شياورجن
شاورجن ( تُكتب: ثِيَوُ عَر دٍ ، وتُنطق: شياو-إر-جن ، واسمها بالصينية: 小兒錦 والتي تُنطق: شياو جينگ؛ Xiao'erjing) هي طريقة تقليدية لكتابة الصينية بحروف عربية، طورها مسلمو الصين (قومية هوي) في مدارسهم الدينية في القرن السادس عشر، لكتابة حواشي وتفاسير للكتب الدينية المكتوبة بالعربية. انتشر استعمالها مع انتشار المدارس الدينية للهوي المشهورين بتقدمهم في التعليم والثقافة بين الصينيين. ثم مالبثت أن انتشرت في كافة مناحي حياتهم اليومية.
وما زالت الشياورجن مستعملة حتى الآن في لكافة أغراض الحياة. ولكونها تدوين للغة المنطوقة فإنها تتواجد باللهجات الصينية المختلفة في مختلف مناطق الصين. واليوم مازالت الشاورجن مستخدمة في مقاطعات نينگشيا و چينگهاي و گانسو . وما زالت المصاحف التي يطبعها الهوي تحمل ترجمة بالشياورجن إلى جانب الترجمة بالحروف الصينية.
انتشرت الشياورجن مع المعارضين الهوي الفارين إلي الإتحاد السوڤييتي السابق (قرغيزستان وأوزبكستان وقزخستان وروسيا). و سميت لغتهم دونگان. ثم ما لبثوا أن أُجبروا على التحول إلى الأبجدية اللاتينية عندما حظرت السلطات السوڤييتية استعمال الأبجدية العربية في 1920. ثم انتقلوا إلى الأبجدية السيريلية عام 1940.
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مسميات
Xiao'erjing does not have a single, standard name. In Shanxi, Hebei, Henan, Shandong, Eastern Shaanxi and also Beijing, Tianjin and the Northeastern provinces, the script is referred to as Xiǎo'érjīng, which when shortened becomes Xiǎojīng or Xiāojīng (the latter Xiāo has the meaning of "to review" in the aforementioned regions). In Ningxia, Gansu, Inner Mongolia, Qinghai, Western Shaanxi and the Northwestern provinces, the script is referred to as Xiǎo'érjǐn. The Dongxiang people refer to it as the "Dongxiang script" or the "Huihui script"; The Salar refer to it as the "Salar script"; The Dungan of Central Asia used a variation of Xiao'erjing called the "Hui script", before being made to abandon the Arabic script for Latin and Cyrillic. According to A. Kalimov, a famous Dungan linguist, the Dungan of the former Soviet Union called this script щёҗин (şjoⱬin, 消經).
الأصول
Since the arrival of Islam during the Tang Dynasty (beginning in the mid-7th century), many Arabic or Persian speaking people migrated into China. Centuries later, these peoples assimilated with the native Han Chinese, forming the Hui ethnicity of today. Many Chinese Muslim students attended madrasas to study Classical Arabic and the Qur'an. Because these students had a very basic understanding of Chinese characters but would have a better command of the spoken tongue once assimilated, they started using the Arabic script for Chinese. This was often done by writing notes in Chinese to aid in the memorization of surahs. This method was also used to write Chinese translations of Arabic vocabulary learned in the madrasas. Thus, a system of writing the Chinese language with Arabic script gradually developed and standardized to some extent. Currently, the oldest known artifact showing signs of Xiao'erjing is a stone stele in the courtyard of de (Daxue Xixiang Mosque) in Xi'an in the province of Shaanxi. The stele shows inscribed Qur'anic verses in Arabic as well as a short note of the names of the inscribers in Xiao'erjing. The stele was done in the year AH 740 in the Islamic calendar (between July 9, 1339, and June 26, 1340). Some old Xiao'erjing manuscripts (along with other rare texts including those from Dunhuang) are preserved in the Institute of Oriental Manuscripts of the Russian Academy of Sciences in St. Petersburg, Russia.
الاستخدام
Xiao'erjing can be divided into two sets, the "Mosque system" and the "Daily system". The "Mosque system" is the system used by pupils and imams in mosques and madrasahs. It contains much Arabic and Persian religious lexicon, and no usage of Chinese characters. This system is relatively standardised, and could be considered a true writing system. The "Daily system" is the system used by the less educated for letters and correspondences on a personal level. Often simple Chinese characters are mixed in with the Arabic script, mostly discussing non-religious matters, and therewith relatively little Arabic and Persian loans. This practice can differ drastically from person to person. The system would be devised by the writer himself, with one's own understanding of the Arabic and Persian alphabets, mapped accordingly to one's own dialectal pronunciation. Often, only the letter's sender and the letter's receiver can understand completely what is written, while being very difficult for others to read. Unlike Hui Muslims in other areas of China, Muslims of the northwest provinces of Shaanxi and Gansu had no knowledge of the Han Kitab or Classical Chinese, they used Xiao'erjing.[1] Xiao'erjing was used to annotate in Chinese, foreign language Islamic documents in languages like Persian.[2]
Xiao'erjing was used mostly by Muslims who could not read Chinese characters. It was imperfect due to various factors. The differing Chinese dialects would require multiple different depictions with Xiao'erjing. Xiao'erjing cannot display the tones present in Chinese, syllable endings are indistinguishable, i.e. xi'an and xian.[3] Xiao'erjing was much simpler than Chinese characters for representing Chinese.[4]
الاستخدام الحديث
In recent years, the usage of Xiao'erjing is nearing extinction due to the growing economy of the People's Republic of China and the improvement of the education of Chinese characters in rural areas of China. Chinese characters along with Hanyu Pinyin have since replaced Xiao'erjing. Since the mid-1980s, there has been much scholarly work done within and outside China concerning Xiao'erjing. On-location research has been conducted and the users of Xiao'erjing have been interviewed. Written and printed materials of Xiao'erjing were also collected by researchers, the ones at Nanjing University being the most comprehensive. قالب:Wikidata fallback link is leading a project in Japan concerning Xiao'erjing.[5] Books are printed in Xiao'erjing.[6] In Arabic language Qur'ans, Xiao'erjing annotations are used to help women read.[7] Xiao'erjing is used to explain certain terms when used as annotations.[8] Xiao'erjing is also used to write Chinese language Qurans.[9][10]
A Dachang Hui Imam, Ma Zhenwu, wrote a Qur'an translation into Chinese including Chinese characters and Xiao'erjing.[11]
الأبجدية
Xiao'erjing has 36 letters, 4 of which are used to represent vowel sounds. The 36 letters consists of 28 letters borrowed from Arabic, 4 letters borrowed from Persian along with 2 modified letters and 4 extra letters unique to Xiao'erjing.
البوادئ والصوامت
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Finals and vowels
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Vowels in Arabic and Persian loans follow their respective orthographies, namely, only the long vowels are represented and the short vowels are omitted.
Although the sukun () can be omitted when representing Arabic and Persian loans, it cannot be omitted when representing Chinese. The exception being that of oft-used monosyllabic words which can have the sukun omitted from writing. For example, when emphasised, "的" and "和" are written as (دِ) and (حـَ); when unemphasised, they can be written with the sukuns as (دْ) and (حـْ), or without the sukuns as (د) and (حـ).
Similarly, the sukun can also sometimes represent the Chinese -[ŋ] final instead of (ـݣ). This is sometimes replaced by the fatḥatan (), the kasratan (), or the dammatan ().
In polysyllabic words, the final 'alif (ـا) that represents the long vowel -ā can be omitted and replaced by a fatḥah () representing the short vowel -ă.
Xiao'erjing is similar to Hanyu Pinyin in the respect that words are written as one, while a space is inserted between words.
When representing Chinese words, the shaddah sign represents a doubling of the entire syllable on which it rests. It has the same function as the Chinese iteration mark "々".
Arabic punctuation marks can be used with Xiao'erjing as can Chinese punctuation marks, they can also be mixed (Chinese pauses and periods with Arabic commas and quotation marks).
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Example
Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Xiao'erjing, simplified and traditional Chinese characters, Hanyu Pinyin and English:
- Xiao'erjing (Unicode)
- ﴿ژٍّ شٍ عَر ذِيِوْ، ذَىْ طٌيًا حْـ ٿُوًالِ شْا ءِلُوُ پٍْدْع。 تَمٍ فُيِوْ لِسٍْ حْـ لِيْاسٍ، بٍْ ىٍْ ءِ سِْودِ قُوًاسِ دْ كٍْشٍ خُسِيْا دُوِدَىْ。﴾
- Simplified Chinese
- 「人人生而自由,在尊严和权利上一律平等。他们赋有理性和良心,并应以兄弟关系的精神互相对待。」
- Traditional Chinese
- 「人人生而自由,在尊嚴和權利上一律平等。他們賦有理性和良心,並應以兄弟關係的精神互相對待。」
- Bopomofo
- 「ㄖㄣˊㄖㄣˊㄕㄥ¯ㄦˊㄗˋㄧㄡˊ,ㄗㄞˋㄗㄨㄣ¯ㄧㄢˊㄏㄜˊㄑㄩㄢˊㄌㄧˋㄕㄤˋㄧ¯ㄌㄩˋㄆㄧㄥˊㄉㄥˇ。ㄊㄚ ˙ㄇㄣㄈㄨˋㄧㄡˇㄌㄧˇㄒㄧㄥˋㄏㄜˊㄌㄧㄤˊㄒㄧㄣ ,ㄅㄧㄥˋㄧㄥㄧˇㄒㄩㄥ ㄉㄧˋㄍㄨㄢ ㄒㄧˋ˙ㄉㄜㄐㄧㄥ ㄕㄣˊㄏㄨˋㄒㄧㄤ ㄉㄨㄟˋㄉㄞˋ。」
- Pinyin
- "Rénrén shēng ér zìyóu, zài zūnyán hé quánlì shàng yílǜ píngděng. Tāmen fùyǒu lǐxìng hé liángxīn, bìng yīng yǐ xiōngdi guānxì de jīngshén hùxiāng duìdài."
- Wade–Giles
- jên2shêngêrh2tzu4 yu2tsai4tsun yen2hê2ch'üan2 li4shang4i lü4p'ing2 têng3, t'a mên5fu4 yu3li3 hsing4hê2liang2 hsinping4yingi3hsiung ti4kuan hsi4tê5ching shên2 hu4 hsiang tui4 tai4.
- English
- "All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act toward one another in a spirit of brotherhood."
انظر أيضاً
- Category:Arabic alphabets
- Islam in China
- Sini (script)
- Jawi alphabet
- Aljamiado
- Arebica
- Uyghur Arabic alphabet
المراجع
الهامش
- ^ Tōkyō Daigaku. Tōyō Bunka Kenkyūjo (2006). International journal of Asian studies, Volumes 3–5. Cambridge University Press. p. 141. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
- ^ Geoffrey Roper (1994). World survey of Islamic manuscripts. 4. (Supplement ; including indexes of languages, names and titles of collections of volumes I-IV), Volumes 1–4. Al-Furqan Islamic Heritage Foundation. p. 96. ISBN 1-873992-11-4. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
- ^ Jonathan Neaman Lipman (2004). Familiar strangers: a history of Muslims in Northwest China. Seattle: University of Washington Press. p. 51. ISBN 0-295-97644-6. Retrieved 2010-11-28.
- ^ Geoffrey Roper (1994). World survey of Islamic manuscripts. 4. (Supplement ; including indexes of languages, names and titles of collections of volumes I-IV), Volumes 1–4. Al-Furqan Islamic Heritage Foundation. p. 71. ISBN 1-873992-11-4. Retrieved 2010-11-28.
- ^ Stéphane A. Dudoignon (2008). Central Eurasian Reader: a biennial journal of critical bibliography and epistemology of Central Eurasian Studies, Volume 1. Schwarz. p. 12. ISBN 978-3-87997-347-7. Retrieved 2010-11-28.
- ^ Centre for the Study of Religion and Communism (2003). Religion in communist lands, Volume 31. Centre for the Study of Religion and Communism. p. 14. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
- ^ Suad Joseph, Afsaneh Najmabadi (2003). Encyclopedia of women & Islamic cultures, Volume 1. Brill. p. 126. ISBN 90-04-13247-3. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
- ^ Daftar-i Muṭālaʻāt-i Siyāsī va Bayn al-Milalī (Iran) (2000). The Iranian journal of international affairs, Volume 12. Institute for Political and International Studies. p. 42. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
- ^ Archives de sciences sociales des religions, Volume 46, Issues 113–116. Centre national de la recherche scientifique. 2001. p. 25. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
- ^ Kees Versteegh; Mushira Eid (2005). Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and Linguistics: A-Ed. Brill. pp. 381–. ISBN 978-90-04-14473-6.
- ^ Garnaut, Anthony (March 2006). "The Islamic Heritage in China: A General Survey". China Heritage Newsletter (5).
- ^ Sobieroj, Florian. (2019). Standardisation in Manuscripts written in Sino-Arabic Scripts and xiaojing. 10.1515/9783110639063-008. Pg. 178, Footnote 3 [1]
المصادر
- A. Forke. Ein islamisches Tractat aus Turkistan // T’oung pao. Vol. VIII. 1907.
- O.I. Zavyalova. Sino-Islamic language contacts along the Great Silk Road: Chinese texts written in Arabic Script // Chinese Studies (《漢學研究》). Taipei: 1999. No. 1.
- Xiaojing Qur'an (《小經古蘭》), Dongxiang County, Lingxia Hui Autonomous Prefecture, Gansu, PRC, 1987.
- Huijiao Bizun (Xiaojing) (《回教必遵(小經)》), Islam Book Publishers, Xi'an, Shaanxi, PRC, 1993, 154 pp., photocopied edition.
- Muhammad Musa Abdulihakim. Islamic faith Q&A (《伊斯兰信仰问答》) (2nd ed.). Beiguan Street Mosque, Xining, Qinghai, PRC, appendix contains a Xiao'erjing–Pinyin–Arabic comparison chart.
- Feng Zenglie. Beginning Dissertation on Xiao'erjing: Introducing a phonetic writing system of the Arabic script adopted for Chinese in The Arab World (《阿拉伯世界》) Issue #1. 1982.
- Chen Yuanlong. The Xiaojing writing system of the Dongxiang ethnicity in China's Dongxiang ethnicity (《中国东乡族》). People's Publishing House of Gansu. 1999.