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- <text id=90TT0653>
- <link 90TT0500>
- <link 89TT0943>
- <title>
- Mar. 12, 1990: Karl Marx Makes Room For Muhammad
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Mar. 12, 1990 Soviet Disunion
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPECIAL SECTION: THE SOVIET EMPIRE, Page 44
- Karl Marx Makes Room for Muhammad
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Some 55 million Soviet Muslims enjoy the fruits of the new
- religious tolerance, but demographics and pent-up resentment add
- new pressures of their own to the frayed Union
- </p>
- <p>By David Aikman Tashkent
- </p>
- <p> "Sit down!" hissed members of the agitated crowd in front
- of Communist Party Central Committee headquarters in Dushanbe,
- capital of Tadzhikistan. Humiliated, the group of veteran Soviet
- combat officers and their men sank awkwardly to the ground when
- ordered to do so by the throng of 10,000 militant Tadzhiks. The
- troops then listened grimly as a mullah recited the Islamic call
- to prayer from atop one of their armored vehicles.
- </p>
- <p> The startling display of religious assertiveness took place
- at the height of the revolt against Moscow's rule that broke out
- three weeks ago in Tadzhikistan, perhaps the most ardently
- Islamic of the 15 Soviet republics. For the Tadzhiks who forced
- the soldiers to observe their demonstration of piety, the moment
- represented a vindication of their faith, long suppressed under
- the official Soviet policy of atheism. But for Soviet
- journalists who took in the scene, the moment may have confirmed
- a nightmare.
- </p>
- <p> Under glasnost, ordinary Soviets are only now learning how
- deeply Islam is rooted in their federation, which contains some
- 55 million Muslims, overwhelmingly located in the five Central
- Asian republics and Azerbaijan. Among some anxious citizens, the
- discovery has touched off premonitions of disaster, as republic
- after republic is shaken by unrest, often with religious
- overtones. After Soviet troops were called in last January to
- quell bloody rioting in Azerbaijan, Igor Belyaev, a prominent
- Soviet commentator on Muslim affairs, warned that "Iran has
- threatened the Soviet Union with an Islamic conflagration."
- President Mikhail Gorbachev argued that "Islamic
- fundamentalism" was a major factor in the rioting against
- minority Armenians in the Azerbaijani capital of Baku.
- </p>
- <p> Neither Gorbachev nor Belyaev is exactly on target in
- Azerbaijan. Fundamentalist Islam had very little to do with the
- rapid growth of the republic's Popular Front before the crushing
- intervention of the Soviet army in mid-January; the main issues
- were autonomy from Moscow and an end to the Communist Party
- monopoly of power. But elsewhere, profound Islamic forces--some of them violent--have begun to shake up the status quo
- in response to Gorbachev's decision to allow freedom of
- conscience throughout the Soviet Empire. Examples:
- </p>
- <p>-- In Dushanbe protesters last month demanded that Islam be
- declared the official religion of Tadzhikistan.
- </p>
- <p>-- Mullahs in Tashkent are now permitted to conduct
- proselytizing meetings on the street, in factories, even in
- prisons.
- </p>
- <p>-- In Samarkand last summer gangs of young Tadzhik thugs
- roamed the local marketplace, slashing the faces of women who
- wore makeup.
- </p>
- <p>-- To compensate for a chronic lack of Islamic holy books,
- Saudi Arabia has printed 1 million copies of the Koran for
- Soviet Muslims--and Aeroflot has agreed to deliver them.
- </p>
- <p>-- Primarily in Uzbekistan but also in other Central Asian
- republics, Muslim TV and radio programs are now a regular
- feature. Some Muslim prayer gatherings are televised along with
- readings from the Koran.
- </p>
- <p>-- Across the Soviet Union's Central Asian region, a
- construction and restoration program is under way that has
- tripled the number of functioning mosques to 250 since the
- beginning of 1989.
- </p>
- <p> No group is more delighted with the new religious liberty
- than the mullahs who nurtured the Islamic faith during decades
- of persecution. "They used to shoot us," says a mullah at
- Tashkent's Tokhta Baitvacha mosque, which was closed in 1937 on
- Stalin's orders and reopened a year ago. "Now they don't
- interfere with us. A lot of young people come here these days."
- </p>
- <p> At a major mosque just opposite the Tashkent headquarters
- of the Muslim Religious Board for Central Asia and Kazakhstan,
- a gaggle of Uzbek teenagers fidget through 2 p.m. prayers while
- their elders scowl at a visiting photographer. At an elegant
- medieval-era mosque just outside town, young construction
- volunteers stop for a farewell word from mullah Kasemi Bey after
- a Saturday morning of restoration work. Says Kasemi Bey: "The
- number of believers is growing. Everybody wants to go to Mecca."
- </p>
- <p> In all five Central Asian republics, Muslim officials are
- emboldened enough to show a certain coolness toward Gorbachev,
- who was not always so favorably disposed to freedom of religion.
- Less than four years ago, the Soviet leader described Islam as
- the "enemy of progress and socialism." Allahshukur Pasha-zada,
- head of the Baku-based Muslim Religious Board for Transcaucasia,
- still resents the Soviet President's claim that Islamic
- fundamentalism played a role in Azerbaijan's upheaval. He led
- the Muslim ceremony in honor of the dead when 1.5 million people
- gathered at the Cemetery of the Martyrs above Baku to mourn the
- people killed in Azerbaijan during January's Soviet army attack--more than 300, claim Popular Front officials. "It's a sin
- when the head of the country uses religion in politics,"
- Allahshukur says. "I didn't expect Gorbachev to play with the
- souls and religious feelings of Muslims."
- </p>
- <p> A visiting delegation of Azerbaijanis from Soviet Georgia
- sat across the table, expressing condolences over the Baku
- violence as Allahshukur spoke. Their pilgrimage suggested that
- the Islamic religious establishment will be considered a source
- of political as well as spiritual inspiration for the Islamic
- minority in the future.
- </p>
- <p> For most of the few thousand full-time mullahs in the Soviet
- Union, their new sense of authority is a sharp break with the
- past. Despite assurances from Lenin and later Stalin of
- religious and cultural freedom for Soviet Muslims, the group
- suffered as much as Soviet Christians did during communist
- crackdowns, especially under Stalin. In 1932 the dictator
- announced a Five-Year Plan to eliminate religious belief. All
- but a tiny handful of the 26,000 mosques that flourished before
- 1917 were closed, destroyed or turned into nightclubs and
- warehouses. Thousands of mullahs were shot or sent to the Gulag.
- </p>
- <p> The mullahs who survived the purges and won permission to
- exercise religious functions were often viewed with suspicion
- by the Muslim laity. As a result, a network of "parallel"
- mosques sprang up across the Asian republics, where Muslim
- believers practiced their religion without official imprimatur.
- In Uzbekistan an undetermined number of Muslims have joined
- mystical Sufi sects. In Uzbekistan and Tadzhikistan authorities
- have recently become concerned about the spread of groups
- espousing Wahhabism, the puritanical sect of the Sunni branch
- of Islam that first emerged in Saudi Arabia in the 18th century.
- </p>
- <p> Alongside freedom of worship, Muslim citizens of the Central
- Asian republics are becoming more assertive about culture. Many
- are demanding a return to the original Arabic script of their
- respective languages. The Cyrillic alphabet was forced on the
- Central Asian republics by Stalin in 1939 to cut Muslims off
- from their rich cultural heritage and to exacerbate relatively
- minor linguistic differences among the four main Turkic groups
- of the area. Today, privately run Arabic-language schools are
- flourishing in Tashkent and other major cities, while Tashkent's
- five Arabic-language middle schools are crammed to capacity. At
- the Tashkent No. 22 Middle School, 2,200 students from Grades 2
- through 11--the highest--attend Arabic-language classes
- taught by 24 full-time instructors. Says teacher Asia Ismarava:
- "It's a good idea to read the old script because then they can
- read the old books."
- </p>
- <p> Soviet Muslim leaders hope to steer growing Islamic
- consciousness in the direction of tolerance, to allay Russian
- suspicions of Islam and to preserve a coherent structure of
- religious authority and order in the country. But they may be
- racing against time. Demographics are having their own influence
- on Soviet Islam. Though the Muslim nationalities make up just
- 19.2% of the Soviet population, they accounted for half the
- total population increase of the past decade. They are still
- growing at five times the rate of the remaining population.
- </p>
- <p> The population pressures, coupled with the floundering
- Soviet economy, have added greatly to impoverishment,
- joblessness and stinging resentment of the better-educated
- European Soviet nationalities--and particularly of the
- well-to-do elite. Last month in Dushanbe these resentments
- exploded in several days of looting, burning and pogroms
- against non-Tadzhiks, especially against ethnic Russians. Yet
- next to the violence, the most striking aspect of the uprising
- was its trenchantly Islamic character. The insurgents demanded
- that Islam be declared the republic's official religion and that
- Arabic script be reinstated. Some of their supporters terrorized
- Tadzhik women who did not wear head scarves in public.
- </p>
- <p> A more sinister view of the riots was provided by a Russian
- intellectual resident in Tadzhikistan. He told TIME last week
- that the violence was deliberately fomented by a group of young
- radicals within the republic's government who want to give the
- area an Islamic character. Some extreme elements, he says, have
- been calling bluntly for the establishment of an Islamic
- republic. The intellectual reported that all non-Tadzhiks in the
- republic are anxious to leave and, as he put it, "everyone is
- terrified" of what will happen with the departure of some 7,000
- Soviet soldiers who arrived in Tadzhikistan after the
- disturbances began.
- </p>
- <p> Such fears buttress suspicions among non-Muslim Soviets
- elsewhere that their country, tied with Turkey as the fifth
- largest Muslim community in the world (after Indonesia,
- Pakistan, Bangladesh and India), is in fact on the brink of the
- Islamic conflagration that commentator Belyaev feared. Those
- suspicions are unfair to the vast majority of Soviet Muslims,
- who may be nationalistic but do not embrace any brand of
- vengeful fundamentalism. As Ilios Ibragimov, a Tadzhik truck
- driver in Dushanbe, put it, "Those people who caused the damage
- and looted, they were fools, bad people." The question is
- whether Mikhail Gorbachev will also recognize the distinction
- and avoid further polarization of the restive Muslims along
- volatile religious lines.
- </p>
- <p>-- With reporting by Paul Hofheinz/Moscow
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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