Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 4 – Daghestan is
overwhelmingly Muslim; its young people are equally overwhelmingly
fundamentalist and want to see shariat law established there; but only a tiny
fraction, fewer than one in 30, say they are interested in becoming part of the
militant Islamist underground fighting in the forests, according to the latest
sociological surveys there.
In an article posted yesterday on
“Kavpolit.com,” journalist Sergey Prostakov provides a survey of these findings
which show that Daghestan is indeed becoming ever more fundamentalist but that
that trend is not immediately translating into a dramatic rise in the number of
those in the armed underground (kavpolit.com/za-shariat-bez-boevikov/).
Ninety percent of Daghestani
residents say they are followers of one or another religion, with “more than 80
percent” of the population declaring themselves to be Muslims, figures that
make that North Caucasus republic “one of the most religious regions of the
Russian Federation,” Prostakov continues.
Because of a high fertility rate,
Daghestan is a republic in which young people form an extremely large share of
the population, “about 40 percent,” and they are distinguished by an even
higher level of religiosity than their elders, with 92 percent of them saying
that they believe in God, up from 79 percent in 2004. Eleven percent of them
have religious educations.
Seventy percent of those in what
Prostakov describes as “the Muslim fundamentalist religious underground” are
young people between the ages of 15 and 25, a reflection of the fact that 77
percent of young Daghestanis now say that “Islam must be established just as it
was during the lifetime of the Prophet Muhammed.”
That latter figure does not vary
much between those who have received only a civic education and those who have
a religious one: “only 9.6 percent of young Daghestanis are convinced that
Islam must change in correspondence with the changes taking place in the
world,” the position of those who are often labeled “modernists.”
Fifty-eight percent of Daghestani
young people believe that the laws of the shariat must take precedence of those
of the state, a figure exactly equal to the share of Daghestanis in higher
educational institutions who think that way.
Among those in secondary schools, “almost 100 percent” want to see shariat
law imposed there.
One intriguing even
counter-intuitive finding of the surveys is that while 30 percent of all
Daghestani young people are prepared to engage in open protest against the government
“if its actions violate Islamic norms,” the percentage of those in religious
schools is in fact somewhat lower, 25.6 percent.
Daghestani experts explain this by
reference to the fact that most of the Muslim educational institutions in that
republic are Sufi in orientation, an ideological trend that opposes the
Salafis. As a result, “even among the fundamentalists” of this trend “the idea
of the peaceful coexistence of Islam and a secular state are widespread.”
This Sufi influence may also explain
why only 3.1 percent of Daghestani young people are prepared to join the armed
underground while 74.4 percent of the Muslims of all ages are prepared to
oppose Wahhabism. Again, the differences between those in religious schools and
those in secular ones and between young people and their elders are small.
Finally, Prostakov reports, 59.1
percent of Daghestaani youth say that the actions of the Wahhabis in their
republic is partially the result of the influence of foreign terrorism
organizations, although 34 percent said that one of the reasons that people do
go into the armed underground is because they are unemployed. Only seven
percent said religion was a motive.
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