¤ÒþÃÙ»ºÙªÒ ¡ÒÃäÁè¹Ñº¶×;ÃÐà¨éÒáÅÐËŧãËÅã¹ÅÑ·¸ÔÇѵ¶Ø¹ÔÂÁ«Öè§áµ¡µèÒ§¡Ñ¹ ÁÒ¡¡ÑºÇÔ¶ÕªÕÇÔµ¢Í§ªÒǨչÁØÊÅÔÁ ´éÇÂà˵عÕéàͧ¨Ö§à¡Ô´¤ÇÒÁ¢Ñ´áÂ駢Ö鹺èͤÃÑé§ à»ç¹¼Å ãËéªÒÇÂÙ¹¹Ò¹ÁØÊÅÔÁµéͧ༪ԭ¡Ñº¤ÇÒÁ¡´´Ñ¹·Ò§¡ÒÃàÁ×ͧà¾ÃÒоǡà¢Ò¾ÂÒÂÒÁÃÑ¡ÉÒ ÇÔ¶ÕªÕÇÔµ´Ñé§à´ÔÁ¢Í§ÁØÊÅÔÁàÍÒäÇé º·¤ÇÒÁ¹Õé¨ÐµÃǨÊͺÇÔ¸ÕµèÒ§ æ ·ÕèªÒÇÂÙ¹¹Ò¹ÁØÊÅÔÁ Prajna~ __ V ihara, __ Volume 13, Number 1-2, January-December, 2012, 309-323 309 c 2000 by Assumption University Press ¹ÓÁÒãªé㹡ÒÃ༪ԭ˹éҡѺÊÀÒ¾áÇ´ÅéÍÁ·Ò§¡ÒÃàÁ×ͧ·ÕèàÅÇÃéÒ â´Â੾ÒÐÍÂèÒ§ÂÔè§ ¡Ò÷Õè¾Ç¡à¢Ò¹ÓàÍҤس¤èÒ·Ò§ÈÒʹҤ×ÍÊѹµÔ¸ÃÃÁáÅÐÂصԸÃÃÁÁÒ»ÃÐÂØ¡µìãªéà¾×èÍ ÃѺÁ×͡Ѻ»Ñ­ËÒ·Ò§¡ÒÃàÁ×ͧ The fundamental values of most religious traditions certainly con- tain those of peace and justice.
    [Show full text]
  • Studies on Ethnic Groups in China Stevan Harrell, Editor
    Studies on Ethnic Groups in China Stevan Harrell, Editor Studies on Ethnic Groups in China Cultural Encounters on China’s Ethnic Frontiers Edited by Stevan Harrell Guest People: Hakka Identity in China and Abroad Edited by Nicole Constable Familiar Strangers: A History of Muslims in Northwest China Jonathan N. Lipman Lessons in Being Chinese: Minority Education and Ethnic Identity in Southwest China Mette Halskov Hansen Manchus and Han: Ethnic Relations and Political Power in Late Qing and Early Republican China, 1861–1928 Edward J. M. Rhoads Ways of Being Ethnic in Southwest China Stevan Harrell Governing China’s Multiethnic Frontiers Edited by Morris Rossabi On the Margins of Tibet: Cultural Survival on the Sino-Tibetan Frontier Åshild Kolås and Monika P. Thowsen The Art of Ethnography: A Chinese “Miao Album” Translation by David M. Deal and Laura Hostetler Doing Business in Rural China: Liangshan’s New Ethnic Entrepreneurs Thomas Heberer Communist Multiculturalism: Ethnic Revival in Southwest China Susan K. McCarthy COmmUNIst MUltICUltURALIsm Ethnic Revival in Southwest China SUSAN K. McCArthY university of washington press • Seattle and London This publication is supported in part by the Donald R. Ellegood International Publications Endowment. © 2009 by the University of Washington Press Printed in the United States of America Design by Pamela Canell 14 12 11 10 09 5 4 3 2 1 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or trans- mitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
    [Show full text]