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The Living Culture Heritage
There are roughly 5 million Mongols
today, of whom 2,3 million live within independent
Mongolia. The remaining ethnic Mongols live in China
(Inner Mongolia) and Siberia in the so called Buryat
Autonomous Republic to the east of Lake Baikal. In China
and Russia most Mongols no longer live in gers and have
become minorities in their own lands.
Mongolian herdsmen of today share the
same lifestyle as those their ancestors have practiced
since time immemorial. The land use patterns date back at
least to the time of the Huns and the period during which
the Chinese started constructing the Great Wall in 200 BC.
Their life revolving around their yurts (ger), livestock
and the pastures. More than a quarter of the entire
population are semi-nomadic herdsmen.

During a horse trail journey
Badrakh and Ganbold invited us
to meet their horse trainer friends.
The capital, Ulaanbaatar offers a sharp
contrast to the lifestyle of the herdsmen. Most modern
buildings have been erected by Russians over the last
thirty or so years. A quarter of the Mongolian population
live in this city, but over half of these urbanites still
live in traditional gers. Typical for Mongolia, there is
a tremendous contrast between the old and the new modern
Russian-inspired gray buildings. There seems to be very
little middle ground. The modern Russian impact on
architecture and lifestyle is confined to Ulaanbaatar and
a few other towns.
Approximately 6 percent of the
population of Mongolia are non-ethnic Mongols. These
non-Mongol groups are Kazakhs, Urianhai (Tuvinian) and Hoton. Kazakhs are the main inhabitants in western
Mongolia, e.g. the Bayan-Ölghii province. They are Muslims and speak a Turkic language. Of the Mongolian
ethnic groups the Khalkha Mongols make up 70 per cent of
the population and the remaining are divided into 14
sub-groups. Westerners find it difficult to distinguish
them from each other.
Languages: Until
recently all Mongolians learnt Russian in school, but
today there is an increased interest in English, German
and French. Very few Mongolians speak anything other than
Mongolian or Russian. The Mongolian language is of the Uighur-Altai group, and unrelated to European languages.
In 1940 the Mongols adopted the Cyrillic alphabet, just
adding two letters to the Russian version. In western
Mongolia Turkic languages like Kazakh is spoken.
Religion: Mongolian
believers are mostly Buddhists (Lamaists), a Buddhism
intimately related to the Tibetan religious beliefs. In
fact, it was the Mongols under Altan Khan (1507-83) who
installed the first Dalai Lama in Lhasa (Dalai is a
Mongol word meaning ocean). During the Stalinist regime
of Choibalsan in the 1930s there was great persecution of
the monks and many monasteries and temples were
destroyed. Until recently there was only one functioning
monastery in Mongolia, the Gandan monastery in Ulaanbaatar. Today under the democratization process there is a
Buddhist revival all over Mongolia. New monasteries have
sprung up, even in temporary shelters like gers. Monks
who had been hidden in civil service have gone back into
monkshood. For the last 60 years, they had been serving
the herdsmen with clandestine religious services.
There has also been an Islamic revival
among the Mongolian Kazakhs in the extreme west, and only
recently the first Mongolian believers made the Haj
pilgrimage to Mecca.
Food: Vegetarians are
unheard of in Mongolia. People mostly eat meat and milk
products. No fish. No poultry.
Although there are potatoes many
herdsmen feel there is a "taste of earth" to
it. Fruit and vegetables are not commonly seen outside
the main towns. Herdsmen do not keep poultry. Mongolian
cuisine features lamb and mutton mostly. They prefer to
boil all foods just as in European Medieval times. The
Kazakhs in western Mongolia prefer goats. Herdsmen milk
all their animals including mares, camels and yaks.
During the summer, when milk products are plentiful,
herdsmen usually revert completely to the "white
food" and abstain from meat for a while.
They also pick berries, pine cone nuts
and other produce of the forests, when available. From of
the mares' milk they make airag (koumiss) which is
fermented. The alcohol content can reach 12-15 percent.
They frequently distill cow yogurt and make
"Mongolian vodka" out of milk.
Herdsmen: The herdsmen, are completely mobile during the summer
months.
Wintertime is the major constraint for the livestock, as
pasture is very limited. Hence, herding families usually
stay in one defined winter place. In the summer, when
pasture is abundant, they spread out anywhere where the
grass is green. Hence, on different trips we usually do
not meet the same people. In the north where pastures are
good families move location just 3-4 times in the annual cycle. However, in the Gobi families may move as much as
19 times.

Herdsmen are scattered across the
summer pastures, and the occasional guest is well
treated. It is a matter, of course, to any Mongolian to
stop and talk for a while and they invite guests, even a
group 10-15 people, for dried cheese, yogurt, airag etc.
We usually buy our meats and yogurts for our expeditions
from these people - usually live animals such as a goat
or lamb. To meet with herdsmen is one of the delights of
a trip in Mongolia. They have not suffered as much as the town dwellers, however the present changes are
significant. The lack of cash has resulted in many rural
areas reverting to a barter economy. Little is available,
except for local produce.
The Naadam Festival: July 12th is the Mongolian national day which is
celebrated throughout the country. The most popular
sports of the Mongols are still the same as they were
during the time of the Huns and Genghis Khan. These are
Mongolian style Wrestling, Horse Racing and Archery.
Since time immemorial the Mongols have competed in these
"three manly games", all of which were
necessary to develop skills for Mongolian warriors.
After the democratization of Mongolia, traditions of the past
have become even more important and more pronounced.
Today, more Naadams are being held. Small regional
Naadams are celebrated as well. And at other more
traditional timings according to the Lunar calendar.
There are several ways to experience Naadam in Mongolia:
- National Naadam Games held in
Ulaanbaatar 11-12 July every year. On these
dates, Naadam is celebrated throughout Mongolia
according to the Western calendar. Local people
qualify to go to the largest of them all, the one
in Ulaanbaatar itself. It is crowded in
Ulaanbaatar during this time, and herdsmen enter
the city on horseback. A giant tent city is built
overnight on the evening of July 10th on
the Jarmag steppe between the airport and the
city center. Horsemen train their horses in on
the steppes near the city prior to Naadam. The
horses are collected a month prior. Pre-Naadam
horse races are held at four different points on
July 3rd and July 7th a little bit away from the city. The
wrestling and archery is made in Stadiums whilst the horse races takes
place on the Jarmag steppe by the airport road.
- Regional and local Naadams 11-12 July. Most
soums (sub provinces) and all aimags (provinces) celebrate their own
Naadams. Even at the local level, small Stadium have been built in the
soum centers. There are not many practitioners of Archery, hence at
local Naadams one should expect to experience Wrestling and Horse Racing
only. Whereas in many aimag capitals, Archery competitions will take
place. The advantage of the local scene, is of course, that it is
smaller, more amateur, and especially Wrestling can be seen at close
range.
- Small Naadams are becoming frequent anywhere in
celebrations of anything. Such local Naadams are celebrated according to
the Lunar calendar. It is just needed an excuse to stage one. These
small Naadams are very small by comparison.
- Since 1994 larger Naadams have
been staged in the open steppes in the
commemoration of Mongolian heroes. All have been
staged in the month of August, final dates being
set in May. Nor date and site is being made
public early. In 1995 in Ovorhangai province
celebrating the 360th day of the birth
of Zanabazar.. In 1997 there was four Naadams of
various sizes in August spread over the month..
We, at Nomadic Journeys, will know well ahead the
locations and time to organize special trips for
select small groups.
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