By :
https://utoronto.academia.edu/MatthewLight
Abstract:
In post-Soviet Russia ,
changing migration patterns have led to the formation of Muslim communities in new
regions, and to increased contacts between Russian and foreign Muslims. This article examines two Russian regions,
Belgorod Oblast and the Republic
of Adygeya , in which such
post-Soviet mobility is causing political conflicts over the governance and
rights of Muslim communities. In Belgorod , regional
authorities have blocked construction of a mosque for a new Muslim community. In Adygeya, authorities seek to restrict
foreign influences on local Muslims. In
both regions, officials still operate on the outdated Soviet assumption that they
can contain the mobility of Islam.
Migration
does not just involve the movement of people.
It also entails the movement of cultures, ideas, and institutions. While Russia ’s
post-Soviet Islamic revival has received extensive scholarly attention, this paper
analyzes an important dimension of mosque-state relations in contemporary Russia
which until now has not been fully theorised:
how changing post-Soviet patterns of migration are setting the stage for
new disputes between organised Muslim communities and political authorities at
both the federal and regional levels. The
article examines the effects of post-Soviet mobility on Muslim communities
through two regional case studies. Migration
within Russia and into Russia
from other post-Soviet states is creating new Muslim communities in regions
where none have ever existed. These new
communities are increasingly demanding recognition of their Muslim institutions. In addition, other aspects of migration—including
both the recently regained right of Russian Muslims to travel abroad to Muslim
countries, and liberalised entry and residence in Russia by foreign Muslims—are
leading to the emergence of new community structures, methods of recruiting personnel,
and ideas about Islam that conflict with those held by local Muslim
hierarchies. In short, post-Soviet
migration challenges the ability of the Russian state to control Russian Islam
and steer it in officially approved directions.