Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
In 1913, an article in a Russian missionary journal compared two “very typical representatives” of Islamic studies in Russia: İsmail Bey Gaspıralı (1851–1914) and Nikolai Ivanovich Il'minskii (1822–1891). Nothing could better symbolize the two opposing points of view about the past, present and future of the Muslims of Russia in 1913. Il'minskii was a Russian Orthodox missionary whose ideas and efforts had formed the imperial perceptions and policies about the Muslims of the Russian empire in the late Tsarist period, while Gaspıralı was a Muslim educator and publisher whose ideas and efforts had shaped the Muslim society per se in the same period. Il'minskii, beginning in the 1860s, and Gaspıralı, beginning in the 1880s, developed two formally similar but inherently contradictory programs for the Muslims of the Russian empire. Schooling and the creation of a literary language or literary languages constituted the hearts of both of their programs. Besides their own efforts, both Gaspıralı and Il'minskii had a large number of followers that diligently worked to put their programs into practice among the Muslims of Russia. As a result of the inherent contradiction of these programs, a bitter controversy developed between what we may call the Il'minskii and Gaspıralı groups, which particularly intensified after the revolution of 1905. In this article, I will discuss the underlying causes and development of this controversy by focusing on the role of language in the programs of Gaspıralı and Il'minskii. Then, I will conclude my article with an evaluation of the legacies of these two individuals in their own time and beyond.
1. Ostroumov, Nikolai, “K istorii musul'manskogo obrazovatel'nogo dvizheniia v Rossii v XIX i XX stoletiiakh,” Mir Islama, Vol. 2, No. 5, 1913, pp. 316–326. “Ismail Bei Gasprinskii” is the English transliteration of the Russianized form of Gaspirah's name.Google Scholar
2. There is a vast literature about the lives, works, and influences of both Gaspirah and Il'minskii. The best works in English include the following. On Gaspirah: Lazzerini, Edward J., Ismail Bey Gasprinskii and Muslim Modernism in Russia, 1878–1914 (Seattle: University of Washington, unpublished , 1973). There is a concise and good discussion in Kırımlı, Hakan, National Movements and National Identity among the Crimean Tatars, 1905–1916 (Leiden, NY: E. J. Brill, 1996). On Il'minskii: Isabelle Teitz Kreindler, Educational Policies toward the Eastern Nationalities in Tsarist Russia: A Study of Il'minskii's System (New York: Columbia University, unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, 1969). Unless indicated otherwise, I will use Kreindler's work for the biographical information on Il'minskii. Wayne Dowler, Classroom and Empire: The Politics of Schooling Russia's Eastern Nationalities, 1860–1917 (Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2001) provides an account of Il'minskii from an educational point of view. Robert Geraci, Window on the East: Ethnography, Orthodoxy, and Russian Nationality in Kazan, 1870–1914 (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2001) discusses Il'minskii at length in relation to his missionary work.Google Scholar
3. Il'minskii's main activity, which is generally known as the “Il'minskii system,” was among the baptized non-Russians of the empire rather than the Muslims, but the boundary between the baptized non-Russian and Muslim domains in the East of the empire was rather vague and Il'minskii also developed a system for the Muslims of the empire.Google Scholar
4. “Inorodtsy” is the Russian plural for the word inorodets. “Inorodets”, literally “that of the other kind,” was used to denote non-Russians in general, and more commonly the non-Russian peoples of eastern Russia in particular.Google Scholar
5. This is not a full list of the languages Il'minskii knew. It is only a list of the languages in which he conducted translation works and linguistic studies.Google Scholar
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13. Lazzerini, , Ismail Bey Gasprinskii, pp. 2–3.Google Scholar
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21. In 1913, Gaspirah wrote: “I would not let even one Turk move from his place in Russia if I had the power to do so, because one emigrating Turk is influencing ten others; he is leaving them in ambivalence, and he himself cannot find salvation in emigration; a homeland is being ruined, but another one is not being founded; nobody gains anything, everybody loses something.” Gaspirinski, İsmail, “Muhǎceret-i Muazzama,” Türk Yurdu, Vol. 2, 1328 (1913), p. 707. Quoted in Abdullah Saydam, Kırım ve Kafkas Göçleri (1856–1876) (Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi, 1997), p. 69. See also İsmail Gasprinskii, Russkoe Musul'manstvo (1881; reprint, Oxford: Society for Central Asian Studies, 1985), pp. 28–29.Google Scholar
22. There were two types of traditional Muslim schools: mektebs, elementary schools, and medreses, higher schools that had an exclusively religious character in nineteenth-century Russia until the reform movement that came toward the end of the nineteenth century. On the function of traditional education in the traditional Muslim societies in Russia, see: Khalid, Adeeb, The Politics of Muslim Cultural Reform: Jadidism in Central Asia (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1998), pp. 19–44. Although Khalid's work is confined to Central Asia, the situation in other parts of Russia was not much different.Google Scholar
23. Lazzerini, , Ismail Bey Gasprinskii, p. xx. School reforms of Şihabeddin Mercanǐ and Abdülqayyum Nasırǐ are two outstanding examples of these attempts.Google Scholar
24. Il'minskii, , “O perevode,” p. 3. For a case study about the impact of these everyday relations, see Kefeli-Clay, , “L'Islam populaire.”Google Scholar
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26. “İsmail Bey Gaspirinskiy ile Mülǎqat,” Tasvir-i Efkǎr, 27 June 1908.Google Scholar
27. Il'minskii, Nikolai I., “O primenenii Russkogo alfavita k inorodcheskim iazykam,” in Nikolai Ivanovich Il'minskii, pp. 5–6. Beginning from the late eighteenth century, the Holy Synod had engaged in the translation of Christian texts into the languages of the inorodtsy. In 1883, Il'minskii analyzed these translations in a long treatise. He contended that these translations were unsuccessful because they had not paid attention to the lexical, semantic, and syntactic rules of the vernaculars. Nikolai I. Il'minskii, Opyty perelozheniia khristianskikh verouchitel'nykh knig na Tatarskii i drugie inorodcheskie iazyki v nachale tekushchogo stoleiia (Kazan': Tipgrafiia Imperatorskogo Universiteta, 1883).Google Scholar
28. Il'minskii, , “O perevode,” p. 14.Google Scholar
29. Chicherina, Sophia, O iazyke prepodavanyia v shkolakh dlia vostochnykh inorodtsev (S-Petersburg: Tipografiia V. Ia. Mil'shteina, 1910), p. 7; and I. Iznoskov, “Pamiati Nikolaia Ivanovicha Il'minskogo,” in Nikolai Ivanovich Il'minskii, p. 95. Also see Il'minskii, “Pravoslavnoe bogosluzhenie,” and Nikolai I. Il'minskii, “O tserkovnom bogosluzhenii na inorodcheskikh iazykakh,” in Nikolai Ivanovich Il'minskii, pp. 30–40.Google Scholar
30. Dowler, , Classroom and Empire, p. 63.Google Scholar
31. “K voprosu ob ustroistve uchilishch dlia inorodcheskikh detei Kazanskogo uchebnogo okruga,” Zhurnal Ministerstva Narodnogo Prosveshcheniia (April 1867), ch. 134, pp. 75–96; and Nikolai I. Il'minskii, “Shkola dlia pervonachal'nogo obucheniia detei kreshchenykh Tatar, v Kazani,” Zhurnal Ministerstva Narodnogo Prosveshcheniia (June 1867), ch. 134, pp. 293–328.Google Scholar
32. Neverov, M. uses the term “Il'minskii system.” Neverov, M., “K voprosu ob obrazvanii inorodtsev,” Zhurnal Ministerstva Narodnogo Prosveshcheniia (December 1869), ch. 146, p. 127.Google Scholar
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34. Ibid., p. 84; Dowler, , Classroom and Empire, pp. 79–80, 177–187.Google Scholar
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36. Il'minskii, , Pis'ma, p. 223. During the imperial period “Tatar” basically denoted any Muslim living in the Russian empire, but it was more specifically used for the Lithuanian Tatars, Crimean Tatars, Kazan Tatars and the Caucasian Muslims. Russians called today's Kazakhs the “Kyrgyz” and today's Kirgiz “Kara-Kyrgyz.” The most general term for the Muslims of sedentary Central Asia was “Sart.” One should be careful about this terminology. In particular the word “Tatar” could have different meanings in different contexts. It could mean all the Muslims of the Russian empire in Gaspirah's usage, while it could mean the sedentary Muslims of European Russia in distinction from the nomadic Turkic tribes to their east in a text by Il'minskii.Google Scholar
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39. Alektorov, , “Iz istorii razvitiia,” p. 187. Ámos Komenský, Jan was the first known person to systematize and popularize the translative method. He arranged his books in columns with the same text in different languages. Thus the student would learn by comparing the foreign language with his native language. “Comenius, John Amos” Encyclopœdia Britannica Online. <http://www.eb.com:180/bol/topic?eu=25332&sctn=1> (accessed 6 April 2001). Il'minskii knew, respected, and quoted Komenský. Nikolai I. Il'minskii, “Besedy o narodnoi shkole,” in Nikolai Ivanovich Il'minskii, pp. 76–77.+(accessed+6+April+2001).+Il'minskii+knew,+respected,+and+quoted+Komenský.+Nikolai+I.+Il'minskii,+“Besedy+o+narodnoi+shkole,”+in+Nikolai+Ivanovich+Il'minskii,+pp.+76–77.>Google Scholar
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55. Il'minskii, , Pis'ma, pp. 338–339. Unfortunately Smirnov's letters to Il'minskii (NART, f. 968, op. 1, d. 145) are lost.Google Scholar
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101. Quoted in Ostroumov, , “K istorii musul'manskogo,” pp. 322–326. Altınsarin's system, which used the Kazakh vernacular as the medium of instruction, had a limited usage by 1905. Russo-native schools generally used Russian as the language of instruction.Google Scholar
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131. Two examples are Abdürreşid İbrahim, who had organized the Muslim congresses after the revolution of 1905, and Yusuf Akçura, who had acted as the spokesman of the Muslim faction in the Duma.Google Scholar
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138. Usmanov, Mirkasım A., “O triumphe i tragedii idei Gasprinskogo,” in Ismail Bei Gasprinskii—Rossiia i vostok (Kazan': Tatarskoe knizhnoe izdatel'stvo, 1993), pp. 3–15.Google Scholar
139.
Being a Turk and having an academic interest in the affairs of the Turkic world, I personally witnessed and continue to witness the appearance of these ideas, and it is impossible to cite all of them. For a few concrete examples, read through the following Web pages: SOTA Turkic Web Pages <http://www.turkiye.net/sota/sota.html> and Erk Democratic Party of Uzbekistan <http://www.uzbekistanerk.org/>.+and+Erk+Democratic+Party+of+Uzbekistan+
140. See <http://www.ismailgaspirali.org> (a Web page designed for the 150th anniversary of Gaspırah's birth).+(a+Web+page+designed+for+the+150th+anniversary+of+Gaspırah's+birth).>Google Scholar
141. For a collection of the summaries of the works presented in this conference, see Chervonnaia, Svetlana M., Ismail Gasprinskii—prosvetitel'naraodov Vostoka, k 150-letiiu co dnia rozhdeniia, Materialy Mezhdunarodnoi nauchnoi konferentsii (Moscow: N.I.I. teorii i istorii izobrazitel'nykh iskusstv Rossiiskoi Akademii khudozhestv, 2001).Google Scholar