Eid al-Adha is a grand festival for the Hui, Uygur, Kazak, Uzbek, Tajik, tatar people, Kirgiz, Salar, Dongxiang and Baoan nationalities in China. Both Eid al-Adha and Eid al-Adha mean sacrifice and dedication, so this festival is generally called "Sacrifice Festival" or "Eid al-Adha Festival". Translate "kurban" again.
The origin of festivals
On June 1992, the first large-scale festival of "China Kashgar Eid al-Adha Festival" was launched.
This art festival is planned to be held once a year in Kashgar. During this period, thousands of Uighurs will participate in the mass collective dance-Sama Dance in Aitig Square in Kashgar.
This is a unique way for Uighurs in Kashgar and other places to express their happy mood. On the morning of the festival, after people went to the Etiquette Mosque for holiday worship, musicians began to play nagra drums and play suona on the roof of the mosque. With the sonorous drums and the crisp suona sound, people danced Sama dance in succession, and suddenly, the whole square was immersed in a happy atmosphere.