What is it about?
This article centers on Maulana Abdul Hamid Khan Bhashani’s visit to China in 1963. It shows how and why Bhashani formulated Afro-Asia as a new spatial imagination that rejected the territorial bounds of the nation-state. It seeks to add to the expanding historiography on people-to-people South Asia–China engagements in historical context. During his visit in China, he met with several figures, such as the last emperor of China. Bhashani’s bonds of affectivity with the last emperor of China, Puyi, were based on a politics of anti-imperialism in which China was afforded a central and a leading role and which was also based on a notion of a shared past between South Asia and China. Focusing on a lesser-known itinerant can help to decenter our understanding of the Cold War and broaden our perspective beyond that of superpower competition. Also, it highlights alternate imaginations at a time in which the nation-state was the most dominant one.
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Photo by Abdul Ridwan on Unsplash
Why is it important?
This article adds a fresh perspective on the history of decolonization, travel history, the Cold War, and Afro-Asian solidarity.
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Looking East, Looking Toward China: Bhashani and His Visit to China, China and Asia, March 2026, De Gruyter,
DOI: 10.1163/2589465x-bja10009.
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