Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 20 – Ukraine is still
living with the Muslim Spiritual Directorate (MSD) system the Russian Empire
and the Soviet Union imposed on the faithful, but if Ukraine’s Muslims are to
escape the limitations and dangers these institutions entail, they must adopt
the more open approach to Islamic communities found in Europe and the US.
The MSD system, Mikhail Yakubovich
says, not only ignores the highly decentralized, democratic and intellectual
bases of the faith and insists on a ritual-centered understanding of religious
life but also ethnicizes and ghettoizes the faithful rather than securing their
integration into the broader community (islamsng.com/ukr/interviews/9074).
The Russian MSD system, which traces
its roots to the Orenburg Mohammedan Spiritual Assembly established in the 18th
century, was and remains a device by which the political authorities control
the Islamic faithful from the top down and seek to restrict Islam to the
observance of a limited number of rituals.
It has no canonical basis in Islam,
but worse, it bureaucratizes, ethnicizes and politicizes the faith and
restricts its development of an intellectual system, thus putting these formal
structures and those who control them at far greater risk from outside and
often more radical Muslims who reject such a limited vision of the Islamic
community.
As Yakubovich, the translator of the
Koran into Ukrainian, points out, the leaders of the heads of the various MSDs
depend on ethnic divisions to support themselves, are demonstratively loyal to
the political authorities, and devote their attention to “the preservation of
the ritual component of Islam” while giving much less attention to its
intellectual core.
And as far as ideology is concerned,
he continues, “the majority of ‘spiritual administrations of the post-Soviet
space lay stress on their ‘traditionalism’ in the face of new Muslim
movements,” groups they often find it difficult to counter because of their own
lack of intellectual preparation and thus fall back on administrative resources
– their own and the state’s.
Despite the fact that “many
centralized spiritual administrations (especially in the Russian Federation)
have invested heavily in the development of Islamic education, science,
publishing and international cooperation, the crisis of religious authority in
the post-Soviet space remains to this day one of the sharpest problems of these
Muslim communities.”
“To a certain extent,” Yakubovich
says, these problems are very much in evidence in Ukraine too. “For example,” he writes, “ethnocentric
Islamic religious institutions which position themselves as ‘traditional’ have
achieved relatively little Islamic education, the development of media or the establishment
of a generation of Ukrainian Islamic scholars.”
The lack of significant progress in
training such religious authorities is especially critical in places like
Ukraine where there is a compelling need for fetwas which always must reflect a
specific time and place, something that means new ones are required when a
society like Ukraine’s is undergoing rapid and radical change, Yakubovich says.
For this to happen, he suggests, what is needed is “the experience
of an organization of a somewhat different type, which presupposes not
centralization under the leadership of a single person or group of persons but
rather a combination of autonomous communities with common approaches to the interpretation
of Islamic doctrine.”
That
is the path that Muslim parishes in the United States and Europe have followed,
and it is the one Ukraine should follow as well. In it, the mullah or imam is a
paid employee of his parish and thus is not beholden to or subject to the
orders of others. And thus, he is in a position to block “radical ideas or the
policy of isolation and ‘ghettoization.’”
This approach, he argues, is especially important now
because internally displaced persons from eastern Ukraine have settled in the
central and western oblasts of the country and need to come up with structures
that are both more flexible and less isolated from non-Muslims than those in the
existing MSDs.
If Ukraine’s Muslims do move in this direction, it will
be another way in which Ukraine will be becoming part of Europe. Equally
important, it will represent a challenge to the way in which Moscow has
insisted on doing business with Muslims and is likely to give new energy to
Muslims in the Russian Federation who also would like to do away with the state
MSD system.
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