Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 2 – Official
identification of one of the terrorist bombers in Volgograd as an ethnic
Russian from Mari El who converted to Islam and fought on the side of the
militants in Daghestan has attracted attention to a trend that most Russians
have been reluctant to discuss: the growing number of ethnic Russian converts
to Islam and the extremism of some of them.
Until relatively recently, few
ethnic Russians converted to Islam, and indeed the numbers involved even now
are relatively small. In the past,
converts tended to be among women who married Muslim men rather than members of
both sexes who converted out of conviction or for ideological reasons.
But the numbers of such converts are
rising, with estimates running as high as 100,000 being offered. Nonetheless, discussions of this phenomenon
have been relatively infrequent for three reasons. First, ethnic Russians see such conversions
as further evidence of the weakness of their identity and a direct threat that
some of their number will now assimilate to other peoples.
Second, both Russian Orthodox and
Muslim groups have usually opposed conversion in either direction, viewing it
as something that undermines the mutually re-enforcing nature of ethnicity and
religion and as a challenge to their authority given that converts often
display a more radical form of the faith
than the traditional leaderships want.
And third, ethnic Russian converts
to Islam present a particular challenge to the authorities. On the one hand,
such converts in order to prove their bona fides with the members of their new
community sometimes feel compelled to engage in radical actions, including acts
of violence.
And on the other, the authorities and
many ordinary are terrified of this possibility because ethnic Russian converts
to Islam do not stand out the way that many more traditional Muslim groups do
and thus can move about without attracting the suspicions that all too often
members of traditional Muslim nationalities do.
The Window on Eurasia series has
carried articles on this subject for some time – see, among others, windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2013/05/window-on-eurasia-mufti-says-ethnic.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2013/12/window-on-eurasia-kazan-treats.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2013/08/window-on-eurasia-ethnic-russians.html,
windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2012/12/window-on-eurasia-islamists-said-coming.html
and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2013/02/window-on-eurasia-russias-muslims.html.
Most of these stories and others
like them were based on materials published outside of Moscow. But now the
subject of ethnic Russian conversions to Islam is attracting the attention of
Moscow outlets and Western ones as well. Among the most recent in Russia itself
is an article carried by Pravda.ru on Tuesday (pravda.ru/society/how/31-12-2013/1187250-terrorizm-0/).
Noting that ethnic Russian names
increasingly appear among the lists of those engaged in terrorism, Pravda.ru
asked two experts, Ruslan Kurbanov of the Institute of Oriental Studies and Harun
Sidorov, the president of the National Organization of Russian Muslims (NORM),
why there has been an influx of “ethnic Russians into the Wahhabi underground?”
Kurban for his part said that it is “obvious”
that the number of ethnic Russian Muslims is “increasing” and that the number
of ethnic Russians in the ranks of the militants is going up as well. There are
many reasons for the former, but the latter reflects the fact that ethnic
Russian Muslims are viewed with suspicion by other Russians and that there are
no arrangements made for their adaptation to their community.
As a result, the orientalist says,
such converts feel isolated and alienated from their own community, and “many
simply are pulled into radicalism.” Indeed,
given the prejudices against them, it is very difficult for such converts to “remain
within the framework of moderate positions.”
Sidorov largely agreed. (He subsequently published a full text of his
interview with Pravda.ru on Facebook because the Russian outlet had used only a
small portion of it. That fuller text is
available at facebook.com/harun.sidorov/posts/10201995678206901. What follows
is taken from it.)
Sidorov points out that “a single
individual can carry out an explosion in which dozens of people die. If this is
repeated several times over the course of a month, everyone will speak about
the flood of ethnic Russians into Islamic terrorism, although in fact, [such
actions] are carried out by several individuals from among the many tens of
thousands of ethnic Russian Muslims.”
According to the NORM leader, the number
of ethnic Russian converts to Islam who have been involved in terrorism in fact
has fallen in recent years. But some still are, and the question arises: “why
are they used in such [actions]?” He suggests that there are three main
reasons.
First of all, such people “blend into
the crowd.” Second, using them “inflicts
a psychological hit on the opponent” by suggesting to Russians that they are
threatened not just by “people from the Caucasus” but by their own. And third, the use of ethnic Russian converts
in such actions increases the alienation of all ethnic Russian Muslims from their
society and makes more of them likely to be willing to engage in this way.
That there are ethnic Russian converts
to Islam should not surprise or disturb anyone, Sidorov continues. “Today Russians [because of their number and
their opportunities] are to be found everywhere from the Columbian mafia and
bordellos of Abu-Dhabi to Buddhist monasteries and the camps of Caucasus
militants.”
Often commentators and government
officials forget this. When North
Caucasian militants launch an attack, Russian officials are careful to suggest
that most North Caucasians are not involved. But if an ethnic Russian attacks,
then “guilt is laid on all ethnic Russian Muslims and no one will support
[them],” a pattern that only makes the situation worse.
Ethnic Russians are going to continue to
convert to Islam, but none of them will be violent radicals if Russian society
treats them with at least as much respect as it says it does the traditionally
Muslim nationalities of the country and in fact moves toward “the normalization
of Russian-Islamic relations” more generally.
Given that terrorism is the work of
individuals not large groups, Sidorov says, it is probably impossible to
prevent it entirely. But it can be kept to a minimum by showing respect to
religious communities and having the Russian special services focus on “real
terrorists” and no engage in “witch hunts” against ethnic Russians who happen
to be Muslims.
No comments:
Post a Comment