JTA -
10.24.2001
Jewish
Telegraphic Agency
Some Jews in Central Asia
Worry as War Rages and Islam Grows
By Lev Gorodetsky
MOSCOW,
Oct. 21 (JTA) — The overwhelming support that Jews in Central Asia
have for their countries' participation in the U.S.-led airstrikes
against Afghanistan is not creating any troubles with their Muslim
countrymen, say Jewish leaders in the region.
But given
the tenuous state of relations between Jews and Muslims in the region,
this assessment could soon change.
"There
have been no acts of anti-Semitism recently. The situation is
stable," Roman Bensman of Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan, told
JTA, praising Uzbek President Islam Karimov.
Marek
Fazilov, a leader of the Jewish community in Tashkent, added: "All
local Jews side with President Karimov in his support of the U.S. action
in Afghanistan and in his crackdown on the Islamic extremists inside the
country."
Karimov
does indeed appear committed to maintaining friendly relations with his
country's Jews, and to his crackdown on Islamic fundamentalism.
But the
reality for the estimated 50,000 to 60,000 Jews in the region — split
between Bukharan Jews, who have long been in the region, and Ashkenazic
Jews, who settled here in the past 75 years — is, and long has been,
far more complex.
"There
has never been any real anti-Semitism here, probably because we have
very close links with the locals and they perceive us" as their own
people, Boris Borukhov, a leader of the 2,000-person Jewish community in
Tajikistan, told JTA.
Borukhov
is mainly speaking about the attitude of the Tajik population toward
Bukharan Jews.
Bukharan
Jews, who are descendants of the ancient Persian Jewish community and
speak Farsi, are believed to have settled in what is now called
Tajikistan as early as the fifth century B.C. E.
During
the first few centuries of the common era, they moved north and
eventually formed large communities in what is now Uzbekistan, southern
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Turkmenistan.
During
the ensuing centuries, Bukharan Jews enjoyed a generally peaceful
co-existence alongside their Muslim neighbors.
Manifestations
of anti-Semitism, including forced conversions to Islam and even cases
of blood libel, were not unknown in Central Asia, but they were far less
frequent and less numerous than in the Slavic parts of the Russian
Empire and the Soviet Union.
Bukharan
Jews long made up the majority of Jews in the region, but after the mass
emigration to Israel and the United States in the 1990s, they are now
only an estimated one-third of Central Asia's 60,000 Jews.
Many of
the remaining two-thirds are the Ashkenazic Jews who settled here during
World War II after fleeing Poland and Western parts of the Soviet Union.
Many of
these Jews were skilled professionals — in such fields as medicine,
engineering, science and music — who formed after the war the backbone
of the local intelligentsia and greatly enhanced the level of culture
and technology in the region.
But as
far as many ethnic Uzbeks, Tajiks and Kazakhs are concerned, the
Ashkenazic Jews were Russian colonizers.
After the
collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, nationalists in Central Asia
started to press for the expulsion of all Russian speakers, no matter
what their ethnic origin.
As a
result, 80 percent of these Ashkenazi Jews left during the last decade
for Israel, Russia, United States and Germany.
Those who
stayed occasionally meet with animosity.
Maria
Semenova, a university instructor, says she was recently harassed and
beaten by ethnic Uzbeks in a Tashkent bus on her way to classes.
When she
appealed to the police, the officers held her until late at night at the
police station, planted drugs in her bag and tried to squeeze a $300
bribe out of her before freeing her, she said.
According
to her, the police said, "What are you Jews still doing here? We're
the masters of the place. You have nothing to do here."
As
Mikhail Degtiar puts its, "There is no state anti-Semitism. But on
the everyday level there is a permanent pressure. All Russian speakers
live in a state of a constant fear. Besides the Islamic terror, there is
the terror of the authorities against everybody."
Degtiar,
a sociology professor, would know.
Until
recently, he was a Jewish community leader in Uzbekistan. But after the
authorities pressed charges against him for an article he published in a
journal in which he predicted the end of Jewish life in Uzbekistan, he
fled to the United States.
Jewish
leaders report that Muslim-Jewish relations have not deteriorated, but
some worry that tensions could mount as the war in Afghanistan
intensifies.
"The
situation is stable, there are no anti-Semitic outbursts, but there is
an uneasy feeling because the war is drawing nearer," Rosa Fish,
the leader of the 2,500-strong Jewish community in Kyrgyzstan,
considered the most democratic country in the region, told JTA.
Indeed,
reports from provincial cities in Tajikistan say Islamic activists are
distributing leaflets blaming the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on Zionists
who wanted the United States to launch a war against Islam. These
leaflets echo a lie that has gained widespread currency in the Arab and
Muslim worlds.
The
unease that some Jews are feeling is not the only problem in the region,
according to some human rights groups.
Though
Uzbek President Karimov is viewed by the U.S. administration as the main
guarantor of stability in the region and a crucial ally, some of these
rights groups are not happy with his methods.
"We
are very concerned about the situation for Jews in Central Asia as
Islamic fundamentalism becomes increasingly strong," Nikolai
Butkevich of the Washington-based Union of Councils for Jews in the
Former Soviet Union told JTA.
"At
the same time, Uzbekistan is a classic case study of how not to deal
with radical Islam. By arresting and harassing people simply because
they demonstrate Islamic piety by growing beards or wearing head scarfs,
the government is pushing them into the arms of the fanatics."
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