MongoliaThe Society and Its Environment
A balladeer playing a two-stringed morin
huur
IN 1986 MONGOLIA CELEBRATED the sixty-fifth anniversary of the
revolution that had begun the transformation of a traditional
feudal society of pastoral nomads into a modern society of
motorcycle-mounted shepherds and urban factory workers. The
reshaping of Mongolian society reflected both strong guidance and
a high level of economic assistance from the Soviet Union. The
relations between Mongolia and the Soviet Union have been
extremely close. The ruling Mongolian People's Revolutionary
Party has so faithfully echoed the line of the Communist Party of
the Soviet Union that some Western observers have doubted the
reality of Mongolia's independence.
From Ulaanbaatar, however, issues of autonomy and the path of
social development are seen differently. Of all the peoples of
Inner Asia--
Uighurs (see Glossary),
Uzbeks (see Glossary),
Kirghiz, Tibetans, Tajiks, and others--only those in Mongolia
retain any degree of independence. As a small nation of barely 2
million people, caught between two giant and sometimes
antagonistic neighbors, China and the Soviet Union, Mongolia has
had to accommodate itself to one or the other of those neighbors.
Twice as many Mongols live outside the boundaries of Mongolia
(3.4 million in China and .5 million in the Soviet Union), as
live within it, and the fate of the larger Mongol population of
China, who have become a 20 percent minority in the Nei Monggol
Autonomous Region--once part of their own country--demonstrates
that alternatives to the pro-Soviet alignment might well be less
attractive. In the opinion of most Western observers, most
Mongolians traditionally have tended to view the Soviet Union as
a model of modern society, and the Russian language has been the
vehicle for the introduction of science and modern technology and
for contacts with the larger communist world.
Mongolia in 1921 was an exceptionally economically
undeveloped society in which nomadic herders, illiterate and
marginally involved in a market economy, constituted most of the
population. They supported some petty nobles and a large number
of Buddhist monks. The society's dominant institution was the
Buddhist monastic system, which enrolled much of the adult male
population as monks. Such limited commerce as existed was
controlled by Chinese merchants, to whom the native nobility was
heavily in debt. The only avenue of mobility and escape from
broad and ill-defined obligations to hereditary overlords was
provided by entrance to the Buddhist clergy, whose monks devoted
themselves primarily to otherworldly and economically
unproductive pursuits. The population appears to have been
declining, because of high death rates from disease and poor
nutrition, the large proportion of celibate monks, and high
levels of infertility caused by venereal disease.
Against such a historical foundation, claims that
contemporary Mongolia represents a completely new society are
quite plausible. In many ways, the society has been transformed,
and in the 1980s rapid social change continued. The ruling party
saw the nation as having leaped directly from feudalism to
socialism, bypassing the capitalist stage of development. Many of
the forms of socialist organization, particularly in the rapidly
growing urban and industrial sectors, appeared to be direct
copies of Soviet models, with some modification to fit the
Mongolian context. The population has nearly tripled since 1920,
as the government pursued a pro-natal policy rare among
developing nations. Mongolia's herds of livestock, which
outnumbered the human population by at least ten-to-one, had been
collectivized, and herders in the 1980s worked as members of
pastoral collectives that drew up monthly and annual plans for
milk and wool production.
By 1985 a slim majority of Mongolia's population was urban,
working in factories and mines, and increasingly housed in
Soviet-model, prefabricated highrises. Public health and
education had been the objects of intense development, which by
the 1980s had produced vital rates approaching those of developed
nations and nearly universal literacy among the younger
generation. Much of Mongolia's industrial development and urban
growth has taken place since the mid-1970s and has been so recent
that the country was only beginning to recognize the problems
attending rapid industrialization, urbanization, and occupational
differentiation.
The drive for modernization along Soviet lines has been
accompanied by an equally strong, but much less explicitly
articulated, determination to maintain a distinctive Mongolian
culture and to keep control of Mongolia's development in
Mongolian hands. Although the topic was politically sensitive,
Mongolia's leaders were nationalists as well as communists, and
they aspired to much more independence than was permitted to the
"national minorities" of the Soviet Union and China with whom the
Mongolians otherwise had so much in common.
Data as of June 1989
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