By Pepe Escobar
February 13, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - Have an auspicious Year
of the Ox, everybody. And to celebrate it in style,
fleetingly alleviating our burden in these times of
trouble, let’s plunge into a dream within a dream,
going back to the future for a game-changing moment
in Chinese history.
Chinese New Year’s Day, 1272. At the time, that
fell on January 18. Kublai Khan, after issuing an
imperial edict, establishes the official beginning
of the Yuan dynasty in China.
That may have been a Chinese-style dynasty in all
its accoutrements, set up according to millenary
rituals and following a classic structure. But the
people who were running the show were definitely the
sons of the steppe: the Mongols.
Kublai Khan was on a roll. In 1256 he had started
building a summer capital north of the Great Wall of
China, Kaiping – renamed Shangtu in 1263. That was
the Xanadu of Coleridge’s
sublime poem – later decoded by the genius of
Jorge Luis Borges, that Buddha in a gray suit, as
containing an “unrevealed
archetype”, an “eternal object” whose “first
manifestation was the palace; the second, the poem.”
In 1258, after fighting, successfully, a court
conspiracy, Kublai’s brother Mongke – then the Great
Khan – gave him the strategic command of one of the
four divisions of the Mongol army in a new offensive
against the Song dynasty in China.
But then Mongke died – of fever – outside
Chungking (today’s Chongqing), in 1259. The
succession was epic. The Khan’s younger brother,
Ariq – who had stayed in the Mongol capital
Karakorum to protect the homeland – was about to go
medieval to capture the throne.
Hulagu, also Kublai’s brother, and the conqueror
(and destroyer) of Baghdad – actually the conqueror
of nearly all of West Asia – stopped his military
campaign in Syria and run back home to support
Kublai.
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Kublai finally got back to Kaiping. A
khuriltai – the imposing, ceremonial Mongol
council of tribal chieftains – was finally held. And
Kublai was proclaimed Great Khan in June 1260.
The immediate result was civil war – until Ariq
finally caved in.
Six years after becoming Great Khan, Kublai
started the construction of a new winter capital,
Ta-tu (“great capital”), northeast of the old city
of Chungtu (that’s where modern Beijing is located).
In Turkic, the city was named Khanbalik (“royal
capital”). That’s the Cambalac we find in Marco
Polo’s travels.
Kublai’s war against the Song dynasty was an
immensely protracted affair. His final victory only
happened four years after he became Great Khan –
when the Song empress dowager handed him over the
imperial seal.
The Yuan dynasty was a de facto, historical
game-changer – because deep down the Mongols, nomad
sons of the steppe, never trusted the sedentary,
refined, urbanized Chinese.
Kublai, though, was a master strategist. He kept
a lot of very important Chinese advisers. But later
on, his successors preferred to staff the
administration with Mongols, assorted Muslims from
Central Asia, and Tibetans.
The Great Khanate under Kublai included Mongolia
and Tibet – which, of course, were not Chinese. Yet
the most extraordinary point is that Yuan China was
in fact integrated and/or absorbed into the Mongol
empire. China became part of the Khanate.
Follow the script
The Yuan dynasty also sealed a defining moment in
Mongol history. The Mongols were always open to the
influence of every religion. But all in all, they
remained fundamentally pagan. The ones who really
commanded their attention – and devotion – were
their shamans.
Still, some Mongols had converted to Nestorian
Christianity. Kublai’s wife, Chabi, was a fervent
Buddhist. But then Kublai’s generation, en masse,
started to turn towards Mahayana Buddhism. Their
tutors were not only Tibetans, but Uighurs as well.
And that leads us to a key juncture. Kublai
decided he needed a unified Mongol script to
congregate the Babel of languages spoken across the
Khanate.
The man appointed to carry the formidable task
was Phagspa – Kublai’s National Preceptor, the
Viceroy of Tibet, and later imperial preceptor, that
is, the supreme authority over all Buddhists in the
whole Mongol empire.
Phagspa came up with a script, not surprisingly,
based on the Tibetan alphabet. Yet that was written
vertically – like Chinese script, and Uighur and
Mongol script.
In 1269, three years before the official start of
the Yuan dynasty, that became the official writing
system. Why is that so important? Because it was the
first multilingual transcription system in the
world.
Then there’s the all-important matter of food.
Kublai was a gourmet. Cooks held a special, very
prestigious role in the Mongol universe. They were
close companions to the Khan, who trusted them to
keep his food always poison-free. Cooks were also
members of the keshig – the Khan’s
praetorian guard. That means they were also
accomplished warriors.
In Chinese imperial tradition, the Son of Heaven
was supposed to follow a perfectly balanced diet;
that’s how he secured stability for the world at
large. Meals of the Chinese emperor – the living
link between Heaven and Earth – marked the passage
of time, and the alternation of yin and yang.
Kublai, as a keen student of Chinese tradition,
must have been introduced by his court advisers to a
famous passage from the Chinese classic The
Master Zhuang. The appropriately named
“Essentials for Nourishing Life” features a dialogue
between the Duke Wenhui of Wei and his cook, Ding,
who happens to be butchering… an ox.
The most extraordinary thing about this tale –
which sort of prefigures the writing of Borges – is
how Ding, the cook, describes his art to the master:
how to dissect an ox by steering his blade through
the open spaces between the joints.
It’s all a matter of concentrating on the Dao.
That is, going with the flow – and respecting
natural anatomy. That’s how you learn to navigate
the complex carcass of life itself – facing no
resistance, and without exhausting vital energy.
So there it is: a cook as a Daoist philosopher.
Borges would have loved it.
The message: if we want to live a life on the
edge of a knife that can’t be blunted, we should be
working between the joints.
Sounds like a life lesson we all should heed for
a properly Ox-picious year.
Pepe Escobar is
correspondent-at-large at
Asia Times.
His latest book is
2030. Follow him on
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