Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 2 – Young people who
have joined the Islamist underground in the North Caucasus more often come from
families of committed atheists than from those who kept Islam alive during
Soviet times because the former have “no immunity” when the radicals
propagandize “a perverted understanding of the Koran,” according to a
Makhachakala imam.
In an interview in the current issue
of “Russky dom,” Magomedrasul Saaduyev, the imam of Makhachkala’s Juma mosque
and a leading theologian in Daghestan, argues that the radicalization of young
Muslims in the North Caucasus reflects the combination of Soviet anti-religious
policies and the arrival of Islamist missionaries after 1991 (russdom.ru/node/6913).
“As a result of 75 years of
communist atheist rule,” Saaduyev says, “a spiritual vacuum was formed in the
hearts and minds of citizens of the country, including in those regions where
Muslims lived.” Earlier, fathers had
ensured their sons learned the basics of Islam, but as a result of Soviet
policies and practices, “this tradition was broken off.”
There were exceptions, of course,
and Saaduyev says he was one of them. He
“grew up in a religious family,” his father taught [him] something, but [even
he] could not openly talk about this even to friends of relatives. Everyone
feared the KGB,” and as a result, real religious life largely disappeared.
“When the Soviet Union fell, a
natural interest in religion, the faith of their ancestors, began to wake up
among people,” the imam says. “But this process because of the lack of people
with the necessary knowledge” was difficult. And it was further complicated by
the appearance in Daghestan of “certain destructive forces.”
These
“forces” which came from abroad “exploited the situation” that Muslims in the
North Caucasus found themselves in because of the Soviet legacy. “People who interpreted the Koran for their
own selfish goals began to appear in villages and mosques and manipulated the
consciousness of people who were illiterate on religious issues.”
In
many places, these “forces” succeeded in gaining influence because there simply
weren’t enough “literate scholarly ulemas” in Daghestani society. And as a result, “the religious illiteracy of
the population became a breeding ground for the dddisseminatiiion of all sort
of pseudo-religions and pseudo-ideologies.”
Young
people were especially affected, Saaduyev says.
They are typically more aware of
changes, “and when young people saw that the ideological system – communism –
had collapsed of its own weigh, they were disappointed in it. But an individual
canot live without ideas and without faith.”
Not
surprisingly, many of them displayed “a natural interest in their roots and
their faith.” But when they did so, there was no one really qualified to answer
their questions. Instead, they have relied on those who were available and were
often led astray.
“To
defeat this pseudo-ideology which is based on pseudo-religion is possible only
with a true ideology based on a true religion,” he continues, and “to support and
disseminate truth about religion is the task of the state” which is the only
institution that “can get [the society and its young] out of the crisis.”
Saaduyev
says he welcomes the support Ramazan Abdulatipov, the new head of Daghestan has
given to the idea of establishing “a first class Islamic university” in the
republic. Such an institution is needed because Daghestan is so ethnically and
linguistically diverse that only Russian can overcome these divides.
“Studying
Islam in Russian in a state Islamic university to a significant degree will
solve the problem of the preparation of cadres and spiritual enlightenment,”
the imam says, and thus will make a significant contribution to overcoming the
misconceptions that many young people in the region have.
That
is because “among those who up to know are hiding themselves ‘in the woods’ for
religious reasons are people who are prepared to lay down their arms,” not
because of “fear for their lives but out of an understanding of their former
confusions” and a genuine acceptance of “traditional
Islamic values.”
That
of course won’t be sufficient to end the insurgency, the imam concludes, noting
that the government must also address the problem of unemployment among young
people. If the young have jobs, they are less likely to fall into bad company
and “babble” about things they know little of.
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