Is Russia Attempting To Erase Crimean Muslim Culture? A Hardline Course To Assimilate National Minorities'
20 February 2018By Mansur Mirovalev
Crimean Tatars fear the Kremlin, after annexation, is chipping away at
identity of the 250,000-strong Muslim ethnicity.
Bakhchisaray, Ukraine - The mosque looked like a bandaged patient.
The 500-year-old limestone building was wrapped in wooden scaffolding and long
pieces of cloth that hid geometric ornaments and Koranic calligraphy.
Next to it lay heavy bundles of steel rods that seemed alien in the courtyard
of the seemingly weightless, palatial complex out-of-a-fairy-tale, built for
Crimean Khans. The dynasty of Genghis Khan's descendants was dethroned after
tsarist Russia's annexation of the Black Sea peninsula in 1783.
In January, almost four years after Moscow's second annexation of Crimea,
pro-Russian authorities started restoring the oldest and holiest part of the
complex - the Big Khan Mosque built in 1532. They also announced plans to
restore the entire palace.
But experts, community leaders and Ukrainian officials have lambasted the
restoration as the destruction of the complex's authenticity. They call it
part of Kremlin's drive to reshape, ban and erase the cultural identity of
Crimean Tatars, a Muslim ethnicity of 250,000 that largely resisted Crimea's
return to Russia.
'This is a blueprint for the restoration of the entire palace,' Edem Dudakov,
a construction engineer and former official in Crimea's pre-annexation
government, told Al Jazeera. 'The palace will be lost; what they're building
is a sham.'
The ATTA Group, a company behind the restoration, specialises in contemporary
architecture and uses modern materials such as steel and concrete that will
inevitably destroy the fragile building, Dudakov said.
It replaces medieval, handmade tiles with modern, Spanish-made roofing, and
whole wooden beams with glued, composite planks.
The company did not reply to requests for comment.
What has been done to the mosque already amounts to 'partial loss of the
building's authenticity,' Mustafa Jemilev, a revered community leader expelled
by Moscow, wrote on Facebook.
Ukrainian authorities echo his concerns.
The restoration 'poses a real danger of destruction' of the palace, the
foreign ministry said in a statement.
'Revenge for disloyalty'
The palace's gradual destruction and 'remodelling' exemplifies Russia's
fraught relationship with Crimean Tatars.
The Turkic-speaking ethnic group once controlled the Great Silk Road's
westernmost branch and warred with Moscow for centuries. Crimean Tatars
consider the palace the most significant symbol of their lost statehood.
A Russian army burned the palace and its gigantic library. Westernised tsars
changed the rebuilt palace's interior to make it look more European. They
erased elaborate frescoes, destroyed many buildings and dramatically reduced
the palace's acreage.
The restoration is part of Kremlin's broader campaign of pressure on the
Crimean Tatar community that includes abductions, arrests, searches and
sentences of up to 15 years in jail for alleged 'terrorism' and membership in
'radical' religious groups.
'Assimilation, erasure of historic memory are revenge for political
disloyalty, for reluctance to obey,' Gulnara Bekirova, an historian and the
host of television shows on ATR, a Tatar-language television network that
criticised Moscow's actions in Crimea, told Al Jazeera.
Shortly after the annexation, Moscow banned ATR and several other media
outlets. It made Tatar-language kindergartens bilingual and reduced Tatar
classes in public schools to two voluntary hours a week.
Such lessons 'are number seven or eight on the schedule, in such conditions,
one just does not attend', political activist Seitumer Seitumerov told Al
Jazeera.
He fled Crimea for mainland Ukraine after the owner of a restaurant he managed
was arrested and charged with 'extremism.'
Moscow introduced history textbooks that describe how Crimean Tatars pillaged
Russia, enslaved and sold tens of thousands of captives, and obediently served
Ottoman sultans - the tsars' archenemies.
Meanwhile, Kremlin-controlled media stoke anti-Tatar sentiments.
Some ethnic Russians accuse Tatars of plotting to massacre the pro-Moscow
population that mostly voted for Crimea's 'return to Russia' during the March
2014 'referendum'.
'If it wasn't for the referendum, Tatars and [Ukrainians] would have cut our
throats,' Alexander Topchilin, a store manager in Simferopol, Crimea's main
city, told Al Jazeera.
Anti-Tatar campaigns go hand in hand with pressure on all things Ukrainian.
Although Russia declared Ukrainian one of three official languages in Crimea
along with Crimean Tatar and Russian, Ukrainian classes were reduced, and
activists displaying Ukrainian symbols or posting pro-Ukrainian comments
online face harassment, beatings and jail, rights groups say.
Ukraine's Culture Ministry bristled at 'Russia's totalitarian and aggressive
policies aimed at destroying ethnic identity and self-identification' of
Crimean Tatars and ethnic Ukrainians.
It said in a statement that the policies were part of Moscow's 'ethnic
genocide conducted to fully colonise the peninsula.'
Muslim reformers
Crimea's location - between the Mediterranean trade outposts, Eurasian steppes
and Eastern Europe - attracted Byzantine emperors, Mongol khans and Ottoman
sultans.
The peninsula's multiethnic population included Turkic-speaking nomads,
Greeks, Goths and Armenians.
Many accepted Islam, but retained cultural traits such as horticulture and
sophisticated, odd-metered music.
Crimea's cultural openness made it an important centre of Muslim culture -
despite the constant pressure that forced hundreds of thousands of Tatars to
leave for Ottoman Turkey.
'Following tsarist government's policies, Crimean Tatars were forced to leave
Crimea and soon turned into a minority in their only historic motherland,'
historian Bekirova said.
A century after the 1783 annexation, Crimea became the cradle of Jadidism, a
movement for political and cultural reforms among Russian Empire's Muslims.
Jadidism's founder Ismail Gasprinsky published Terjiman (Interpreter), a
newspaper that reached Siberia, Central Asia and Eastern Europe. His daughter,
Shefika, started one of the first magazines for Muslim women, Alemi Nisvan
(Women's World).
Crimean Tatars used an adapted Arabic script, but under Joseph Stalin, they
had to switch to a Cyrillic script, and their next generation simply could not
read their pre-Soviet literature.
During anti-religious campaigns, most of the peninsula's mosques were closed
down. Jadids, who largely supported Bolsheviks, were purged and executed.
In 1944, the entire Crimean Tatar community was deported to Central Asia for
alleged collaboration with Nazi Germans, and was allowed to return in the late
1980s. Half a century of exile amid a virtual ban on their language further
eroded their religious and cultural identity.
Wider linguistic crackdown
The ongoing crackdown on their language follows a similar trend throughout
multiethnic Russia.
Last November, the Kremlin forbade compulsory classes of Tatar, Russia's
second-most spoken language and a linguistic sibling of Crimean Tatar,
following complaints from the parents of ethnic Russian students in the Volga
River province of Tatarstan.
'It is inadmissible to force a person to study a language that is not their
mother tongue,' Russian President Vladimir Putin said, adding that Russian
'can't be replaced with anything'.
Several other provinces with large non-Russian populations responded with
similar bans, despite protest rallies and pleas signed by intellectuals and
public figures.
Critics blame the trend on Kremlin's tilt to anti-Western nationalism that
began after massive protests against Putin's third election.
Russia has turned 'into a colonial 'prison of nations' with a hardline course
to assimilate national minorities', wrote Radjana Dugarova, an activist from
the southern Siberian province of Buryatiya.
Although Mongol-speaking Buryats form a sizable minority, they also faced a
ban on the compulsory teaching of their mother tongue.
Fearing persecution, Dugarova fled Russia in 2009.
Sources: Al Jazeera News
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