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TOL: The Year of Praying Dangerously

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  • TOL: The Year of Praying Dangerously

    Transitions on Line, Czech Rep.
    Jan 10 2005

    The Year of Praying Dangerously


    by Felix Corley


    Turkmen authorities keep up the pressure on unauthorized religious
    building and activity. A partner post from Forum 18.

    In 2004, the same year that Turkmenistan's autocratic president,
    Saparmurat Niazov, inaugurated what officials describe as the largest
    mosque in Central Asia in his home village of Kipchak in central
    Turkmenistan, the authorities demolished at least seven other
    mosques, apparently to prevent unapproved Muslim worship. Several
    Muslim and non-Muslim sources inside Turkmenistan, who preferred not
    to be identified, have told Forum 18 News Service of seven specific
    mosque demolitions. The sources said they believe that other
    unapproved mosques might also have fallen victim to the government's
    desire to stifle unauthorized Muslim worship. Christians and members
    of other faiths are still battling to be allowed to open places of
    worship, regain those confiscated, or rebuild those destroyed in the
    past six years.

    The Kipchak mosque--built by the French company Bouygues and
    inaugurated with great pomp on 22 October 2004--angered some Muslims
    by incorporating on its walls not only quotations from the Koran, but
    also from the Ruhnama (Book of the Soul), a pseudo-spiritual work
    claimed to have been written by Niazov. Muslims regard as blasphemous
    the use of such quotations and the requirement that copies of the
    Ruhnama be placed in mosques on a par with the Koran, as well as
    instructions to imams to quote lavishly from the president's work in
    sermons. Few Muslims reportedly attend the Kipchak mosque for regular
    prayers, though it can house up to 10,000 worshippers. Apparently as
    part of a policy of isolating Turkmen religious believers of all
    faiths, no foreign Muslim religious dignitaries were permitted to
    attend the inauguration.

    Islam is traditionally the faith of the majority in Turkmenistan, and
    it is the faith under the tightest government control. The president
    installed the new chief mufti, Rovshen Allaberdiev, in August after
    removing his predecessor, while the government's Gengeshi (Council)
    for Religious Affairs names all imams throughout the country. Only
    about 140 mosques--all of them under the state-controlled
    muftiate--now have state registration, just a fraction of the number
    of a decade ago when religious practice was freer.

    Independent mosques have been demolished in recent years--such as
    those built by Imam Ahmed Orazgylych in a suburb of Ashgabat and in
    the village of Govki-Zeren near Tejen in southern Turkmenistan, both
    bulldozed in 2000--while others that reject the forced imposition of
    the Ruhnama have been shut down, such as the mosque closed on
    National Security Ministry orders in late 2003 after mosque leaders
    refused to place the Ruhnama in a place of honor.

    Other faiths, too, face severe difficulties maintaining places of
    worship. The authorities have refused to allow the two Hare Krishna
    temples bulldozed in the Mary region in summer 1999 and the
    Seventh-day Adventist church bulldozed in Ashgabat in November 1999
    to be rebuilt and have refused to pay any compensation. Neither
    community has been allowed to meet publicly for worship despite both
    having regained official registration in 2004.

    Nor have the Baptist and Pentecostal churches in Ashgabat--closed
    down and confiscated in 2001--been handed back, leaving both
    communities with nowhere to worship. The government has also refused
    to hand back an Armenian Apostolic church in the Caspian port city of
    Turkmenbashi confiscated during the Soviet period, despite repeated
    appeals by the local Armenian community. Other religious communities
    that have been denied registration--including other Protestant
    churches, the Jehovah's Witnesses, and the New Apostolic
    Church--likewise have nowhere to meet.

    The 2004 mosque demolitions appear to have occurred in two waves,
    with three demolished at the beginning of 2004 and a further four in
    Ashgabat destroyed since October.

    "The mosques demolished in the spring had been built without
    permission," one source told Forum 18. "The demolitions were not
    reported in the media, but they didn't take place covertly, either."

    The three mosques known to have been demolished in the first wave
    were a Shia mosque used by local ethnic Iranians in the village of
    Bagyr near Ashgabat, as well as small Sunni mosques in the town of
    Serdar (formerly Kyzyl-Arvat) in western Turkmenistan and in the
    village of Geoktepe, 45 kilometers northwest of Ashgabat. "The
    Geoktepe mosque was in the middle of the old fortress," one source
    told Forum 18. "The authorities wanted all the Muslims to go to the
    main, newly built mosque." The massive Saparmurat Haji mosque, named
    after the president and completed in the 1990s, was, like the Kipchak
    mosque, built by Bouygues. The construction cost was a reported $86
    million.

    The autumn wave of demolitions began with the destruction of two
    mosques in Ashgabat. Both were razed on 15 October, just one day
    before the start of Ramadan.

    "Worshippers in both mosques were told that these mosques were being
    demolished because the local government is planning to build a new
    road and to widen the existing one," a source told Forum 18 from
    Ashgabat. "Of course, nothing has yet been built there."

    A visitor to the mosque on Bitarap Turkmenistan street in August
    found it looking "pretty good," with people repairing and painting
    the inside of the relatively large building. Sources told Forum 18
    that local people were "really unhappy" when the local authorities
    informed them the mosque was to be demolished.

    "According to some unconfirmed rumors, construction of these mosques
    was financed by some unidentified Arab charities," one source added.
    "This might have been one of the reasons for their demolition." Some
    local imams referred to the mosque on Bitarap Turkmenistan street as
    a Wahhabi mosque, a reference to the brand of Sunni Islam that
    predominates in Saudi Arabia, though the term "Wahhabi" is used more
    widely in Central Asia as a synonym for "Muslim extremist."

    Soon afterward, a privately built mosque in the Garadamak area of
    southern Ashgabat was demolished along with many houses in the same
    area. A source from Ashgabat who visited the mosque in July told
    Forum 18 that the imam, who used to live in a nearby house, seemed at
    that time to be unaware of the government's imminent plans to
    demolish his mosque.

    The most recent demolition, in November, was of another private
    mosque in the Choganly area of northern Ashgabat, near the city's
    largest market. It, too, was not registered with the government but,
    unlike the mosque in the Garadamak district, could not operate due to
    strong opposition from the local authorities. No other houses around
    this mosque are known to have been demolished.

    One local Muslim suggested that all four of the Ashgabat mosques
    demolished in the autumn were targeted because their imams refused to
    read Niazov's Ruhnama in their mosques.

    Other Muslims trace the start of the latest wave of demolitions of
    private mosques to a presidential speech complaining of alleged
    attempts to sow discord in the country. "Some people are coming here
    and taking our lads to teach them," Niazov told a meeting in the city
    of Turkmenbashi in September. "Eight lads have been taken in this way
    to make them into Wahhabis. This means they will come back later and
    start disputes among us. Therefore let us train them here, in
    Ashgabat, at a faculty of theology."

    Sources have told Forum 18 that Khezretkuli Khanov, head of the
    Ashgabat Gengeshi, has complained to visitors to his office in recent
    months that he constantly faces the problem of dealing with mosques
    functioning without the required permission. Unregistered religious
    activity is illegal in Turkmenistan, in defiance of international
    human rights norms.
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