http://austrolabe.com/2007/01/15/islam-in-the-russian-federation/

 


 <http://austrolabe.com/2007/01/15/islam-in-the-russian-federation/> Islam
in the Russian Federation


January 15th, 2007 by  <http://austrolabe.com/author/delicious/> Austrolabe 

The  <http://da.mod.uk/> Defence Academy of the United Kingdom have released
a
<http://www.defac.ac.uk/colleges/csrc/document-listings/russian/06%2853%29MA
S.pdf> fascinating paper [PDF] on the state of Islam and Muslims in the
Russian Federation.

According to this study, Muslims have a much higher birthrate than the
Slavic component of the society, with Russia set to become increasingly
"Islamic" over the coming decades. Although there is no "Muslim lobby" in
Russian politics, the demographic shifts will almost certainly lead to an
increased Islamic or Muslim influence on Russian society and politics
(including foreign policy). This will, the report warns, lead to increased
tensions between Slavs and Muslims; tensions which are already becoming
evident.

The entire report is worth reading, but part of the first section on
demographics paints an interesting picture:

In the last USSR census of 1989, Moslems in the Russian Federation were
reckoned to be 12 million, or 8 per cent of the Russian Federation
population. The 2002 Russian Federation census reveals that the Moslem
component of the Russian Federation is 14.5 million (out of a total
population of 144 million).3 However this is claimed in some quarters to be
an underestimate. Ravil Gaynutdin, head of the Council of Muftis of Russia,
announced in August 2005 that Russia's population contains 23 million ethnic
Moslems.4 The Moslem population has been boosted by the influx of immigrants
from Moslem parts of the former Soviet Union. An estimated 3-4 million
Moslems are migrants from former Soviet regions, including 2 million Azeris,
1 million Kazakhs, and several hundred thousand Uzbeks, Tajiks and Kyrgyz.
Moreover, the growth rate of the Moslem population is faster than that of
the Slavic population of the Russian Federation. Although the total Russian
population dropped by 400,000 in the first half of 2005, it increased in 15
regions, such as the Moslem republics of Chechnya, Dagestan and Ingushetia.
The birth rate is 1.8 children per woman in Dagestan, versus 1.3 for Russia
as a whole. Male life expectancy is 68 in Dagestan, versus 58 for Russia
overall.

Russia had about 300 mosques in 1991 and now there are at least 8,000 (more
than in Egypt, which has a population of 75 million), about half of which
were built with money from abroad, especially from Turkey, Iran and Saudi
Arabia. There were no Islamic religious schools in 1991 and today there are
between 50 and 60, teaching as many as 50,000 students. There are 3098
registered Moslem communities. The number of Russians going on the hajj each
year has increased from 40 in 1991 to 13,500 in 2005.



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