Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 22 – The Yekaterinburg
city commission on land use yesterday approved plans to build three new Russian
Orthodox Churches in various urban districts at its first meeting following the
massive protests against the possible construction of a cathedral in the central
square of that Urals city.
That decision reverses an earlier holding
by the commission and has become possible both church leaders and opponents say
because the mayor revamped the commission’s membership in favor of the ROC MP,
something likely to spark concerns that the cathedral on the square is still on
the table even though officials say it isn’t (ura.news/articles/1036278305).
But this obvious tilt toward the
Orthodox Church is having another consequence: it is enraging the city’s large
Muslim community which was promised a mosque in the center of the city by
Sverdlovsk Governor Eduard Rossel in the 1990s but never given the land on
which such a structure could be erected (business-gazeta.ru/article/428466).
Officials say that the Muslims were
never able to come up with the money, a claim Muslims both in Yekaterinburg and
across the Middle Volga dispute; but most Muslims ascribe it to anti-Islamic
prejudices among the Russian Orthodox Church and city and regional officials – and
they can point to numerous Islamophobic remarks by both.
Muslim leaders in Yekaterinburg and
in Kazan have denounced the failure of the city to agree to a place for a
mosque and say that neither religious nor civil authorities should talk about
Muslims in the language that both all too often use apparently with complete
impunity despite Russian laws on insulting religious faiths (business-gazeta.ru/article/428466).
Some of the most offensive Russian
comments came during the struggle over the building of a cathedral in Yekaterinburg’s
main square. At that time, one prominent city official suggested that it must
be built because “if there’s no church, then there’ll be a mosque instead (.ng.ru/ng_religii/2019-06-18/11_466_rpc.html).
Faced with this united front against
them in Yekaterinburg, Muslims there have now produced and are circulating an
open letter to Vladimir Putin demanding that he intervene to ensure that they
will get the land for a mosque they seek and thus not have their rights violated
as they are now (eanews.ru/news/yesli-nashi-muzhchiny-vyydut-na-miting-ikh-polozhat-na-asfal-t-v-bor-be-za-mechet-musul-mane-yekaterinburga-doshli-do-putina_17-06-2019).
Given Putin’s own attitudes, it is
unlikely that he will respond in a positive way; but if as likely he doesn’t, it
is entirely possible that soon there will be not one protest but two involving
religion and power: the first a new fight against the cathedral and the second a
fight by Muslims to have the religious center they were promised and that the constitution
say is their right.
No comments:
Post a Comment