Narratives on the Origin of the Institution of the Muftiate among Tatars in Soviet times

The rationale behind the creation of the institution of the muftiate in 1788 in Ufa was that the state wanted to better control the spiritual life of Muslims in the Russian Empire and use it as a tool for implementing domestic and foreign policy. It seemed more convenient for the government to deal...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Renat I. Bekkin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tatarstan Academy of Sciences, Marjani Institute of History 2020-11-01
Series:Историческая этнология
Subjects:
Online Access:https://historicalethnology.org/news/en-2020-t5-n2-3/
_version_ 1797390224005791744
author Renat I. Bekkin
author_facet Renat I. Bekkin
author_sort Renat I. Bekkin
collection DOAJ
description The rationale behind the creation of the institution of the muftiate in 1788 in Ufa was that the state wanted to better control the spiritual life of Muslims in the Russian Empire and use it as a tool for implementing domestic and foreign policy. It seemed more convenient for the government to deal with an organized structure incorporated into the system of state-controlled institutions rather than with separate, non-institutionalized representatives of Muslims who relied mainly on their authority among faithful and did not need legitimation and support from the state (either financial or legal). A certain number of Muslim religious figures also did not initially accept this institution. However, by mid-nineteenth century the Muslim community came to the understanding that it needed the institution of the muftiate through which they could represent and defend their interests relative to the state and the Synodal Church as a governmental body. Moreover, the Tatars began viewing the spiritual assembly in Ufa as a national institution guarding Tatar national identity within the context of the Orthodox state. The Tatar population of the empire thus appropriated the muftiate, giving rise to the legend that the institution had historically existed among the Tatars long before they were conquered by the Russians. The first narratives that the muftiate existed in the Kazan Khanate and was destroyed after the conquest of Kazan in 1552 probably appeared at the end of the nineteenth century. In Soviet times, this point of view was widespread in the 1920–1930s. Later it was modified and subsequent aspects of the narrative emphasized some aspects of the history of the muftiate, and concealed others. But the main thesis that the muftiate is an important institution for preserving the spiritual culture of the Tatar people remained unchanged. These changes in the interpretation of its history became in many ways a reflection of the processes that took place in the system of Soviet muftiates and, above all, in the Central Spiritual Administration of Muslims in Ufa in Soviet times. This point of view contradicted the views of a number of Soviet historians (Lyutsian I. Klimovich, Arshaluis M. Arsharuni, Hadzhi Z. Gabidullin, Galimjan G. Ibragimov and others), who considered the muftiate an exclusively colonial institution imposed on Muslims and serving as an instrument of enslavement and oppression.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T23:08:39Z
format Article
id doaj.art-869e586bf64f45f6a5d87047be34402d
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2587-9286
2619-1636
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-08T23:08:39Z
publishDate 2020-11-01
publisher Tatarstan Academy of Sciences, Marjani Institute of History
record_format Article
series Историческая этнология
spelling doaj.art-869e586bf64f45f6a5d87047be34402d2023-12-15T10:23:51ZengTatarstan Academy of Sciences, Marjani Institute of HistoryИсторическая этнология2587-92862619-16362020-11-015222524210.22378/he.2020-5-2.225-242Narratives on the Origin of the Institution of the Muftiate among Tatars in Soviet timesRenat I. Bekkin0Doctor Sc. (Economics), Ph.D. in Religious Studies, Cand. Sc. (Law), Professor of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Professor at the Institute of Oriental Studies at the Herzen State Pedagogical University of Russia (St. Petersburg, Russian Federation); Leading Research Fellow at the Institute for African Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences (30/1 Spiridonovka St., Moscow 123001, Russian Federation); bekkin@mail.ruThe rationale behind the creation of the institution of the muftiate in 1788 in Ufa was that the state wanted to better control the spiritual life of Muslims in the Russian Empire and use it as a tool for implementing domestic and foreign policy. It seemed more convenient for the government to deal with an organized structure incorporated into the system of state-controlled institutions rather than with separate, non-institutionalized representatives of Muslims who relied mainly on their authority among faithful and did not need legitimation and support from the state (either financial or legal). A certain number of Muslim religious figures also did not initially accept this institution. However, by mid-nineteenth century the Muslim community came to the understanding that it needed the institution of the muftiate through which they could represent and defend their interests relative to the state and the Synodal Church as a governmental body. Moreover, the Tatars began viewing the spiritual assembly in Ufa as a national institution guarding Tatar national identity within the context of the Orthodox state. The Tatar population of the empire thus appropriated the muftiate, giving rise to the legend that the institution had historically existed among the Tatars long before they were conquered by the Russians. The first narratives that the muftiate existed in the Kazan Khanate and was destroyed after the conquest of Kazan in 1552 probably appeared at the end of the nineteenth century. In Soviet times, this point of view was widespread in the 1920–1930s. Later it was modified and subsequent aspects of the narrative emphasized some aspects of the history of the muftiate, and concealed others. But the main thesis that the muftiate is an important institution for preserving the spiritual culture of the Tatar people remained unchanged. These changes in the interpretation of its history became in many ways a reflection of the processes that took place in the system of Soviet muftiates and, above all, in the Central Spiritual Administration of Muslims in Ufa in Soviet times. This point of view contradicted the views of a number of Soviet historians (Lyutsian I. Klimovich, Arshaluis M. Arsharuni, Hadzhi Z. Gabidullin, Galimjan G. Ibragimov and others), who considered the muftiate an exclusively colonial institution imposed on Muslims and serving as an instrument of enslavement and oppression.https://historicalethnology.org/news/en-2020-t5-n2-3/muftiatethe orenburg mohammedan spiritual assemblyrizaeddin fakhreddinfaizrakhman sattarovislam in the ussr
spellingShingle Renat I. Bekkin
Narratives on the Origin of the Institution of the Muftiate among Tatars in Soviet times
Историческая этнология
muftiate
the orenburg mohammedan spiritual assembly
rizaeddin fakhreddin
faizrakhman sattarov
islam in the ussr
title Narratives on the Origin of the Institution of the Muftiate among Tatars in Soviet times
title_full Narratives on the Origin of the Institution of the Muftiate among Tatars in Soviet times
title_fullStr Narratives on the Origin of the Institution of the Muftiate among Tatars in Soviet times
title_full_unstemmed Narratives on the Origin of the Institution of the Muftiate among Tatars in Soviet times
title_short Narratives on the Origin of the Institution of the Muftiate among Tatars in Soviet times
title_sort narratives on the origin of the institution of the muftiate among tatars in soviet times
topic muftiate
the orenburg mohammedan spiritual assembly
rizaeddin fakhreddin
faizrakhman sattarov
islam in the ussr
url https://historicalethnology.org/news/en-2020-t5-n2-3/
work_keys_str_mv AT renatibekkin narrativesontheoriginoftheinstitutionofthemuftiateamongtatarsinsoviettimes