Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 1 – Because the
Russian authorities have not been willing to allow the construction of new
mosques in Moscow, the city’s two million Muslims and the two million more who
come into the city each day from surrounding regions increasingly are visiting
underground mosques where a variety of ideological trends are on offer.
In a 3,000-word article published in
“Novoye vremya” yesterday, journalist Sergey Khazov visited one of these
unregistered and hence illegal religious centers, spoke with some of those who
visit them, and compared the Russian experience in this regard with that of
European countries (http://www.newtimes.ru/articles/detail/71780).
Khazov describes
his visit to such a mosque near the Dubrovka metro station, a non-descript building
with space for up to 400 Muslims to pray and meet with one another. Among the
parishioners were ethnic Azerbaijanis and ethnic Russians who had turned to
Islam after becoming disenchanted with their lives.
This particular underground mosque,
the journalist continues, is considered Salafi, a trend in Islam that focuses
almost exclusively on the Koran and the sunna rather than later commentaries
and that many non-Muslims view as dangerously radical. The Salafis with whom Khazov met, however,
struck him as entirely regular people.
One striking feature of those at this mosque, Khazov continues, is that “for
many, faith is becoming the single point of self-identification.” As Akhmet Yarlykapov, a specialist on Islam
in the North Caucasus, says, “before this, they were Avars, Ingush andNogays
but having turned up in a big city, they suddenly recognized that they are
Muslims, and this Muslim identity has become the main one.”
Part of the reason for that, the
specialist says, is that these “Islamic communities are veery active, people
find support and moral calm there. As a
result, people suddently become active believers. A certain portion is radicalized and begin to
follow stricter trends. But when they return to their motherland, there problem
also arise with them because they begin to think that Islam at home is not
correct.”
But a larger reason for the
radicalization of Muslims in Moscow is the actions of the Russian officials
there who “de facto persecute the Muslim minority.” Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin has worked not
only to expel migrants but to close unofficial and underground mosques, actions
that offend many believers.
Mullahs at the six registered
mosques in the Russian capital suggest that the city’s Muslims should have
about 100 mosques to meet their needs.
(Other Muslim leaders argue that the number should be even greater
because of the various trends within Islam and they say the Tatar mullahs at
the official mosques are not pushing hard enough.)
Attempts to secure official
permission for more “official” mosques have been blocked by those living in the
neighborhood, Khazov says, but he adds that many Muslims in the Russian capital
and experts on ethnic conflict like Emil Pain believe that Moscow residents would
agree and that the authorities themselves are orchestrating opposition.
The comments of Sobyanin certainly
make such beliefs credible. As one city
official told Khazov, “first there will be a mosque, then a Muslim cemetery,
and then what? As long as there is no
mosque, there is the chance to expel the migrants; when it is built, we’ll have
to live alongside them. And then what
should the Russians do?”
But until the authorities agree to open more official mosques, they face the prospect that ever more Muslims will use underground ones, something that will invest their religious experience with more political meaning and possibly lead to precisely the kind of radicalization that the Russian authorities say they oppose.
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