Entangled Religions - Interdisciplinary Journal for the Study of Religious Contact and Transfer (Jun 2021)

(PREPRINT) ‘Popular Ijtihad’ and Entangled Islamic Discourse on the Covid-19 Pandemic in Russia

  • Anonymous

DOI
https://doi.org/10.46586/er.12.2021.8919
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3

Abstract

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In this article, I examine initial reactions of the Russian Muslim community in social networks to the spread of the coronavirus. My two main questions are: who and how reinterprets the category of Islamic piety in the context of the pandemic, and to what extent the online environment transforms the Islamic tradition. To answer them, I focus on the following key narratives of Russian Muslims’ online discourse on the pandemic: Covid-19 as a retaliation against China for the persecutions of Muslim Uighurs in Xinjiang region, the search for signs of the coming doomsday, as well as various approaches to the reinterpretation of religious piety. Moreover, I consider how the pandemic speeded up building the entangled glocalised discourse. In the context of increased role of transnational online Muslim community, I suggest the term ‘popular ijtihad’ to describe individualized forms of religious engagement that the crisis situation stimulated.

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