And the Oscar to best supporting actor goes to: Borodishin

Qinghai-Hexi-Corridor--Tsaidam-Basin-6-Gobi--DesertBorodishin, or Borodichine as Ella calls him is the best performing actor in our history. Boro was sergeant in the Russian white army under General Annenkov, who entered China with his decimated troops. After staying with him in the Sinkiang, he decided not to follow him further away (it was a good move, as Annenkov was betrayed by a Chinese warlord Feng Yu-Hsiang, known as the “betrayal general” and also the “Christian general” – I hope that the two appellatives are not related -. Feng returned Annenkov to the Russians, who shot him). They split, and while Annenkov left the Sinking to meet his fate, Borodishin joined the Smigounovs in the Tsaidam.

Two years later, the Smigs left Teijinar with Narim, due to the complex situation of the region, while Borodishin remained in Tsaidam. Was it because he was “on the hills, buying yak’s tails” – as Peter says -, when they departed, and nobody told him? Did he find the Smigs yurt empty when he returned of his journey?

I prefer to think that he stayed in the Qaidam waiting for his wife and his children from who he had lost contact. His letters became abruptly unanswered when his family was already traveling towards the frontier to meet him. Did Boro stayed in the Tsaidam expecting their arrival, knowing if they finally arrive to Teijinar, and he had departed, it will be impossible that they meet again? Probably, as Peter says

He still yearned for them, still (sometimes) had hopes he would see them again

Qaidam_basin2

We were the first Europeans he has seen for two years; his was a terribly desolate life. With us he was always cheerful, or at any rate tranquil; but you had an awful feeling that maybe his heart was broking slowly

Boro recommends them to avoid the main road, and follow an almost forgotten, barely negotiable path. They will find no guides for this region, and he proposes to go with them until they reach Issik Pakte, twelve marches towards the West. He cannot go further because he had no papers of any sort. And Boro helps them to buy four camels, and to get all the supplies for the march, which is not easy because people in the oasis have an economy of subsistence. They have almost nothing to trade. Boro must travel long distances (people live dispersed) to complete the stock they need.

During the eight days while Boro organizes their departure, Peter and Kini live a relaxed life in the luxurious yurt of the Smigs. Reading, hunting, waiting. Peter killed an antelope, from which she made shashlik on the cleaning rod of the rifle (this is strange, nobody made shashlik there? there had no other metal rod?).

The next day at noon, when the trio Ella, Peter and Boro departed towards Issik Pakte, no Mongol went with them.

Boro was a good fellow, cheerful and a good companion (a “brave homme”, as Kini says)

After something like two weeks they arrived to Issik Pakte, enduring snow storms, being lost without water, and eating samba with melted mutton fat and a little Worcestershire sauce. Once there, Borodishin negotiated with two Turki to guide them through the 12 stages needed to reach Cherchen, and helped them to trade Greys, Peter’s horse, for a young mare, “more amphibian than equine”

And finally, after two days, they parted. Borodishin,

At dawn he left with the Mongol, riding back along the way we had come, hunched on his camel, eternally sucking at his long Chinese pipe, his sad loyal eyes staring across the empty lands before him. As I watched him go I tried not to think in the two grubby yurts at Teijinar, were the redshanks called and he and Wang Sun-Lin took it in turns to go it and fetch fuel, and nothing ever happened

Two years later, he was murdered by bandits. Probably he felt relieved

 

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Photo credits: from the Internet


3 Responses to And the Oscar to best supporting actor goes to: Borodishin

  1. Pingback:Traveling abroad is always complicated. And specially, in China. – Toils and Troubles in Xinjiang Province

  2. Avatar peter hughes
    peter hughes says:

    This is very interesting. I read ‘News from Tartary’ in 1990 whilst on a trek in Kashmir, and I’d wondered what happened to Borodishin. i would have loved to meet them – such a fantastic story to tell. Ella’s ‘Forbidden Journey’ is a great read too. Such a beautiful country – I want to go there!

    • The country they loved does not exist anymore…I was there, three years ago, following their route. Camels were replaced by electric mopeds, old cities made from mud with twisty streets have been replaced by straight lines of Chinese style condominiums, and the whole Xinjiang is occupied by the Police and the Army. None of them like tourists in this area… but go there, I would go back again, now that I know what I will find