IWPR
- 26 July 2002
Posted 30 July 2002 on RELIGIOSCOPE
The
authorities' crackdown on Islamic radicalism appears to have
prompted many young Uzbeks to join the growing number of Christian
groups in the country.
Government
intolerance of Islamic fundamentalism is driving scores of
Uzbek youth into the arms of new Christian groups practising
in the Jizak region - some of which offer financial incentives
to their followers.
"President
Islam Karimov's regime discriminates against Islam and Muslims
under the guise of fighting religious militancy and international
terrorism," said convert Rano Pirmatova, a student
at Jizak Pedagogical Institute. "But a human being
needs to believe in something."
"Islam
is strongly discouraged, so we chose Christianity. However,
if the Uzbek constitution means what it says, surely we are
free to worship any way we choose."
Mainstream
religious practise, tightly controlled by the state, does
not always appeal to the younger generation, some of whom
are increasingly drawn to the more fundamentalist branches
of Islam.
In
this devout Sunni Muslim country, non-traditional Islamic
groups are viewed with suspicion by the authorities. Some
of the more radical groups such as Hizb-ut Tahrir and the
Wahabbi movement have been banned, and a large number of suspected
members have been imprisoned.
Following
the September 11 attacks in America, radical Muslim groups
have become associated with terrorism, which in turn has also
discouraged young people from joining their ranks.
This
has left an ideological vacuum that many new Christian groups
are seeking to fill. Other young converts, however, point
to very different motives. Another student at the institute,
who declined to give her name, told IWPR that many were lured
by financial gain.
"Missionaries
paid me 50 US dollars when I converted, and promised more
later. To earn more, my task is to preach Christianity to
other young Uzbek Muslims," she said.
Educated
young people are the main target of the evangelising groups,
with significant numbers of students at educational institutes
in Tashkent reportedly abandoning Islam in favour of the Christian
faith. But there are also suggestions that older Uzbeks, usually
the parents of new members, sometimes join too.
This
was the experience of one 65-year-old Jizak woman who did
not want to be named. "I followed my daughter's suit
and converted to Christianity. I feel relieved now, having
left Islam behind. Islam never worked for me," she
told IWPR.
Uzbekistan,
with a population of around 25 million people, has long been
acknowledged as the most religious country in Central Asia,
and has been the historic centre of Islamic education in the
area.
Islam
was the dominant religion in the country until the 19th century
when the conquering Russians settled in the area and began
to practise their own faith.
While
Russian Orthodoxy is now established in Uzbekistan, the missionary
groups have only had a presence in the country since the mid-Nineties.
So far the Religions Committee of Uzbekistan has registered
60 Korean Protestant, five Catholic and four Evangelist churches.
Most of the new Christian organisations are active in the
Fergana valley, traditionally Uzbekistan's most Islamic area.
There
are now signs of growing unease at government level over the
proliferation of non-traditional Christian groups.
Aqmal
Saidov, director of the National Centre for Human Rights,
told IWPR that the authorities have placed constraints on
visiting missionaries from Protestant groups such as Word
of Faith and Mission of Mercy, both of which were denied official
registration.
Such
moves, he wrote, were aimed at preventing "outbursts
of religious intolerance among members of Uzbekistan's traditional
denominations, Islam and Russian Orthodox Christianity".
Local authorities in the Jizak region are also concerned about
the growing influence of the missionaries, with assistant
regional prosecutor Tuychi Khaitmatov saying the number of
Uzbeks converting to Christianity was "alarming".
"Our
office has received numerous complaints with people urging
us to take a stance on foreign religions and prevent young
Muslims from defecting," he said.
Last
month, three meetings were held in Jizak where local government
officials asked parents to be vigilant and discourage their
children from joining Christian groups. The city prosecutor
has also issued "warnings" to more than 30
prospective converts, urging them to reconsider.
Jizak
assistant prosecutor Nikholboy Normatov believes people are
tempted to convert because it is "easier" to follow Christian commandments than to be a good Muslim.
Another
pedagogical institute student told IWPR that regional National
Security Service agents paid frequent visits to the campus.
"They
hold meetings, cautioning us against Christianity," he said. "However, we can remember them holding similar
meetings cautioning us against Islam and showing footage of
radical Muslim violence."
Ulugbek
Khaidarov