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CENTRAL ASIA ypressions of Identity
and Change Edited by Jo- Ann Gross
Duke
University Press
I
Durham and London
1992
©
199-2
Duke
University Press
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
on acid-free paper
ac
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
appear on the last printed page of this book.
To my parents, Philip W.
and Ruth Gross,
with love and gratitude
Contents
Illustrations
ix
Central Asia Book Series Preface
xi
xiii
Introduction:
Approaches
to the
Jo-Ann Gross
Problem of Identity Formation
1
I
The Sh aping andR esh aping of I den ti ty
1
The Development and Meaning of Chaghatay Identity Beatrice Forbes
2
Religious, National,
Muriel Atkin 3
Manz
27
and Other Identities in Central Asia
46
Ethnic Identity and Political Expression in Northern
Afghanistan
Olivier
Roy
73
II
Islam as a Source of Identity
4
The Hui,
Islam, and the State:
in China's
Northwest Corner
A Sufi Community Dru
C.
Gladney
89
5
Shaykh Zaynullah Rasulev: The Last Great Naqshbandi Hamid Algar 112 Shaykh of the Volga-Urals Region
6
Islam in a Changing Society: The Khojas of Eastern
Turkistan
Isenbike Togan
134
viii
Contents
III
Discourse as a Cultural Expression of Identity
7
Beyond Renewal: The fadid Response to Pressure for Edward /. Lazzehni Change in the Modern Age 151
8
Interpreting the Poetry of
Walter Feldm an 9
167
Abdullah Qadiriy and the Bolsheviks: From Reform to Revolution
Glossary
Christopher Murphy
203
Postscript
205
General Bibliography Contributors
Index
Makhtumquli
221
217
209
190
Illustrations
Figure
1
.
The Naqshbandi Lineages
Zaynullah Rasulev
Map 1 Map 2 Map 3
.
.
.
Central Asia
of
Shaykh
114
2
The Ulus Chaghatay in 1360
30
Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, Northwest
92
Central Asia
Islam
may
Book
Series
play two different roles in the dramatic changes
fecting contemporary Central Asian society.
Through the
af-
first, it
surely provides an underpinning today for a culture that until the late 1920s regarded itself as
wholly Muslim. More problematic
Islam's part in the region's public reidentification set in
by Mikhail Gorbachev's program tuted around the mid-1980s. Analysts or scholars
who
of
is
motion
openness (glastnost)
insti-
interpret very recent developments
in Central Asia often seriously disagree about the cultural and political
importance of Islam in the area's
affairs.
But most recognize
the paradox created by the heritage of Islamic civilization per-
USSR. Religion played only a small part in the region's public life between the late 1920s and at least the mid-1980s. For that reason, by no means all analysts sisting in the officially atheistic
or scholars favor an "Islamic" approach to current Central Asian affairs.
A few consider that the Communist suppression of religion
in the Soviet
ground.
Union has only pushed the
Some
piactice of Islam under-
believe that latent forces of Islam merely wait to
burst out at the
first
chance to dominate the thinking and
life of
the area once again.
This divergence in interpretation of the significance of Islam, together with the intense interest among students and other informed persons concerning Islam and ethnicity in group identity, reveal the need for systematic inquiries into those linkages at this time. For the
same
reasons, the present study benefits noticeably
from bringing to readers more than one author's point of view. However, this volume generally does not address in a partisan
1
Central Asia Book Series
xii
fashion the disagreement over the degree of significance of today's Islamic religion for Central Asia. Rather, the authors carefully build a case for examining the factor of religion as a
component
group identity in the study of contemporary Central Asia. All productive approaches to the study of the culture and society of of
the region deserve appropriate attention.
manuscript
The
for publication in the Central
editors chose this
Asia Book Series be-
problems. Even more persuasive were the academic credentials, access to the local-language sources, and experience of these authors as well as their mastery of the subjects they treat. The Moscow regime's willingness to permit genuine expressions of ethnic pluralism in the territory currently under its management appears to have cooled considerably by 1990 and 1991, in comparison with its attitude toward expression of nationality during the years between 1986 and 1989. That reversal concerns religious practices as well. Whether or not Soviet governmental policy may now aim to counteract the important moves that contributed to removing some of the previous strictures from the cause
it
offers insights into those
in this selection
practice of religion in Central Asia, the subject deserves
more
in-
formed discussion. Both outside and inside the USSR, scholars and other informed persons can hardly ignore the potential effects of a revival in religious influence upon the life and art of the majority of Central Asian people, especially among that largest proportion comprising the broad base of society.
The Central Asia Book ies,
Series endeavors to issue learned stud-
documents, eye-witness accounts, and reference materials that
make a lasting addition to knowledge about the region. Edward Allworth, General Editor of the Series, Columbia Uni-
will
versity.
Andras fornia,
J.
E. Bodrogligeti,
Advisory Editor, University of Cali-
Los Angeles.
Richard N. Frye, Advisory Editor, Harvard University.
Edward Allworth
March
1
99
General Editor, Central Asia Book Series
Preface
The chapters included in this volume originated as papers presented at a workshop on ''Approaches to the Study of Islam in Central and Inner Asia/ which was sponsored by the Middle East Institute at Columbia University, and held in March 1988. Implicit in the planning and organization of this project was my be7
lief
that a comparative interregional, cross-disciplinary discussion
of Islam and identity in the Muslim societies of pre-modern and medieval Central Asia would result in a meaningful dialogue through which issues of religious, ethnic, and national identities could be discussed. Current developments in Eastern Europe, the Soviet Union, Central Asia, Africa, and the Middle East have demonstrated the resilience of such identities in the face of social, economic, and political changes. However, as the contributors in this volume demonstrate, issues concerning identity formation and the construction and reconstruction of ethnic, religious, and na-
tional identities are
modern
fold: first, to
present a variety of approaches to the process of
identity formation litical,
a phenomenon confined to the The purpose of this volume is two-
by no means
era of nation-states.
which take into consideration the
cultural, po-
and historical factors involved in that process; and second,
to demonstrate the fluidity tity in the
Muslim
and multiplicity
of concepts of iden-
societies of Central Asia.
The problems involved in the transliteration of eight languages Turkmenian, Uzbek, Tajik, Russian, and Chinese) are considerable. The system employed for Persian, Arabic, and Russian is that of the Library of Congress, except z has been used instead of z for the letter zed in Persian and Arabic. (Persian, Arabic, Chaghatay,
xiv
Preface
Khoja rather than khwaja has also been used. Words accepted in English such as ulama, madiasa, Qufan, etc., will be spelled as commonly used in English-language journals. Foreign words have been italicized the first time they are used; diacritical marks have been used for Persian and Arabic words throughout the text. An attempt has been made to spell personal and proper names consistently throughout the book. However, regional and localized spellings have been used whenever appropriate. In the case of Turkic languages, which as yet have no standardized transliteration system, I have tried to respect the systems adopted by individual authors. In addition to those
scholars
who
who have contributed to this volume,
participated in the original
other
workshop were Edward
Allworth, Yuri Bregel, Robert Canfield, Jonathan Lipman, Robert
McChesney, Eden Naby, William
Roff,
Morris Rossabi, Nazif
Shahrani, and Maria Subtelny. Their contributions to the workshop, although not explicitly represented in this volume, added a great deal to the final
form
of the project,
and they are
much
ap-
preciated. I
am
grateful to Professor Richard Bulliet,
who
as director of
the Middle East Institute at Columbia University fully supported the project from the planning stages to
its
completion.
I
also
am
Edward Allworth, who encouraged me to prepare the original manuscript for publication and whose advice, as general editor of the Central Asia Book Series, was indispensable. I would like to express my appreciation to Trenton State College, which provided me with the grant support and time needed to complete the introductory chapter and the editing of the manuscript, and to John Karras, chairman of the history department, whose constant encouragement throughout the project was so helpful. I would also like to thank Haideh Sahim, whose assistance with the Persian transliteration was so valuable, and Mehrdad Izady for his grateful to
help in drawing the maps.
McChesney for
I
am
particularly indebted to
Dru Gladney, John
Thomas
and Robert their insightful suggestions and comments on the
Allsen, Walter Feldman,
Karras,
introductory chapter.
Jo-Ann Gross
Introduction:
Approaches to the Problem
of Identity
Formation
Jo-Ann Gross
Central Asia
is
perhaps most distinctive for
its
cultural and geo-
political position as a frontier region. Historically, Central Asia
has served as a point of convergence for nomadic and sedentary
and Islamic periods. This convergence resulted in a unique integration of social and cultural traditions. In the post-Mongol period, for example, the convergence of Perso-Islamic and Turko-Mongolian traditions affected the civilizations in the pre-Islamic
character of the economies, political ideologies, popular religious
and social organization in Central Asia, parts of Russia, Northwest China, the Eastern Islamic world, and even parts of the Arab world. The effects of a dual Turkic/Iranian sociopolitical and cultural framework of traditions is one which persists in many Central Asian societies today, as reflected in several of the chapters included in this volume.
beliefs, arts
and
literature, languages,
Scholars studying the
dilemma
of
how
to deal
in so diverse a region.
1
Muslim societies of Central Asia face the with the dynamics
The
of identity
formation
researcher dealing with Central Asia
confronts a cultural and historical field in which knowledge of several languages
and meanings
is
is
imperative, and the sifting of cultural symbols
a part of the dialectical process of untangling the
threads of identity.
If,
for
example,
we
consider the post-Mongol
societies of medieval Khurasan, Transoxiana, or istan, the
question of ethnicity and group identity
At the heart
of studies that deal
Chinese Turkis
a crucial one.
with such societies are questions