Sultan Mirsayev

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Sultan Mirzaev ( Russian Султан Мирзаев . Scientific transliteration Sultan Mirzaev ; also: Sultan Mirzayev, born 1964 ) is the Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Religious Council of the Caucasus Peoples and he was head of the Spiritual Board of Muslims of the Chechen Republic and Mufti of Chechnya and the religious head of the Chechens . The official seat of the Muftiate is at the Akhmat Kadyrov Mosque .

The Bishop of Stavropol and Vladikavkaz Feofan, President Ramzan Kadyrov and Mufti Sultan Mirsayev at the opening of the Akhmat Kadyrov Mosque in the Chechen capital Grozny (2008).

He is a graduate of the Faculty of Civil Engineering of the Grozny Petroleum Institute and the Islamic University of Dagestan in the Dagestani capital Makhachkala . He speaks Arabic and Turkish.

The division of tasks with the Chechen President was described as follows:

"While President Ramzan Kadyrov is responsible for the development of the infrastructure and quiet on the streets, Mufti Mirsayev is responsible for the» spiritual and moral rebirth of the Chechen Republic «."

He considers his most important task in the office of spiritual leader to be “to lead the ideological struggle against the spread of Wahhabism in Chechnya and to actively propagate traditional Islam”.

Ramzan Kadyrov initiated the election of the new mufti after the death of his father, the mufti and president Akhmat Kadyrov , who was killed in a bomb attack in Grozny on May 9, 2004.

In 1999 he was the then mufti of Chechnya, on a proposal Achmat Kadyrov , chairman of the Supreme Sharia -Gerichtes of Ichkeria appointed. Muftis initiated.

According to islamrf.ru , he has been conducting studies in the Department of State-Church Relations of the Russian Academy of Public Administration under the President of the Russian Federation since 2006 .

In 2014 he resigned his Mufti post for health reasons, and his deputy Magomed Hiytanaev (Магомед Хийтанаев) was appointed as his managing successor. Salach Meschijew later became a Mufti.

See also

References and footnotes

  1. Whose chairman is Sheikhülislam Grand Mufti Allahşükür Paşazadə (Allahshukur Pashazade).
  2. Russian Феофан (Ашурков) (see chechnyatoday.com ) - accessed on December 5, 2017
  3. Named after Akhmat Kadyrov , the former Mufti and President of the Chechen Republic , who was killed in a bomb attack in Grozny on May 9, 2004. Ramzan Kadyrov is his son.
  4. Russian Дагестанский исламский университет
  5. islamrf.ru: Мирзаев Султан Бетерович - accessed on December 4, 2017
  6. new-deutschland.de: On Fridays only dressed in office: After the infrastructure has been rebuilt, Chechnya’s public and private life is becoming increasingly Islamic (André Widmer, Grozny, January 13, 2010 - accessed on December 4, 2017
  7. russland.ru (archive): New Mufti in Chechnya fights against the spread of Wahhabism - accessed on December 4, 2017
  8. Firouzeh Nahavandi (ed.): Mouvements islamistes et politique: “Réalités et stratégies multiples” 2003-2010, p. 133 - available online at ulb.ac.be on December 4, 2017
  9. islamrf.ru: Мирзаев Султан Бетерович - accessed December 4, 2017; see. Firouzeh Nahavandi (ed.): Mouvements islamistes et politique: "Réalités et stratégies multiples" 2003-2010, p. 133 - Online at ulb.ac.be (According to this source, Sultan Mirsajew was "ancien membre de la Cour chariatique suprême d ' Itchkérie ".)
  10. islamrf.ru: Мирзаев Султан Бетерович - accessed on December 4, 2017
  11. islam.ru: Chechen Mufti Sultan Mirzayev resigned - accessed on December 4, 2017
  12. also in the spellings Salakh Mezhiyev and Salah-Haji Medjiyev
  13. islam.ru - accessed December 4, 2017

literature

  • Hans-Georg Heinrich, Ludmilla Lobova, Alexey Malashenko: Will Russia Become a Muslim Society? 2011 ( partial online view )

Web links