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Gulag Miracles

Gulag Miracles
Sufis and Stalinist Repression in Kazakhistan
1. Auflage, 2019
The book Gulag Miracles: Sufis and Stalinist Repression in Kazakhstan, represents the first detailed study of Muslim religious responses to totalitarian repression during the first half of the 20th century, and is therefore of interest to specialists in Islamic Studies, Religious Studies, Russian and Soviet History, Central Asian and Turkic Studies, and Sufi Studies. Based on Kazakh-language hagiographies produced by Sufi communities, the monograph examines how these communities interpreted and explained the experience of repression (anti-religious policies targeting Sufis, collectivization, famine, and mass arrests), and how these communities adjusted to Soviet life after the Second World War. At the center of the study are a series of miracle stories, set in the Gulag, recounting the experiences of saints and other prominent members of these communities with Stalinist repression. These stories, rich in symbolic meaning, circulated among these communities in the Soviet era, and contain political critiques of the Stalin era, based on Islamic and Sufi ethics. These hagiographies, published in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, clearly reveal the continuity of Sufi concepts in Kazakh communities from the medieval period, through to independence, bringing into question the degree to which the Soviet era represented a rupture in the religious lives of Muslim communities. The book also considers the role of Sufi communities in Kazakh kinship structures, and their manifestation during the Soviet era. In this context, it reevaluates much that has been written about “Soviet Islam”, questioning the justification for separating the Soviet Union and its Muslim communities from the rest of the “Muslim World”. The hagiographies demonstrate that while Sufi communities underwent a degree of Sovietization, as reflected in their stories, this Sovietization was accomplished, ironically, by a parallel “Islamization” of various aspects of the Soviet experience.
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Acknowledgements
Page 7 - 8

Chapter 1. Muslim Hagiographies and the Social History of Central Asia - Central Asian hagiographies as historical sources - Hagiographical elements in Muslim compositional genres - Regional and thematic aspects of hagiographic traditions - Kazakh hagiographies - Sources for modern Kazakh hagiographies and shrine catalogs
Page 17 - 32

Chapter 2. Sufi Communities and the Significance of Miracles - Sufi communities in Central Asia - Miracles and sacred lineages - Five Ishan lineages in Kazakhstan
Page 33 - 60

Chapter 3. Confiscation, Collectivization, and Repression - Ishans and the state to 1917 - Stalinist repression in Kazakhstan
Page 61 - 84

Chapter 4. Gulag Miracles and Sacred Relics - Gulag miracles - Relics and other sacred objects
Page 85 - 102

Chapter 5. Accommodation, Sovietization, and Islamization - Sacred lineages and the Second World War - Ishans and Soviet career paths - Saints on the collective farm: Tractor and rain miracles - Ishans and Soviet patriotism
Page 103 - 116

Conclusion
Page 117 - 118

Appendix: Miracles in the Gulag and Tsarist Prisons
Page 119 - 132

Bibliography
Page 133 - 142

Maps
Page 143 - 146

Index
Page 147 - 154

Edition:
978-3-7001-8334-1, Print, softcover, 30.09.2019
Edition:
1. Auflage
Pages:
153 Pages
Format:
22,5x15,0cm
Language:
English
DOI (Link to Online Edition):

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