Valiulla Iakupov’s “Traditional Islam”

Authors
Publication date 2017
Journal Vostok/Oriens
Volume | Issue number 2017 | 3
Pages (from-to) 123-139
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam School for Regional, Transnational and European Studies (ARTES)
Abstract
In this article we analyze the concept of “traditional Islam” in the writings of the Tatar scholar Valiulla Iakupov (1963–2012). We discuss Iakupov’s interpretation of the history of Tatar Islam, his views on Wahhabism (which he condemned in strongest terms), and on the state-Islam relations in contemporary Russia, as well as his ideas about the relations between Islamic authority and secular science. Against the background of this content analysis, we then proceed to analyze Iakupov’s religious language, especially his use of Arabic-origin loanwords and their Russian equivalents of Church Slavonic origin, and also his creative coinage of new religious terms. While Iakupov was above all known as a proponent of the use of Tatar as Russia’s major language for Islam, we argue that Iakupov also made a significant contribution to the development of “Muslim-Russian” as the new religious idiom of Muslims in the Russian-speaking world.
Document type Article
Language English
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