Dar al-Harb as the Motherland? The Muslim Tatars of (the Grand Duchy of) Lithuania and Social Contract
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1558/cis.29620Keywords:
Tatars, Lithuanian Muslims, Islam in Lithuania, Dār al-ḤarbAbstract
Muslim presence in Lithuania, though already addressed from many angles, has not hitherto been approached from either the perspective of the social contract theories or of the compliance with Muslim jurisprudence. The author argues that through choice of non-Muslim Grand Duchy of Lithuania as their adopted Motherland, Muslim Tatars effectively entered into a unique (yet, from the point of Hanafi fiqh, arguably Islamically valid) social contract with the non-Muslim state and society. The article follows the development of this social contract since its inception in the fourteenth century all the way into the nation-state of Lithuania that emerged in the beginning of the twentieth century and continues until the present. The epitome of the social contract under investigation is the official granting in 1995 to Muslim Tatars of a status of one of the nine traditional faiths in Lithuania with all the ensuing political, legal and social consequences for both the Muslim minority and the state.References
Bairašauskaite Tamara and Egdunas Racius. 2016. “Lithuania.” In Muslim Tatar Minorities in the Baltic Sea Region, edited by Ingvar Svanberg and David Westerlund, 21–45. Leiden: Brill.
Bairašauskaite, Tamara. 1992. “Musulmonu konfesine bendruomene Nepriklausomoje Lietuvoje.” (Muslim Confessional Community in Independent Lithuania). Lietuvos istorijos metraštis (Lithuanian History Yearbook) 1991: 98–114.
Bairašauskaite, Tamara. 1996. Lietuvos totoriai XIX amžiuje (Lithuanian Tatars in the Nineteenth Century). Vilnius: Mintis.
Central Bank of the Republic of Lithuania. 1997. “50 litas coin issued to commemorate the 600th Anniversary of the settling down of Karaims and Tartars in Lithuania.” at http://www.lb.lt/1997_karaite [2016-01-06].
Central Bureau of Statistics. 1925. Lietuvos gyventojai: 1923 m. rugsejo 17 d. surašymo duomenys (Lithuania’s Population: Data of the 17 September 1923 Census). Kaunas: Central Bureau of Statistics.
Department of Statistics. 2002. Gyventojai pagal lyti, amžiu, tautybe ir tikyba (Population by Sex, Age and Religion), Vilnius: Statistikos departamentas.
Department of Statistics. 2013 Gyventojai pagal tautybe, gimtaja kalba ir tikyba [Population by Ethnicity, Native Language, and Faith], Vilnius: Statistikos departamentas.
Dumšiene, Perpetua. 2010. “Paminklas Vytautui Didžiajam ir 600-osioms Žalgirio mušio metinems.” [“Monument to Vytautas the Great and the 600 year anniversary of the Žalgiris battle”], at http://www.totoriai.lt/raiziai_paminklas.htm [2016-01- 06].
Encyclopaedia Britannica. “Social contract.” http://www.britannica.com/topic/social-contract [2016-01-05].
Fadl, Khaled Abou El. 1994. “Islamic law and Muslim minorities: The juristic discourse on Muslim minorities from the second/eighth to the eleventh/seventeenth centuries.” Islamic Law and Society 1(2): 141–187. https://doi.org/10.2307/3399332
Hassan, Said Fares. 2013. Fiqh al-Aqalliyyt: History, Development, and Progress. Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137350091
Jakubauskas, Romas. 2008. “Kreipimasis” [“Address”]. Lietuvos totoriai 7–9(2): 119–121.
Kasatkina, Natalija. 2003. “‘Istorines’ diasporos šiuolaikineje Lietuvos visuomeneje.” [“‘Historical.’ diasporas in modern Lithuanian society]. Filosofija. Sociologija 2: 37–43.
Lietuvos totoriai. 2011a. “Lietuvos Respublikos Prezidentes sveikinimas Lietuvos totoriu bendruomenei paminklo Vytautui Didžiajam atidengimo proga.” [“Congratulations of the President of the Republic of -Lithuania to the Lithuanian Tatar Community on the Occasion of Unveiling of the Monument to Vytautas the Great”]. 1–2: 131–132, 5.
Lietuvos totoriai. 2011b. “Sabantujus sugrižo i Trakus.” [Sabantuj has returned to Trakai]. Nr. 6-8 (136–138): 1.
Lithuanian Central State Archive, inventory number: collection 391, folder 4, case 148, sheets 2, 2ap.
Lithuanian Central State Archive, inventory number: collection 391, folder 4, case 1846, sheet 29.
Lithuanian Central State Archive, inventory number: collection 391, folder 4, case 1846, sheets 29ap, 30, 30ap.
March, Andrew F. 2007. “Islamic foundations for a social contract in non-Muslim liberal democracies.” The American Political Science Review 101(2): 235–252. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055407070128
Marsham, Andrew. 2009. Rituals of Islamic Monarchy. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
Nalborczyk, Agata S. and Borecki, Pawel. 2011. “Relations between Islam and the state in Poland: The legal position of Polish Muslims.” Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations 22(3): 343–359. https://doi.org/10.1080/09596410.2011.586514
Robertson Huffnagle, Holly. n.d. “‘Tolerancja i Tatarzy’: Muslims in the Christian Commonwealth, 16th–17th centuries.” Unpublished manuscript. 1-22.
Rumša, Jonas. 2011. “Nuo Žalgirio laiku iki musu dienu.” [“From the times of Žalgiris till our days”], Lietuvos totoriai. 6-8: 136–138, 6.
Seimas. 1995. Law on Religious Communities and Associations of the Republic of Lithuania,
http://www3.lrs.lt/pls/inter3/dokpaieska.showdoc_l?p_id=289917 [2012-05- 12].
Sitdykovas, Galimas. 2012. “Adas Jakubauskas: ‘Mano dalyvavimo rinkimu kampanijoje tikslas—noras padeti Lietuvos totoriu bendruomenei ir kitoms tautinems bendrijoms spresti susidariusias problemas’.” [“Adas Jakubauskas: ‘The aim of my participation in the elections campaign—the wish to help the Lithuanian Tatar community and other ethnic communities solve the pending problems’.”]. Lietuvos totoriai 4–6: 142–144, 1–2.