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5 - Ishans and Murids before, in and after the Gulag: Strategies of Adaptation to the 1948 Repressions in the Perm Region

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2022

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Summary

Abstract

The chapter is devoted to studying the sociocultural trauma which was the result of repressions associated with the “Anti-Soviet Ishanism Establishment Case” of 1948 in the Perm Region (USSR). Because the arrested Muslims had been sentenced as Ishanism devotees, it was important to verify the interrogation records and charging papers by means of oral history; the chapter confirms the fact that the Muslims arrested in 1948 were indeed followers of the tradition of Ishanism. Oral interviews allowed not only the lives of each of the arrested people to be traced, but also their families and people who were more or less familiar with them. The study also identifies how society – and ishans and murids themselves – managed to adapt to the consequences of the arrests.

Keywords: Ishanism, sociocultural trauma, post-memory, narrative, oral history, the Perm Region

Introduction

Despite the liberalization of relations between the state and religious organizations during World War II, even at the beginning of 1948 the mechanism of arrests and prosecutions was initiated once again against those holders of religious beliefs who, committed to traditional Muslim literature and culture, continued their religious practices. In February 1948, state security officers of the Molotovskaya Oblast`“revealed evidence” of the “sectarian group of Ishanism” that “was engaged in anti-Soviet activities,” as stated in the investigative documents.

In 1999, my investigations in the archive revealed the so-called “Anti-Soviet Ishanism Establishment Case” (hereafter ASIEC), containing documents related to the arrests in 1948 of a group of people residing in the southern districts of the Permskaya Oblast` (Molotovskaya Oblast` at the time), which was densely populated by Muslims. During the case of 1948, many Muslims were interrogated, charged and finally sentenced as Ishanism devotees. It is typical for the Perm Region that since ancient times, the Tatars and Bashkirs living in its southern parts have traditionally practiced Islam. Those who were arrested in 1948 were accused of professing Ishanism, a form of Sufism that existed in the Volga-Ural Region. The findings were included in an article which was published in 1999 (Selyaninova 1999, 72-79).

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Chapter
Information
Friction, Fragmentation, and Diversity
Localized Politics of European Memories
, pp. 121 - 142
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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