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Of Goats and Dragons
Buzkashi, played avidly across Central Asia, is a game
of superlatives: the most exhilarating, violent and spectacular
contest to involve men and horses. A kind of Central Asian
polo, buzkashi is played on horseback between two teams
of riders competing to win possession of a headless goat,
calf or sheep carcass, which is then carried and thrown across
the opposition's goal line. Leo Docherty dives into the fray.
Photographs by Christopher Herwig.
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On Central Asian Tracks
Setting off with only the travelogue of an eighteenth century
Sufi mystic and a book on the Muslim shrines of Xinjiang,
historian Alexandre Papas and photographer Lisa Ross observe
the 'cult of saints' as they follow along the holy paths
of the Taklamakan Desert in search of Xinjiang's active
Sufi shrines.
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steppe Guide: Issyk Kul
This glorious alpine lake and its environs offer unlimited
possibilities for adventure and exploration. Set deep in
the heart of the TianShan at 1,600 m above sea level and
long cherished as the jewel of Central Asia, Issyk Kul -
the world's second largest alpine lake - occupies a special
place in the Kyrgyz heart. Rowan Stewart and Susie Weldon
take us there. Photographs by Christoph Schutz.
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Cookery: Noodles from the Other China
Xinjiang is a noodle-eater's paradise. During their travels
there over the last twenty-five years, including recent
research trips for their latest book, Beyond the Great
Wall: Recipes and Travels in the Other China, Naomi
Duguid and Jeffrey Alford have eaten - and have watched
people knead, shape and cook - a stupendous quantity of
noodles. Photographs by Richard Jung.
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Top Ten Monuments to Lenin
Despite Vladimir Ilyich Lenin's request before his death
that no memorial be created for him, by the 1980s there
were statues of him in every city, town and village in the
Soviet Union - honouring the man and symbolising socialist
idealism. In addition, streets, squares, collective farms,
medals, wheat hybrids and even an asteroid were named after
the architect of Soviet Communism. Photographs by Christopher
Herwig, Paul Lowe, Kurmanbek Makeshev, Vladimir Pirogov
and Michael Steen.
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Snapshot: Boomtown Birthday
The best views of Kazakhstan's capital, Astana, are had from
Baiterek, a spherical observation tower nearly 100 m tall
symbolising a Kazakh legend in which a mythical bird lays
a golden egg in a poplar tree. From this vantage point, the
scale of Astana's construction is clearly visible: cranes
and skyscrapers rise in all directions, in stark contrast
with the vast emptiness of the surrounding steppe. Photograph
by Philipp Jahn.
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