Jump to content

Islam in Russia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Chief Mufti of Russia)

Map showing the distribution of Muslim ethnic communities at municipality level, based on the results of the 2021 Russian census.
Islam in Europe
by percentage of country population[1]
  95–100%
  90–95%
  50–55%
  30–35%
  10–20%
  5–10%
  4–5%
  2–4%
  1–2%
  < 1%

Islam is a major religious minority in the Russian Federation, which has the largest Muslim population in Europe excluding Turkey.[2] According to the US Department of State in 2017,[3] Muslims in Russia numbered 14 million or roughly 10% of the total population. One of the Grand Muftis of Russia, sheikh Rawil Gaynetdin, estimated the Muslim population of Russia at 25 million in 2018.[4]

Recognized under the law and by Russian political leaders as one of Russia's traditional religions, Islam is a part of Russian historical heritage, and is subsidized by the Russian government.[5] The position of Islam as a major Russian religion, alongside Orthodox Christianity, dates from the time of Catherine the Great, who sponsored Islamic clerics and scholarship through the Orenburg Assembly.[6]

The history of Islam and Russia encompasses periods of conflict between the Muslim minority and the Orthodox majority, as well as periods of collaboration and mutual support. Robert Crews's study of Muslims living under the Tsar indicates that "the mass of Muslims" was loyal to that regime after Catherine, and sided with it over the Ottoman Empire.[7] After the Russian Empire fell, the Soviet Union introduced a policy of state atheism, which impeded the practice of Islam and other religions and led to the execution and suppression of various Muslim leaders. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Islam regained a legally recognized space in Russian politics. Despite having made Islamophobic comments during the Second Chechen War, President Vladimir Putin has since subsidized mosques and Islamic education, which he called an "integral part of Russia's cultural code",[8][9] and encouraged immigration from Muslim-majority former Soviet states.

Muslims form a majority of the population of the republics of Tatarstan and Bashkortostan in the Volga Federal District and predominate among the nationalities in the North Caucasian Federal District located between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea: the Circassians, Balkars, Chechens, Ingush, Kabardin, Karachay, and numerous Dagestani peoples. Also, in the middle of the Volga Region reside populations of Tatars and Bashkirs, the vast majority of whom are Muslims. Other areas with notable Muslim minorities include Moscow, Saint Petersburg, the republics of Adygea, North Ossetia-Alania and Astrakhan, Moscow, Orenburg and Ulyanovsk oblasts. There are over 8,000 registered religious Muslim organizations,[10] equivalent to almost one fifth of the number of registered Russian Orthodox religious organizations of about 42,000 as of 2022.[11]

History

[edit]

In the mid-7th century AD, as part of the Muslim conquest of Persia, Islam was introduced to the Caucasus region, parts of which were later permanently incorporated by Russia.[12] The first people to become Muslims within current Russian territory, the Dagestani people (region of Derbent), converted after the Arab conquest of the region in the 8th century. The first Muslim state in the future Russian lands was Volga Bulgaria[13] (922). The Tatars of the Khanate of Kazan inherited the population of believers from that state. Later most of the European and Caucasian Turkic peoples also became followers of Islam.[14] The Mongol rulers of the Golden Horde were Muslims from 1313. By the 1330s, three of the four major khanates of the Mongol Empire had become Muslim.

The Tatars of the Crimean Khanate, the last remaining successor to the Golden Horde, continued to raid Southern Russia and burnt down parts of Moscow in 1571.[15] Until the late 18th century, the Crimean Tatars maintained a massive slave-trade with the Ottoman Empire and the Middle East, exporting about 2 million slaves from Russia and Ukraine over the period 1500–1700.[16]

From the early 16th century up to and including the 19th century, all of Transcaucasia and southern Dagestan was ruled by various successive Iranian empires (the Safavids, Afsharids, and the Qajars), and their geopolitical and ideological neighboring arch-rivals, on the other hand, the Ottoman Turks. In the respective areas they ruled, in both the North Caucasus and South Caucasus, Shia Islam and Sunni Islam spread, resulting in a fast and steady conversion of many more ethnic Caucasian peoples in adjacent territories.

The period from the Russian conquest of Kazan in 1552 by Ivan the Terrible to the ascension of Catherine the Great in 1762 featured systematic Russian repression of Muslims through policies of exclusion and discrimination - as well as the destruction of Muslim culture by the elimination of outward manifestations of Islam such as mosques.[17] The Russians initially demonstrated a willingness in allowing Islam to flourish as Muslim clerics were invited into the various regions to preach to the Muslims, particularly the Kazakhs, whom the Russians viewed with contempt.[18][19] However, Russian policy shifted toward weakening Islam by introducing pre-Islamic elements of collective consciousness.[20] Such attempts included methods of eulogizing pre-Islamic historical figures and imposing a sense of inferiority by sending Kazakhs to highly élite Russian military institutions.[20] In response, Kazakh religious leaders attempted to bring religious fervor by espousing pan-Turkism, though many[quantify] were persecuted as a result.[21] The government of Russia paid Islamic scholars from the Ural-Volga area working among the Kazakhs[22]

The Crimean Khan's Palace in Bakhchysarai in 1857. Crimea was conquered by the Russian Empire in 1783.

Islamic slavery did not have racial restrictions. Russian girls were legally allowed to be sold in Russian-controlled Novgorod to Tatars from Kazan in the 1600s by Russian law. Germans, Poles, and Lithuanians were allowed to be sold to Crimean Tatars in Moscow. In 1665, Tatars were allowed to buy Polish and Lithuanian slaves from the Russians. Before 1649, Russians could be sold to Muslims under Russian law in Moscow. This contrasted with other places in Europe outside Russia where Muslims were not allowed to own Christians.[23]

The Cossack Hetmanate recruited and incorporated Muslim Mishar Tatars.[24] Cossack rank was awarded to Bashkirs.[25] Muslim Turkics and Buddhist Kalmyks served as Cossacks. The Cossack Ural, Terek, Astrakhan, and Don Cossack hosts had Kalmyks in their ranks. Mishar Muslims, Teptiar Muslims, service Tatar Muslims, and Bashkir Muslims joined the Orenburg Cossack Host.[26] Cossack non-Muslims shared the same status with Siberian Cossack Muslims.[27] Muslim Cossacks in Siberia requested an Imam.[28] Cossacks in Siberia included Tatar Muslims like in Bashkiria.[29]

Bashkirs in Paris during the Napoleonic Wars, 1814

Bashkirs and Kalmyks in the Imperial Russian Army fought against Napoleon's Grande Armée during the French invasion of Russia.[30][31] They were judged suitable for inundating opponents but not intense fighting.[32] They were in a non-standard capacity in the military.[33] Arrows, bows, and melee combat weapons were wielded by the Muslim Bashkirs. Bashkir women fought among the regiments.[34] Denis Davidov mentioned the arrows and bows wielded by the Bashkirs.[35][36] Napoleon's forces faced off against Kalmyks on horseback.[37] Napoleon faced light mounted Bashkir forces.[38] Mounted Kalmyks and Bashkirs numbering 100 were available to Russian commandants during the war against Napoleon.[39] Kalmyks and Bashkirs served in the Russian army in France.[40] A nachalnik was present in every one of the 11 cantons of the Bashkir host which was created by Russia after the Pugachev Rebellion.[41] Bashkirs had the military statute of 1874 applied to them.[42] Muslims were exempt from military conscription during World War I.[43]

Fighting in the mountains of Dagestan during the Murid War

While total expulsion (as practiced in other Christian nations such as Spain, Portugal and Sicily) was not feasible to achieve a homogeneous Russian-Orthodox population, other policies such as land grants and the promotion of migration by other Russian and non-Muslim populations into Muslim lands displaced many Muslims, making them minorities in places such as some parts of the South Ural region and encouraging emigration to other parts such as the Ottoman Empire and neighboring Persia, and almost annihilating the Circassians, Crimean Tatars, and various Muslims of the Caucasus. The Russian army rounded up people, driving Muslims from their villages to ports on the Black Sea, where they awaited ships provided by the neighboring Ottoman Empire. The explicit Russian goal involved expelling the groups in question from their lands.[44] They were given a choice as to where to be resettled: in the Ottoman Empire, in Persia, or Russia far from their old lands. The Russo-Circassian War ended with the signing of loyalty oaths by Circassian leaders on 2 June [O.S. 21 May] 1864. Afterward, the Ottoman Empire offered to harbor the Circassians who did not wish to accept the rule of a Christian monarch, and many emigrated to Anatolia (the heart of the Ottoman Empire) and ended up in modern Turkey, Syria, Jordan, Palestine, Iraq, and Kosovo. Many other Caucasian Muslims ended up in neighboring Iran - sizeable numbers of Shia Lezgins, Azerbaijanis, Muslim Georgians, Kabardins, and Laks.[45] Various Russian, Caucasus, and Western historians agree on the figure of c. 500,000 inhabitants of the highland Caucasus being deported by Russia in the 1860s. A large proportion of them died in transit from disease. Those that remained loyal to Russia were settled into the lowlands, on the left bank of the Kuban' River. The trend of Russification has continued at different paces in the rest of Tsarist and Soviet periods, so that [citation needed] as of 2014 more Tatars lived outside the Republic of Tatarstan than inside it.[14]

Students and staff of the Erivan Russian-Muslim School for Girls, 1902

A policy of deliberately enforcing anti-modern, traditional, ancient conservative Islamic education in schools and Islamic ideology was enforced by the Russians in order to deliberately hamper and destroy opposition to their rule by keeping them in a state of torpor to and prevent foreign ideologies from penetrating in.[46][47]

Captured Soviet soldiers of Muslim backgrounds volunteered in large numbers for the Ostlegionen of the Wehrmacht.

Communist rule oppressed and suppressed Islam, like other religions in the Soviet Union.[when?] Many mosques (for some estimates,[48] more than 83% in Tatarstan) were closed. For example, the Märcani Mosque was the only acting mosque in Kazan at that[when?] time.

Islam in the post-Soviet period

[edit]
Areas in Russia where Islam is the largest religion. Islam makes up the majority in: Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, Dagestan, Chechnya, Ingushetia, Kabardino-Balkaria, Karachay-Cherkessia.

There was much evidence of official conciliation toward Islam in Russia in the 1990s. The number of Muslims allowed to make pilgrimages to Mecca increased sharply after the embargo of the Soviet era ended in 1991.[49] In 1995, the newly established Union of Muslims of Russia, led by Imam Khatyb Mukaddas of Tatarstan, began organizing a movement aimed at improving inter-ethnic understanding and ending lingering misconceptions of Islam among non-Muslim Russians. The Union of Muslims of Russia is the direct successor to the pre-World War I Union of Muslims, which had its own faction in the Russian Duma. The post-Communist union formed a political party, the Nur All-Russia Muslim Public Movement, which acts in close coordination with Muslim imams to defend the political, economic, and cultural rights of Muslims. The Islamic Cultural Center of Russia, which includes a madrassa (religious school), opened in Moscow in 1991. In the 1990s, the number of Islamic publications has increased. Among them are few magazines in Russian, namely: "Ислам" (transliteration: Islam), "Эхо Кавказа" (Ekho Kavkaza) and "Исламский вестник" (Islamsky Vestnik), and the Russian-language newspaper "Ассалам" (Assalam), and "Нуруль Ислам" (Nurul Islam), which are published in Makhachkala, Dagestan.

Mintimer Shaimiyev, the president of the republic of Tatarstan, in the Qolşärif Mosque, Kazan.

Kazan has a large Muslim population (probably the second after Moscow urban group of the Muslims and the biggest indigenous group in Russia) and is home to the Russian Islamic University in Kazan, Tatarstan. Education is in Russian and Tatar. In Dagestan there are number of Islamic universities and madrassas, notable among them are: Dagestan Islamic University, Institute of Theology and International Relations, whose rector Maksud Sadikov was assassinated on 8 June 2011.[50]

Talgat Tadzhuddin was the Chief Mufti of Russia. Since Soviet times, the Russian government has divided Russia into a number of Muslim Spiritual Directorates. In 1980, Tazhuddin was made Mufti of the European USSR and Siberia Division. Since 1992, he has headed the central or combined Muslim Spiritual Directorate of all of Russia.

In 2005, Russia was granted the status of an observer state in the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation[51]

Russian president Vladimir Putin has said that Orthodox Christianity is much closer to Islam than Catholicism is.[52][53][54][55]

A chain e-mail spread a hoax speech attributed to Putin which called for tough assimilation policies on immigrants, no evidence of any such speech can be found in Russian media or Duma archives.[56][57][58][59]

Russian Muslim soldiers killed in the invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The ethnically non-Russian republics of the Russian Federation suffered heavy losses in the war in Ukraine.[60]

Islam has been expanding under Putin's rule.[61] Tatar Muslims are engaging in a revival under Putin.[62]

According to The Washington Post, "Russian Muslims are split regarding the [Russian] intervention in Syria, but more are pro- than anti-war."[63]

The Grand Mufti of Russia, Talgat Tadzhuddin and other Russia's Muslim leaders supported the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[64] Chechnya's Kadyrovite forces have fought alongside the Russian forces in Ukraine.[65][66]

After a Quran burning incident that happened in Sweden during Eid al-Adha,[67] Russian president Vladimir Putin defended the Quran by stating that It's a crime in Russia to disrespect the Quran and other holy books.[68]

Islam in the North Caucasus

[edit]

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Northern Caucasus experienced an Islamic (as well as a national) renaissance. Also radical and extremist streams of Islam started taking root, initially in western (upland) Dagestan.[69]

In 1991, Chechnya declared independence as the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria. Russian Army forces were commanded into Grozny in 1994, but, after two years of intense fighting, the Russian troops eventually withdrew from Chechnya under the Khasavyurt Accord. Chechnya preserved its de facto independence until 1999. However, the Chechen government's grip on Chechnya was weak, especially outside the ruined capital Grozny. The areas controlled by separatist groups grew larger and the country became increasingly lawless.[70] Aslan Maskhadov's government was unable to rebuild the region or to prevent a number of warlords from taking effective control. The relationship between the government and radicals deteriorated. In March 1999, Maskhadov closed down the Chechen parliament and introduced aspects of Sharia. Despite this concession, extremists such as Shamil Basayev and the Saudi-born Islamist Ibn Al-Khattab continued to undermine the Maskhadov government. In April 1998, the group publicly declared that its long-term aim was the creation of a union of Chechnya and Dagestan under Islamic rule and the expulsion of Russians from the entire Caucasian Region.[71] This eventually led to the invasion of militants in Dagestan and the start of the Second Chechen War in 1999. The Chechen separatists were internally divided between the Islamic extremists, the more moderate pro-independent Muslim Chechens and the traditional Islamic authorities with various positions towards Chechen independence. An interim Russian-controlled administration was imposed in Chechnya in 2000, headed by the ex-Mufti and, therefore, religious leader of Sufism, Akhmad Kadyrov. Encouraged by the Russian strategy of using the traditional Islamic structures and leaders against the Islamic extremists, there was a process of religious radicalisation in Chechnya and other Northern Caucasus regions.[72]

At the end of the Second Chechen War, in 2005, Chechen rebel leader, Abdul-Halim Sadulayev, decreed the formation of a Caucasus Front against Russia, among Islamic believers in the North Caucasus, in an attempt to widen Chechnya's conflict with Russia. After his death, his successor, Dokka Umarov, declared continuing jihad to establish an Islamic fundamentalist Caucasus Emirate in the North Caucasus and beyond. Insurgency in the North Caucasus continued until 2017. The police and the FSB carried out mass arrests and used harsh interrogation techniques. Some of those who closely followed the teachings of Islam have lost their jobs; mosques have also been closed.[69]

Russian president Vladimir Putin has allowed the de facto implementation of Sharia law in Chechnya by Ramzan Kadyrov, including polygamy and enforced veiling.[73]

Vladimir Putin and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan opened Moscow's Cathedral Mosque, 23 September 2015.

There was large anger from mostly Muslims from the Caucasus against the Charlie Hebdo cartoons in France.[74] Putin is believed to have backed protests by Muslims in Russia against Charlie Hebdo cartoons and the West.[75]

Demographics and Branches

[edit]
Chechen World War II veterans during celebrations on the 66th anniversary of victory in the Second World War.

More than 90% of Muslims in Russia adhere to Sunni Islam of the Hanafi and Shafi'i schools.[2] In a few areas, notably Dagestan, Chechnya and Ingushetia, there is a tradition of Sunni Sufism, which is represented by Qadiriyya, Naqshbandi and Shadhili orders.[2] Naqshbandi–Shadhili spiritual master Said Afandi al-Chirkawi received hundreds of visitors daily.[76]

Baku Mosque in Astrakhan, former Sunni, presently belonging to the Twelver Shia community.

About 10%, or more than two million, are Shia Muslims, mostly of Twelver Shi'ism branch.[77] At first, they are the Azeris, who historically and still currently been nominally followers of Shi'a Islam, as their republic split off from the Soviet Union, significant number of Azeris immigrated to Russia in search of work. In addition to them, some of the indigenous peoples of Dagestan, such as the Lezgins (a minority) and the Tats (a majority), are Shias too.[2] Nizari Isma'ili Muslims—another Shia branch—are represented only by the Pamiris, migrants from Tajikistan.[78]

There is also an active presence of Ahmadis.[79]

In 2021, Putin announced that some 20% of Russian aviation industry employees are Muslims.[80]

Conversions

[edit]

Most Muslims in Russia belong to ethnic minorities but in the recent years there have been conversions among the Russian majority as well, one of the country's main Islamic institutions, the Moscow-based Spiritual Administration of Muslims of the Russian Federation (DUM RF) estimating the ethnic Russian converts to number into the "tens of thousands" while some converts themselves give numbers between 50,000 and 70,000.[81]

Hajj

[edit]

A record 18,000 Russian Muslim pilgrims from all over the country attended the Hajj in Mecca, Saudi Arabia in 2006.[82] In 2010, at least 20,000 Russian Muslim pilgrims attended the Hajj, as Russian Muslim leaders sent letters to the King of Saudi Arabia requesting that the Saudi visa quota be raised to at least 25,000–28,000 visas for Muslims.[citation needed] Due to overwhelming demand from Russian Muslims, on 5 July 2011, Muftis requested President Dmitry Medvedev's assistance in increasing the allocated by Saudi Arabia pilgrimage quota in Vladikavkaz.[83] The III International Conference on Hajj Management attended by some 170 delegates from 12 counties was held in Kazan from 7 – 9 July 2011.[84]

Language controversies

[edit]

For centuries, the Tatars constituted the only Muslim ethnic group in European Russia, with Tatar language being the only language used in their mosques, a situation which saw rapid change over the course of the 20th century as a large number of Caucasian and Central Asian Muslims migrated to central Russian cities and began attending Tatar-speaking mosques, generating pressure on the imams of such mosques to begin using Russian.[85][86] This problem is evident even within Tatarstan itself, where Tatars constitute a majority.[87]

Public perception of Muslims

[edit]

A survey published in 2019 by the Pew Research Center found that 76% of Russians had a favourable view of Muslims in their country, whereas 19% had an unfavourable view.[88]

Islam in Russia by region

[edit]
Memorial Mosque in Moscow
Saint Petersburg Mosque
White Mosque of Astrakhan
Mosque of Twenty-Five Prophets in Ufa, Bashkortostan
Grand Mosque of Makhachkala in Makhachkala, Dagestan
Mosque in Izhevsk, Udmurtia
Mosque in Yakutsk, Yakutia
Mosque in Grozny, Chechnya

Percentage of Muslims in Russia by region:

Region Percentage of Muslims Source
 Adygea 24.60 Source
 Altai Krai 1.00 Source
 Altai Republic 6.20 Source
 Amur Oblast 0.63 Source
 Arkhangelsk Oblast 0.00 Source
 Astrakhan Oblast 14.62 Source
 Bashkortostan 54.3 Source
 Belgorod Oblast 0.62 Source
 Bryansk Oblast 0.25 Source
 Buryatia 0.20 Source
 Chechnya 95.00 Source
 Chelyabinsk Oblast 6.87 Source
 Chukotka 0.00 Source
 Chuvashia 3.50 Source
 Crimea 15.00 Source
 Dagestan 83.00 Source
 Ingushetia 96.00 Source
 Irkutsk Oblast 1.25 Source
 Ivanovo Oblast 0.50 Source
 Jewish Autonomous Oblast 0.80 Source
 Kabardino-Balkaria 70.40 Source
 Kaliningrad Oblast 0.25 Source
 Kalmykia 4.80 Source
 Kaluga Oblast 0.63 Source
 Kamchatka Krai 1.20 Source
 Karachay-Cherkessia 64.20 Source
 Karelia 0.20 Source
 Kemerovo Oblast 1.00 Source
 Khabarovsk Krai 1.13 Source
 Khakassia 0.60 Source
 Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug 10.88 Source
 Kirov Oblast 0.87 Source
 Komi Republic 1.00 Source
 Kostroma Oblast 0.60 Source
 Krasnodar Krai 1.37 Source
 Krasnoyarsk Krai 1.50 Source
 Kurgan Oblast 2.62 Source
 Kursk Oblast 0.25 Source
 Leningrad Oblast 0.75 Source
 Lipetsk Oblast 1.13 Source
 Magadan Oblast 1.00 Source
 Mari El 6.00 Source
 Mordovia 2.50 Source
 Moscow 3.50 Source
 Moscow Oblast 2.12 Source
 Murmansk Oblast 1.00 Source
 Nenets Autonomous Okrug 0.00 Source
 Nizhny Novgorod Oblast 0.13 Source
 North Ossetia-Alania 30.00 Source
 Novgorod Oblast 0.80 Source
 Novosibirsk Oblast 1.13 Source
 Omsk Oblast 2.75 Source
 Orenburg Oblast 13.87 Source
 Oryol Oblast 0.25 Source
 Penza Oblast 5.75 Source
 Perm Krai 4.00 Source
 Primorsky Krai 0.50 Source
 Pskov Oblast 0.20 Source
 Rostov Oblast 1.13 Source
 Ryazan Oblast 1.00 Source
 Saint Petersburg 2.25 Source
 Sakhalin Oblast 0.40 Source
 Samara Oblast 2.25 Source
 Saratov Oblast 2.40 Source
 Sevastopol 0.00 Source
 Smolensk Oblast 0.12 Source
 Stavropol Krai 2.00 Source
 Sverdlovsk Oblast 2.88 Source
 Tambov Oblast 0.25 Source
 Tatarstan 53.80 Source
 Tomsk Oblast 1.13 Source
 Tula Oblast 1.00 Source
 Tuva 0.00 Source
 Tver Oblast 0.75 Source
 Tyumen Oblast 5.75 Source
 Udmurtia 4.25 Source
 Ulyanovsk Oblast 6.87 Source
 Vladimir Oblast 0.63 Source
 Volgograd Oblast 3.50 Source
 Vologda Oblast 0.25 Source
 Voronezh Oblast 0.38 Source
 Yakutia 1.40 Source
 Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug 17.40 Source
 Yaroslavl Oblast 0.75 Source
 Zabaykalsky Krai 0.25 Source

Islam in Moscow

[edit]

According to the 2010 Russian census, Moscow has less than 300,000 permanent residents of Muslim background, while some estimates suggest that Moscow has around 1 million Muslim residents and up to 1.5 million more Muslim migrant workers.[89] The city has permitted the existence of four mosques.[90] The mayor of Moscow claims that four mosques are sufficient for the population.[91] The city's economy "could not manage without them," he said. There are currently four mosques in Moscow,[92] and 8,000 in the whole of Russia.[93] Muslim migrants from Central Asia have had an impact on the culture with Samsa becoming one of the most popular take away foods in the city.[94]

List of Russian muftiates

[edit]
All-Russia boards
Grand Muftiates Grand Muftis Term of office Headquarters
The Central Spiritual Administration of the Muslims of Russia Edit this on Wikidata[2][95] Sheikh-ul-Islam Talgat Tadzhuddin 1992–present Ufa
The Spiritual Administration of the Muslims of Russian Federation Edit this on Wikidata[95] Sheikh Rawil Ğaynetdin 2014–present Moscow
Muftiate Mufti Term of office Headquarters
The Spiritual Assembly of the Muslims of Russia Edit this on Wikidata[95] Albir Krganov 2016–present Moscow
Interregional boards
Muftiates Muftis Term of office Headquarters
The Coordinating Center of North Caucasus Muslims Edit this on Wikidata[2][95] Ismail Berdiyev 2003–present Moscow and Buynaksk
The Spiritual Administration of the Muslims of the Asian Part of Russia Edit this on Wikidata[2][95] Nafigulla Ashirov 1997–present Moscow and Tobolsk
Notable regional muftiates
Muftiates Muftis Term of office Headquarters
The Muftiate of the Republic of Dagestan[2][95] Sheikh Ahmad Afandi Abdulaev 1998–present Makhachkala
The Spiritual Administration of the Muslims of the Republic of Adygea and Krasnodar Krai[2] Askarbiy Kardanov 2012–present Maykop
The Spiritual Administration of the Muslims of the Republic of Bashkortostan[2][95] Ainur Birgalin 2019–present Ufa
The Spiritual Administration of the Muslims of the Chechen Republic[2][95] Salah Mezhiev 2014–present Grozny
The Spiritual Administration of the Muslims of the Kabardino-Balkarian Republic[2] Hazrataliy Dzasejev 2010–present Nalchik
The Spiritual Administration of the Muslims of the Karachay-Cherkess Republic[2] Ismail Berdiyev 1991–present Cherkessk
The Spiritual Administration of the Muslims of the Republic of North Ossetia–Alania[2] Khajimurat Gatsalov 2011–present Vladikavkaz
The Spiritual Administration of the Muslims of the Republic of Tatarstan[2][95] Kamil Samigullin 2013–present Kazan
The Spiritual Centre of the Muslims of the Republic of Ingushetia[2] Isa Khamkhoev 2004–present Magas

Notable Russian Muslims

[edit]
Khabib Nurmagomedov
[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Muslim Population Growth in Europe Pew Research Center". 10 July 2024. Archived from the original on 10 July 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Lunkin, Roman; et al. (2005). "Ислам" [Islam]. In Bourdeaux, Michael; Filatov, Sergei (eds.). Современная религиозная жизнь России. Опыт систематического описания [Contemporary Religious Life of Russia. Systematic description experience] (in Russian). Vol. 3. Moscow: Keston Institute; Logos. pp. 78–212. ISBN 5-98704-044-2.
  3. ^ "RUSSIA 2017 INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REPORT" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 May 2018.
  4. ^ "Islam in Russia". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  5. ^ Bell, I (2002). Eastern Europe, Russia and Central Asia. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-85743-137-7. Retrieved 27 December 2007.
  6. ^ Azamatov, Danil D. (1998), "The Muftis of the Orenburg Spiritual Assembly in the 18th and 19th Centuries: The Struggle for Power in Russia's Muslim Institution", in Anke von Kugelgen; Michael Kemper; Allen J. Frank, Muslim culture in Russia and Central Asia from the 18th to the early 20th centuries, vol. 2: Inter-Regional and Inter-Ethnic Relations, Berlin: Klaus Schwarz Verlag, pp. 355–384,
  7. ^ Robert D. Crews, For Prophet and Tsar, pp. 299-300 (Harvard, 2006)
  8. ^ "Vladimir Putin says Muslim schools can help stop "destructive" ideas". Newsweek. 25 January 2018. Retrieved 13 October 2021.
  9. ^ Traynor, Ian (13 November 2002). "Get circumcised, angry Putin tells reporter". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 April 2023.
  10. ^ "Russia builds more than 8,000 mosques, Islamic schools in 20 years". TASS. Retrieved 7 September 2024.
  11. ^ "Вперед, в прошлое: школ в России стало меньше, чем церквей". newizv.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 7 September 2024.
  12. ^ Hunter, Shireen; et al. (2004). Islam in Russia: The Politics of Identity and Security. M.E. Sharpe. p. 3. (..) It is difficult to establish exactly when Islam first appeared in Russia because the lands that Islam invaded early in its expansion were not part of Russia at the time, but were later incorporated into the expanding Russian Empire. In the middle of the seventh century, Islam reached the Caucasus region as part of the Arab conquest of the Iranian Sassanian Empire.
  13. ^ Mako, Gerald (2011). "The Islamization of the Volga Bulghars: A Question Reconsidered". Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi. 18 (208). Retrieved 7 October 2015. [...] the Volga Bulghars adopted the Hanafi school of Sunni Islam, as practiced in Khwarazm.
  14. ^ a b Shireen Tahmasseb Hunter, Jeffrey L. Thomas, Alexander Melikishvili, "Islam in Russia", M.E. Sharpe, Apr 1, 2004, ISBN 0-7656-1282-8
  15. ^ Solovyov, S. (2001). History of Russia from the Earliest Times. Vol. 6. AST. pp. 751–809. ISBN 5-17-002142-9.
  16. ^ Darjusz Kołodziejczyk, as reported by Mikhail Kizilov (2007). "Slaves, Money Lenders, and Prisoner Guards: The Jews and the Trade in Slaves and Captives in the Crimean Khanate". The Journal of Jewish Studies. 58 (2): 189–210. doi:10.18647/2730/JJS-2007.
  17. ^ Frank, Allen J. Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia: The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde, 1780–1910. Vol. 35. Brill, 2001.
  18. ^ Khodarkovsky, Michael. Russia's Steppe Frontier: The Making of a Colonial Empire, 1500-1800, pg. 39.
  19. ^ Ember, Carol R. and Melvin Ember. Encyclopedia of Sex and Gender: Men and Women in the World's Cultures, pg. 572
  20. ^ a b Hunter, Shireen. "Islam in Russia: The Politics of Identity and Security", pg. 14
  21. ^ Farah, Caesar E. Islam: Beliefs and Observances, pg. 304
  22. ^ Allen J. Frank (1998). Islamic Historiography and "Bulghar" Identity Among the Tatars and Bashkirs of Russia. BRILL. pp. 35–. ISBN 90-04-11021-6.
  23. ^ KIZILOV, MIKHAIL (2007). "Slave Trade in the Early Modern Crimea From the Perspective of_Christian Muslim and Jewish Sources". Journal of Early Modern History. 11 (1–2). Leiden: Koninklijke Brill NV: 16. doi:10.1163/157006507780385125.
  24. ^ Allen J. Frank (1 January 2001). Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia: The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde, 1780-1910. BRILL. pp. 61–. ISBN 90-04-11975-2.
  25. ^ Allen J. Frank (1 January 2001). Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia: The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde, 1780-1910. BRILL. pp. 79–. ISBN 90-04-11975-2.
  26. ^ Allen J. Frank (1 January 2001). Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia: The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde, 1780-1910. BRILL. pp. 86–. ISBN 90-04-11975-2.
  27. ^ Allen J. Frank (1 January 2001). Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia: The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde, 1780-1910. BRILL. pp. 87–. ISBN 90-04-11975-2.
  28. ^ Allen J. Frank (1 January 2001). Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia: The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde, 1780-1910. BRILL. pp. 122–. ISBN 90-04-11975-2.
  29. ^ Allen J. Frank (1 January 2001). Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia: The Islamic World of Novouzensk District and the Kazakh Inner Horde, 1780-1910. BRILL. pp. 170–. ISBN 90-04-11975-2.
  30. ^ Vershinin, Alexander (29 July 2014). "How Russia's steppe warriors took on Napoleon's armies". Russia & India Report.
  31. ^ John R. Elting (1997). Swords Around a Throne: Napoleon's Grande Armée. Perseus Books Group. pp. 237–. ISBN 978-0-306-80757-2.
  32. ^ Michael V. Leggiere (16 April 2015). Napoleon and the Struggle for Germany: Volume 2, The Defeat of Napoleon: The Franco-Prussian War of 1813. Cambridge University Press. pp. 101–. ISBN 978-1-316-39309-3.Michael V. Leggiere (16 April 2015). Napoleon and the Struggle for Germany: 1. Cambridge University Press. pp. 101–. ISBN 978-1-107-08054-6.
  33. ^ Janet M. Hartley (2008). Russia, 1762–1825: Military Power, the State, and the People. ABC-CLIO. pp. 27–. ISBN 978-0-275-97871-6.
  34. ^ Nasirov, Ilshat (2005). "Islam in the Russian Army". Islam Magazine. Makhachkala.
  35. ^ Alexander Mikaberidze (20 February 2015). Russian Eyewitness Accounts of the Campaign of 1807. Frontline Books. pp. 276–. ISBN 978-1-4738-5016-3.
  36. ^ Denis Vasilʹevich Davydov (1999). In the Service of the Tsar Against Napoleon: The Memoirs of Denis Davidov, 1806–1814. Greenhill Books. p. 51. ISBN 978-1-85367-373-3.
  37. ^ Andreas Kappeler (27 August 2014). The Russian Empire: A Multi-ethnic History. Routledge. pp. 129–. ISBN 978-1-317-56810-0.
  38. ^ Tove H. Malloy; Francesco Palermo (8 October 2015). Minority Accommodation through Territorial and Non-Territorial Autonomy. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-106359-6.
  39. ^ Dominic Lieven (15 April 2010). Russia Against Napoleon: The True Story of the Campaigns of War and Peace. Penguin Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-101-42938-9.
  40. ^ Dominic Lieven (15 April 2010). Russia Against Napoleon: The True Story of the Campaigns of War and Peace. Penguin Publishing Group. pp. 504–. ISBN 978-1-101-42938-9.
  41. ^ Bill Bowring (17 April 2013). Law, Rights and Ideology in Russia: Landmarks in the Destiny of a Great Power. Routledge. pp. 129–. ISBN 978-1-134-62580-2.
  42. ^ Charles R. Steinwedel (9 May 2016). Threads of Empire: Loyalty and Tsarist Authority in Bashkiria, 1552–1917. Indiana University Press. pp. 145–. ISBN 978-0-253-01933-2.
  43. ^ Figes, Orlando (1996). A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution, 1891-1924. London: Jonathan Cape. p. 257. ISBN 0-224-04162-2. OCLC 35657827.
  44. ^ Kazemzadeh 1974
  45. ^ А. Г. Булатова. Лакцы (XIX – нач. XX вв.). Историко-этнографические очерки. — Махачкала, 2000.
  46. ^ Andrew D. W. Forbes (9 October 1986). Warlords and Muslims in Chinese Central Asia: A Political History of Republican Sinkiang 1911-1949. CUP Archive. pp. 16–. ISBN 978-0-521-25514-1.
  47. ^ Alexandre Bennigsen; Chantal Lemercier-Quelquejay; Central Asian Research Centre (London, England) (1967). Islam in the Soviet Union. Praeger. p. 15.
  48. ^ "Imamat-news.ru смотреть порно видео онлайн". imamat-news.ru. Archived from the original on 1 June 2013.
  49. ^ "History of Hajj in Russia from 18th to 21st century - IslamDag.info".
  50. ^ "IslamDag.info".
  51. ^ "Observers". Organisation of Islamic Cooperation. Archived from the original on 9 September 2022. Retrieved 14 January 2023.
  52. ^ "Window on Eurasia: Putin Says Orthodoxy 'Closer to Islam than Catholicism Is' - RISU". Religious Information Service of Ukraine.
  53. ^ "Faith in expediency". The Economist.
  54. ^ Nikolas K. Gvosdev; Christopher Marsh (22 August 2013). Russian Foreign Policy: Interests, Vectors, and Sectors. SAGE Publications. p. 297. ISBN 978-1-4833-2208-7.
  55. ^ Илья Косыгин (4 January 2012). "Православие ближе к исламу, чем к католицизму. В. Путин". Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 – via YouTube.
  56. ^ Fader, Carole. "Fact Check: No record of Putin's speech on Muslims". The Florida Times-Union.
  57. ^ Archives. "Russian President Vladimir Putin Says No to Sharia-Fiction!".
  58. ^ Mikkelson, David (4 April 2014). "Vladimir Putin's Speech to the Duma on Minorities".
  59. ^ "Vladimir Putin's Supposed Speech to the Duma on Minorities and Sharia Law". Hoax Slayer. Archived from the original on 9 April 2013. Retrieved 4 April 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  60. ^ Latypova, Leyla (27 September 2022). "Ethnic Minorities Hit Hardest By Russia's Mobilization, Activists Say". The Moscow Times.
  61. ^ Miller, Rebecca M. (13 April 2015). "Comeback: How Islam Got Its Groove Back in Russia".
  62. ^ "Do minorities have a place in Putin's Russia?". www.wilsonquarterly.com. Retrieved 4 April 2023.
  63. ^ "Are Russia's 20 million Muslims seething about Putin bombing Syria?". The Washington Post. 7 March 2016.
  64. ^ "Russia's Muslim Leaders on the Invasion of Ukraine: United in a Display of Loyalty, Divided in Competition for Power". PONARS Eurasia. 7 April 2022.
  65. ^ "Terrified Chechens flee to avoid Ukraine call-up as casualties mount". The Telegraph. 28 May 2022.
  66. ^ "Chechen leader Kadyrov admits high losses among unit in Ukraine". Al Jazeera. 28 October 2022.
  67. ^ Reynolds, Nick (30 June 2023). "Quran burner who caused international outrage reveals his new plans". Newsweek. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  68. ^ Disrespecting the Quran is a crime in Russia, unlike in some other countries - Putin, retrieved 5 July 2023
  69. ^ a b "Islam, Islamism, and Terrorism in the Northern Caucasus and Central Asia: A Critical Assessment" (PDF). Retrieved 4 April 2023.
  70. ^ "Second Chechnya War – 1999–???". GlobalSecurity.org. Retrieved 15 April 2008.
  71. ^ Richard Sakwa, ed. (2005). "Mike Bowker: Western Views of the Chechen Conflict". Chechnya: From Past to Future. Anthem Press. pp. 223–318. ISBN 978-1-84331-164-5.
  72. ^ "ISLAMIC EXTREMISM IN THE NORTH CAUCASUS: WHAT KIND OF THREAT FOR REGIONAL SECURITY?" (PDF). Retrieved 4 April 2023.
  73. ^ Julia Ioffe (24 July 2015). "Putin Is Down With Polygamy". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
  74. ^ Arkhipov, Ilya; Kravchenko, Stepan (17 February 2015). "Putin Points Muslim Rage at Cold War Foes". Bloomberg.com.
  75. ^ "Chechnya declares public holiday to support huge anti-Charlie Hebdo rally". Independent.co.uk. 20 January 2015.
  76. ^ "Shaykh Said Afandi al-Chirkawi". IslamDag.info.
  77. ^ Goble, Paul (9 October 2015). "Because of Syria, Moscow Focusing on Sunni-Shiite Divide Within Russia". Window on Eurasia -- New Series. Retrieved 9 October 2015.
  78. ^ Kalandarov, T. C. (2005). Памирские мигранты-исмаилиты в России [Pamir Ismaili Migrants in Russia] (PDF). Исследования по прикладной и неотложной этнологии Института этнологии и антропологии РАН [Research in applied and urgent ethnology of the Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology of the Russian Academy of Sciences] (in Russian). Moscow: Nauka. ISBN 5-201-13758-X.
  79. ^ Ingvar Svanberg, David Westerlund (6 December 2012). Islam Outside the Arab World. Routledge. p. 418. ISBN 978-0-7007-1124-6. Retrieved 27 June 2014.
  80. ^ Escobar, Pepe (21 July 2021). "Checkmate fighter puts Russia ahead of the game". Asia Times.
  81. ^ Sibgatullina, Gulnaz (2020). Languages of Islam and Christianity in Post-Soviet Russia. Brill Publishers. p. 73.
  82. ^ Russian Pilgrims Number Exceeds 18,000, Ministry of Hajj, Saudi Arabia.
  83. ^ "IslamDag.info".
  84. ^ "IslamDag.info".
  85. ^ "The Rebirth of Islam in Russia".
  86. ^ "РЕЛИГАРЕ - "Русский ислам" как явление и как предмет исследования". www.religare.ru. Archived from the original on 12 July 2020. Retrieved 12 June 2008.
  87. ^ http://www.allrussia.ru/pressreview/default.asp?id=37870&rub_id=19&VYear=2000&VMonth=4&VDay=18[permanent dead link]
  88. ^ "European Public Opinion Three Decades After the Fall of Communism – 6. Minority groups". Pew Research Center. 14 October 2019.
  89. ^ "Строители и гувернантки покидают Москву". Российская газета. 9 February 2009.
  90. ^ Shuster, Simon (2 August 2013). "Underground Islam". Slate.
  91. ^ "Moscow mayor: No more mosques in my city". Christian Science Monitor. 21 November 2013.
  92. ^ "In Moscow, more Muslims than mosques". Archived from the original on 4 September 2015.
  93. ^ "7500 Mosques Have Been Erected In Russia Since Putin Became President". www.interpretermag.com.
  94. ^ a b "Moscow's Muslims find no room in the mosque". BBC. 22 March 2012. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  95. ^ a b c d e f g h i Popov, Igor (2016). "1.3.1 Сунниты" [1.3.1 Sunnis]. Справочник всех религиозных течений и объединений в России [The Reference Book on All Religious Branches and Communities in Russia] (in Russian). Retrieved 25 December 2023.
  96. ^ "IslamDag.info".
  97. ^ Paxton, Robin (15 April 2007). "Arctic mosque stays open but Muslim numbers shrink". Reuters.
[edit]