Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 16 – “Almost 90
percent of the leaders of Kazakhstan youth consider themselves believers, with
86 percent of them professing Islam,” according to a survey conducted by
sociologist Madina Nurgaliyeva and leading her to warn that “religiosity among
young Kazakhstanis is at a critically high level.”
Moreover,she says, “half of those
who list themselves as believers are actively practicing believers, that is,
people who visit the mosque or a church, regularly take part in Friday prayers”
and so on (caravan.kz/news/religioznost-kazakhstanskojj-molodezhi-nakhoditsya-na-kriticheski-vysokom-urovne-ehkspert-384248/).
They say they are increasingly put
off by the secular state and increasingly attracted by information on religion
on the Internet. Moreover, in some oblasts, they are subject to active
recruiting by various religious groups, including many that are radical and
supportive of an Islamic social and political order.
“For residents of the western
[portions of Kazakhstan],” she writes, “it has become customary to see people
on the streets whose visages clearly reflect their religious attachments,
things like beards and hijabs. For the
local population, this is customary; but for visitors from elsewhere, it is
shocking.”
One consequence of this, Nurgaliyeva
says, is that inter-religious conflicts are now more common than inter-ethnic
ones, something that many in that country are worried about and seek to have
the government adopt a harder line against religion and especially the dissemination
of religious literature coming in from abroad.
“The youth leaders point to the
significance of social networks and the role of the Internet” in promoting
various radical ideas of “a destructive character,” destructive they say not
only of secularism but also of traditional Sunni Islam and its hitherto
predominant role in Kazakhstan.
Media reports from the western
portions of that country suggest that ever more young girls are wearing the
hijab to school despite a government ban on such dress, that they are refusing
to take part in some lessons, and even that they are refusing to stand in honor
of the state flag or anthem (nur.kz/1283622-shkolnicy-v-khidzhabakh-ignoriruyut-gimn.html).
This trend has prompted the Nur.kz
portal to say that “it is possible that if we allow girls to wear the hijab in
schools, then we will soon remain without a state, without a language, without
traditions, and without a culture.”
The growth of Islamic and Islamist
sentiment has even prompted one Muslim leader to write to President Nursultan
Nazarbayev calling for the constitution to be revised so that Islam can be
declared the state religion and so that religious parties can organize themselves
legally (caravan.kz/news/kazakhstanskijj-religioved-predlagaet-sdelat-islam-gosudarstvennojj-
religiejj-strany-382852 and radiotochka.kz/27964-teolog-predlagaet-sdelat-kazahstan-islamskim-gosudarstvom.html).
Astana is clearly worried about all
this, but its steps so far, including a call to require mosques to use Russian
so that Russian speakers in the republic will get their religious instruction that
way rather than via the Internet show that it is still moving very cautiously (e-islam.kz/ru/songy-janalyktar/item/11731-komitet-po-delam-religij-vyskazal-svoyu-pozitsiyu-po-voprosu-chteniya-propovedej-v-mechetyakh-na-russkom-yazyke).
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