Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 9 – The Russian
government has never been pleased by the fact that it must now deal with more
than 80 Muslim spiritual directorates (MSDs) rather than a single centralized
one, and some Muslim leaders – most prominently Talgat Tajuddin of Ufa -- have
sought to form a Moscow patriarchate-style central leadership to boost their
own authority.
But neither the one side nor the
other has made much progress over the last 20 years. Indeed, the lack of any
theological justification for the existence of the MSDs – they descend from
tsarist and Soviet era structures intended to allow the state to control Muslim
communities – has opened the floodgates to a hodgepodge of competing Muslim
hierarchies.
In some oblasts, there are as many
as six different MSDs each claiming control over some of the parishes, an
arrangement that raises questions in the minds of many Muslims and even more
government officials as to who is in charge and who can be held responsible for
the rise or control of Islamist groups.
A clear indication that Moscow wants
to see the amalgamation of the competing MSDs into only one or two was given by
Tajuddin, the head of the Central MSD who sometimes styles himself as the
Supreme Mufti of Holy Rus but who has been called “the drunken mufti” for his
well-known predilection for vodka.
According to URA.ru journalist Anton
Olshannikov, Tajuddin declared that “cooperation with the organs of power is
not only our choice but also the directive of the Most High,” something he has
said before and that reflects his aspiration to be a Muslim counterpart to
Moscow Patriarch Kirill (ura.ru/content/svrd/08-12-2014/articles/1036263568.html).
But the Ufa mufti’s words took on
special importance this time not only because Sverdlovsk has one of the most
complicated MSD networks in Russia but also because officials, both those in
the oblast government responsible for religious affairs and FSB officers
concerned about countering extremism weighed in on his side.
Portions of the 60 Muslim parishes
are administered by Tajuddin’s Central MSD, the MSD for the Asiatic Part of
Russia, the MSD for the European Part of Russia, the Central MSD for Russia and
the European Countries of the CIA, the Moscow Muftiate, the Muslim Spiritual
Assembly of Sverdlovsk Oblast, and the Urals Muftiate. Seven parishes are
independent.
What this means, officials say, is
that when they have a problem with Muslims, they have no idea to whom they
should turn or who should be held responsible, a marked contrast as far as the
authorities are concerned with the situation with the Russian Orthodox Church
where there is a single hierarchy and a single boss.
The
existence of so many Muslim bosses, the officials say, complicates their own
lives in another way: Many of the MSDs spend their time engaged in intrigues
against one another, sending compromising information about those they want to
undercut and opening the way for extremist groups who denounce all of these
Muslim leaders.
Olshannikov
says that the authorities have decided to push for the unification of some if
not all of the MSDs to simplify the situation and to do so either by a “soft”
or “hard” strategy. The “soft” strategy
will involve getting those MSDs who are not far apart ideologically or
politically to agree to unite with the carrot of government assistance and the
stick of being potentially subject to charges of supporting extremism if they
don’t unite.
According
to Yakov Silin, the Sverdlovsk deputy prime minister who is responsible for
inter-confessional concord, the authorities view “the unification of the MSDs
as a matter of importance,” although the powers that be are not in a position
to achieve their unification “at any price.”
“The
leaders of these organizations have various positions, and behind them stand a
definite number of believers,” Silin said. “If they themselves consider it
necessary and turn to us, we will, within the limits of reason and the law,
provide assistance. But uniting them into a single organization is not the
goal.”
But
officials in the force structures and special services are prepared to go
further and apply the “harsh” approach, forcing the MSDs to unite through legal
charges and other means, because they believe that this is a necessary
precondition for a successful struggle against extremism. That struggle is more
important, they say, than simple administrative convenience.
A
source whom Olshannikov described as “close to the special services” said that
“as a result of the planned unification [of MSDs] in Sverdlovsk oblast, there
will remain two or a maximum of three spiritual administrations.” Two would be ideal, he said, because that
would provide balance and a useful way for the authorities to intervene.
On
the one hand, the officer said, the authorities could always play one against
the other. And on the other, they would then be in the position to bring
charges of extremism against one at any time – and everyone would know that in
advance – and thus keep both in line and the real extremists at bay.
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