It is said that Huimin Street used to be a bustling commercial street. There were many merchants and the scenery was the same. The famous shops on the street were in a row and the famous products were well known throughout the country. It is said that there are 108 grain banks, and there are 10 people who slaughter cattle and slaughter ducks. Whether it is a market or not, it is very lively. The low roof of the house, like spider webs of wires, stretched in all directions, but so accessible: the grassroots temperament left over from the wooden board, but the booming scene of the people, has long been impossible to reach. The history of this street has been long, it is said that the original foreign envoys and merchants who came to Chang'an to do business here, constantly flourishing, the people are mostly the descendants of these ancient immigrants. They formed a high degree of cohesion with their religion, tenaciously adhered to their own unique cultural life circle in the mainstream Han society, and their blood still retains the genetic factors of shrewd merchants and nobles, until today. In the Han Dynasty more than 2,000 years ago, it was once the starting point of the Silk Road, and it ushered in the ancestors of the Hui people - merchants, envoys, students from ancient Arabia and Persia. Historical records show that many people have traveled along the Silk Road to the bustling Chang'an City, and have been doing business, studying abroad and becoming officials in this area for generations. Today, it has become a settlement area for more than 60,000 Hui Muslims. As the place of Islamic culture, this area still has many cultural relics such as the Tang Dynasty Hanguangmen, the Ming Dynasty Xichengmen Buildings, many well-preserved mosques and Taoist Chenghuang Temple, Buddhism Xiwutai, and the Lamaism Guangren Temple. Many streets in the neighborhood have a strong Islamic style, halal food city, ethnic shopping center and mosque, Muslim living area "reflecting fun".