Tibetan Reform and the Kalmyk Revival of Buddhism

Inner Asia ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 241-259 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tara Sinclair

AbstractThe anti-religious campaigns of the Soviet Union in the 1930s eradicated Kalmyk Buddhism from the public sphere. Following perestroika the Kalmyks retain a sense of being an essentially Buddhist people. Accordingly, the new Kalmyk government is reviving the religion with the building of temples and the attempted training of Kalmyk monks, yet monasticism is proving too alien for young post-soviets. According to traditional Kalmyk Gelug Buddhism authoritative Buddhist teachers must be monks, so monastic Tibetans from India have been invited to the republic to help revive Buddhism. The subsequent labelling by these monks of 'surviving' Kalmyk Buddhist practices as superstitious, mistaken or corrupt is an initial step in the purification of alternate views, leading to religious reform. This appraisal of historical practices is encouraged by younger Kalmyks who do not find sense in surviving Buddhism but are enthused with the philosophical approach taught by visiting Buddhist teachers at Dharma centres. By discussing this post-Soviet shift in local notions of religious efficacy, I show how the social movements of both reform and revival arise as collusion between contemporary Tibetan and Kalmyk views on the nature of true Buddhism.

2014 ◽  
Vol 1020 ◽  
pp. 707-710 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zaruhi Mamian

Within the last 20 years due to the collapse of the Soviet Union, the declaration of independence of the Republic of Armenia, the establishment of new economic relations as well as the absence of centralized state means, an unregulated and undesirable process of construction has come into being. These changes made the gap between the reality and the present documents of urban planning projects, legislative documentations and socioeconomic relations even deeper. In the current social-political situation it has become a necessity to define the main trends of the development of the city of Yerevan and the reformation of its center. Moreover, these trends should correspond to the existing legal and economic fields, which in its turn will lead to the formation of new public centers. At present we have very few samples of historical and cultural heritage that witness about our urban past. There also exist some historically treasured areas that are subject to reconstruction. The aim of urban planning, in general, is to turn the public formation contents into an artistic image. This presupposes the planning and objectification of the environment characteristic to the given public formation. It is very important to find the standards which can help to organize areas in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, along the abovementioned lines.


Slavic Review ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 79 (4) ◽  
pp. 778-799
Author(s):  
Lusia Zaitseva

This article contributes to the study of gender and dissidence in the Soviet Union by examining the feud between two significant authors of cultural samizdat and tamizdat—Nadezhda Mandeľshtam and Lidiia Chukovskaia—through an updated feminist lens. It draws on prose unpublished in their lifetimes and presents previously undiscovered writing by Mandeľshtam in order to examine the origins and substance of their feud. I argue that their distinctive modes of authorship date to their relationship with Anna Akhmatova and subsequent differing approaches to her legacy. These approaches reveal their shared conservative attitude regarding gender and moral authority in the nascent liberal Soviet counterpublic as well as their diverging understandings of how the transnational public sphere could help bring about much-needed changes at home. These attitudes shaped how they regarded each other and continue to have salience for our understanding of women's participation in the public sphere in Russia today.


Author(s):  
Tuomas Tepora

AbstractThis chapter shows how the social and political changes in Finnish society in the early 1990s were reflected in the images of C. G. E. Mannerheim (1867–1951), the Marshal of Finland. By looking at the debate concerning the construction of the Museum of Contemporary Art right next to the Mannerheim equestrian statue in Helsinki, Tepora analyzes the public dispute as a moral panic that sprang from the 1990s recession, the collapse of the Soviet Union, and joining the European Union. Arguing for the study of nontotalitarian personality cults, Tepora shows how the opposing sides in the debate either rose to defend the conservative Mannerheim image as an unchanging emotional figure or recoded the figure to reflect their liberal and cosmopolitan perspectives.


2019 ◽  
pp. 80-100
Author(s):  
Shugatai Amangul

 After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Kazakhstan government implemented ethnic-based immigration policies which call for ethnic Kazakhs from abroad return to their historical homeland. In 1991, Kazakhstan started a repatriation process of calling back its ethnic Kazakh to belong to the new nation, and to their new found ethnic identity. The immigration policies has including the “repatriation process of ethnics”, have helped significantly as Kazakhs tries to reconcile past wrongs, increase internal stability and conserve national identity. Because of the Soviet era much of Kazakh language and traditional cultures was sufficiently reduced in the public sphere, and the ethnic composition in this country was dominated by non-titular ethnics Thus, that ethnic immigration policy focused on change ethno-demographic structure of the Kazakhstan and increasing the total population size. This article focused to analyze the results of the ethnic immigration policy of Kazakhstan, how it has changed the immigration policy over the last 30 years. Казахстан улсын угсаатны шилжилт хөдөлгөөний бодлого, түүний үр дүн Хураангуй: 1991 онд Зөвлөлт Холбоот Улс (ЗХУ) задарч, Бүгд Найрамдах Казахстан Улс (БНКазУ) байгуулагдсаны дараа тус улсад хүн амын “олон улсын шилжилт хөдөлгөөн”-ий урсгал эрчимтэй явагдаж эхэлсэн билээ. Шинээр тусгаар тогтносон БНКазУ хүн амын тогтвортой өсөлтийг дэмжих, нийт хүн амд казах угсаатны эзлэх хэмжээг нэмэгдүүлэх замаар угсаатны бүтцээ өөрчлөх, нийгэм эдийн засгийн хөгжилтэй уялдуулан хүн амын амьжиргааны түвшинг дээшлүүлэх зэрэг зорилтуудыг дэвшүүлсэн. Энэ хүрээнд дэлхийн өнцөг булан бүрээс казах угсаатнуудыг өөрсдийн “түүхэн эх нутаг” (historical homeland) болох БНКазУ-д шилжин ирж суурьших уриа дуудлага болгож, хүн амын шилжилт хөдөлгөөний тусгай бодлогыг хэрэгжүүлсэн. Ингэснээр БНКазУ-ыг чиглэсэн казах үндэстний хил дамнасан шилжилт хөдөлгөөн бүс нутгийн ба дэлхийн хэмжээнд эрчимтэй өрнөж, өнөөдрийг хүртэл тасралтгүй үргэлжилж байна. Энэхүү өгүүлэлд БНКазУ-ын Засгийн газраас нийт хүн амд эзлэх казах үндэстний тоог нэмэгдүүлэх, угсаатны бүтцийг өөрчлөхийн тулд 1991 оноос хойш 30 орчим жилийн хугацаанд хэрэгжүүлж буй шилжилт хөдөлгөөний (цагаачлал) бодлогын хэрэгжилт, түүний үр дүнд задлан шинжилгээ хийхийг зорилоо. Түлхүүр үг: Бүгд Найрамдах Казахстан Улс, хүн ам зүйн бодлого, угсаатны бүтцийн өөрчлөлт, диаспора, казах үндэстний шилжилт хөдөлгөөн


Religions ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Davide N. Carnevale

This paper explores the relationship between human rights and social analysis within the main historical and theoretical perspectives adopted by social sciences. In particular, religious freedom will be analysed as one of the central issues in the recent engagement of the social sciences with human rights. After examining current narratives and mainstream approaches of the social sciences towards the right to religious freedom, this article will then underline the importance of a social epistemology which goes beyond a normative and legal perspective, bridging the gap between the framework of human rights and the social roles of religion in context. Within this framework, religious freedom represents a social construct, whose perception, definition and implementation dynamically evolves according to its influence, at different levels, in the lived dimension of social relations. The second part of the article proposes a context-grounded analysis of religious freedom in the Republic of Moldova. This case study is characterised by the impressive growth of Orthodoxy after the demise of the Soviet Union and by a complex and contradictory political approach towards religious freedom, both as a legal standard and as a concept. Emerging through the analysis of local political narratives and some preliminary ethnographical observations, the social importance of religion will be investigated both as a governmental instrument and as an embodied means of dealing with widespread socio-economic insecurity, creating tensions between religious rootedness and religious freedom. The local debate on religious freedom will then be related to the influence of geopolitical borders, the topic of traditional identity and the religious form of adaptation to the ineffectiveness of the new secular local policies, with orthodox institutions and parishes having new socio-political roles at both a global and local scale.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 (62) ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstantin Zamyatin

As a part of the “parade of sovereignties” during the disintegration of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, the national republics of Russia designated both Russian and local languages as their state languages. The co-official status of the dominant Russian language by default prevented full-fledged official bilingualism, and serious steps were needed to promote non-dominant local languages in the public sphere. Beyond a mere formal recognition of their official status, the republican authorities passed regulations in order to provide institutional support for the local languages, the amount of which varied across republics. However, the extent of such regulations remains understudied and the best way to evaluate it would be a comparative analysis. What was the level of institutionalization of the official status in the case of titular languages in Russia’s republics? This study examines various solutions for framing the official status of titular languages in regional language legislations in order to understand the patterns of institutionalization. The republics titled after the Finno-Ugric peoples were chosen as case studies for the comparison. The study reveals that language legislation contains serious deficiencies in institutionalization of the official status of titular languages, which impede possibilities for their practical use in office.


Author(s):  
Asher Orkaby

The deposed Yemeni Imam Muhammad al-Badr escaped the shelling of his palace in September 1962 and fled north to gather loyal tribal militias. By the time al-Badr’s escape was revealed to the public, two months after the initial assault on Sana’a, most of the world had already recognized the new republic, under the assumption that al-Badr was dead. Egypt and the Soviet Union, which had both developed a close alliance with al-Badr before 1962, were compelled to recognize the republic or risk losing their political, economic, and strategic investments in Yemen. What emerged at the end of 1962 was a civil war between an Imam and his loyal tribesmen and a weak republic supported by Egypt and the Soviet Union.


2021 ◽  
pp. 144-178
Author(s):  
Krista A. Goff

The chapter focuses on the trajectory of Talysh national identifications and classifications, which was being erased from the public sphere in the Soviet Union. It explores why Talyshes were vulnerable to assimilatory politics and the architecture of Soviet myths of nontitular assimilation. It also argues that theories of Soviet modernity, as well as Talysh ethnonational ties to Iran, are key variables that shaped Talysh experiences in the Soviet Union. The chapter mentions A. A. Isupov, the head of the Administration's Department of the All-Union Census, who invoked an ethnographer's account of Talysh assimilation to explain that the Talysh men were not Talysh but Azerbaijani. It explains how censuses have constitutive power and in the Soviet Union, which played an important role in naturalizing discourses of minority assimilation.


Author(s):  
Ryan Gingeras

In the first years after its founding, the Republic of Turkey was widely praised as a model state governed by an enlightened elite. In contrast to the Soviet Union or Nazi Germany, Turkey was viewed as politically moderate, stable, and friendly to the West. It instead appeared to be a state that had radically transformed itself into a strong, united, and progressive nation unburdened by its past. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk was held to be the chief architect and engineer of this feat and was placed by many among the greatest reforming statesmen in world history. These perceptions of Atatürk and his revolutionary rule have endured to this day. As a study grounded in untapped archival and scholarly sources, Eternal Dawn presents a definitive look inside the development and evolution of Atatürk’s Turkey. Ryan Gingeras presents Turkey’s early years as the culmination of a variety of social and political forces dating back to the late Ottoman Empire. Eternal Dawn presses beyond the reigning mythology that still envelops this period and challenges many of the standing assumptions about the limits, successes, and consequences of the reforms of Mustafa Kemal. Through a detailed survey of the social and political conditions that defined life in Turkey’s diverse provinces, Ryan Gingeras lays bare many of the harsh realities and bitter legacies of the republic’s founding. Atatürk’s revolution destroyed as much as it built and established precedents that strengthened and undermined the country’s long-term stability.


Author(s):  
Angela Dranishnikova ◽  
Ivan Semenov

The national legal system is determined by traditional elements characterizing the culture and customs that exist in the social environment in the form of moral standards and the law. However, the attitude of the population to the letter of the law, as a rule, initially contains negative properties in order to preserve personal freedom, status, position. Therefore, to solve pressing problems of rooting in the minds of society of the elementary foundations of the initial order, and then the rule of law in the public sphere, proverbs and sayings were developed that in essence contained legal educational criteria.


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