Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 17 – Prior to the
Bolshevik revolution, most of the cities in southern and eastern portions of
the Russian Empire had a Muslim quarter and a Christian one. The Bolsheviks by
various means put an end to that pattern; but now it has reemerged in the
Middle Volga and elsewhere, a trend with enormous potential consequences for
the country as a whole.
In today’s issue of “NG-Religii,”
Vladislav Maltsev says that in the Middle Volga this specific form of “Islamization”
is affecting “both villages and urban micro-districts of the region” and thus
contributing to the isolation of the two comunities one from the other (ng.ru/ng_religii/2016-02-17/4_povolzhie.html).
Maltsev does not address the more general trend of the emergence of Muslim districts in Moscow, St. Petersburg and elsewhere; but his comments about the cities in the Middle Volga and the south of Russia can and should be extrapolated to these urban areas as well.
Western countries are quite familiar
with a situation where members of ethnic or religious groups choose to live in
relatively or even entirely homogeneous neighborhoods, Maltsev points out. But
Russian experts have generally assumed that in Russia, this pattern is
absent. They are wrong.
“In the Middle Volga and Southern
Federal Districts,” he writes, “similar processes are already clearly appearing
here and there,” most obviously in villages where one or the other group forms
an overwhelming majority but increasingly in major cities like Astrakhan and
Kazan as well.
In Srednaya Elyuzan in Penza oblast,
Maltsev says, there are 11 mosques for its 10,000 residents; in Belozerye in
Mordvinia, there are nine Muslim center for 3,000 residents. In both, observers say, “clericalization has
penetrated social life.” Only religious holidays are celebrated and civic ones
like New Years are ignored.
But this process is also occurring
in parts of major cities like Astrakhan and Kazan. In the former, whole
neighborhoods have been taken over by Muslims, many of them from Daghestan, and
women in the markets wear the hijab. And local mosques are often centers of
religious radicalism.
In the latter, Maltsev continues, the
Staraya Tatarskaya Sloboda which had been the center of Muslim religious life
prior to 1917 is again becoming a Muslim neighborhood and a center of Islamic
activism as well. Its Islamization has begun in the streets adjoining the main
mosque there. There, the Moscow
journalist says, he even saw a woman in a naqab.
“If this phenomenon becomes a stable
trend,” he warns, “then it could have far reaching consequences and therefore
it should not be ignored.” Among those consequences, he suggests, is Islamist
radicalization and thus a threat to the stability of Russia.
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