Islam in Russia is a rare scholarly attempt to understand the tolerant nature of Islam in the modern Russian Federation since the state’s official acceptance of Islam.
The book explores the key factors that have contributed, over time, to the establishment of a co-existent form of Islam in modern multi-ethnic and multinational Russia. It also probes discussion of the role that Russian Muslim intellectuals have played in forming contemporary Russian Islam. It concludes that the co-existent form of Islam in Russia can be linked to three key factors: its historical emergence, the intellectual culture, and strong regional identities.
This original and engaging examination of the development and identity of Islam in Russia is a useful resource for students and scholars of Global Islam, Islam in Europe, History of Russia, Islamic History, Islamic Thought and Modern Religious History.
Islam in Russia is a rare scholarly attempt to understand the tolerant nature of Islam in the modern Russian Federation since the state’s official acceptance of Islam and is a useful resource for students and scholars of Global Islam, Islam in Europe, History of Russia, Islamic History, Islamic Thought and Modern Religious History.
PART I Tolerance Formations: Key Historical Milestones of Islam in
Russia
1. Introduction to Tolerant Islam in Russia
2. Historical Stages of
Development of Islam in Russia (7th16th Centuries)
3. Historical Stages of
Development of Islam in Russia (16th21st Centuries) PART II Tolerance
Formations: Intellectual Heritage
4. Intellectual Heritage PART III Tolerance
Formations: Diversity of Muslim-Populated Areas of Russia
5. The Varying
Features of Islam in Russias Regions (Volga Federal District, Central
Federal District and Southern Federal District)
6. The Varying Features of
Islam in Russias Regions (Northwestern Federal District, Ural Federal
District, Siberian Federal District, Far Eastern Federal District, North
Caucasian Federal District) Afterword Bibliography Index
Diana Galeeva is an Academic Visitor at University of Oxford, UK, and Associate Professor at Mohammed bin Zayed University for Humanities, UAE. She is the author of Qatar: The Practice of Rented Power (2022) and Russia and the GCC: The Case of Tatarstan's Paradiplomacy (2022).