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Temples in trouble
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Temples
destroyed in Turkmenistan By B.B. Govinda Swami Dear All, Please accept my humble obeisances. All glories to
Srila Prabhupada. Here is a report of what is going on in Turkmenistan.
We submitted it to Keston and here is how they have presented it. I am humbly requesting you all to pray for the
devotees in Turkmenistan. Also I am happy to report that the Uzbek government
reopened our centres in Tashkent and Samarkand and reregistered our
society in Uzbekistan. Your humble servant, BB Govinda Swami Wednesday 8 September by Felix Corley, Keston News Service The Turkmen authorities - who are inflicting the
harshest religious policy in the whole of the former Soviet Union - have
turned their attention to the Hare Krishna community after taking steps to
try to halt the activities of Protestant Christian communities. Two Hare
Krishna temples - in the capital Ashgabad and in the eastern town of Mary
- were destroyed in August and the leader of the Ashgabad community,
ALEKSANDR PRINKUR (ACHARYA DAS), was forcibly deported from the country. Keston believes this is the first time government
authorities in any of the former Soviet republics have deliberately
destroyed places of worship since the end of the Soviet period, although
many places of worship have been forcibly closed by the authorities in a
number of republics. During the 1994-1995 Russian assault on Chechnya,
bombing by the Russian air force destroyed the Russian Orthodox church in
Grozny. More recently, St Petersburg authorities wanted to demolish a
Russian Orthodox church to make room for a motorway, but at last word had
dropped those plans after a public outcry which included the reporting of
Sasha Shchipkov for KNS. Prinkur told Keston News Service on 3 September that
on 12 August the National Security Committee (KNB, the former KGB) and the
local authorities forced the Hare Krishna devotees to pull down their
temple in Ashgabad, which had been under construction for two years on
private land belonging to a devotee and which was almost finished. Two
days later a programme attacking the Hare Krishna community was shown on
Ashgabad television. `The presenters of the programme conducted open
propaganda against our community,’ reports Prinkur, `and it was also
said that the Hare Krishna temple in the town of Mary had been
destroyed.’ (Keston does not have independent confirmation of this
report.) In the wake of the programme, the woman who owned the land where
the temple had been built in Ashgabad was beaten at the market by another
woman who had seen the programme. `Devotees are periodically summoned to the KNB, where
they are interrogated, intimidated and threatened that their homes will be
taken away,’ reports Prinkur. `Very many devotees and those who
associate with devotees have lost their jobs. One woman, Klara, who had
just begun to associate with devotees, was fired from her job. Her boss
told her that they were firing her because she was connected with Krishna
Consciousness and also threatened that they could put her in prison.’ Prinkur himself, who had led the Ashgabad community
since 1995, was deported after the demolition and in the wake of two
months of harassment of the community. In the evening of 14 June two KNB
officers and one policeman conducted an illegal search of the Ashgabad
temple - without presenting the necessary documentation - breaking into
locked cupboards and confiscating both communal and personal property.
`They searched through literally everything,’ reports Prinkur, `and left
everything in complete disorder.’ The officers focused on the books,
confiscating a total of 1,300 volumes as well as 16 video cassettes and
120 audio cassettes. All those present had their identity documents
confiscated, though all but Prinkur were able to get them back the
following day at the local administration. However, the authorities seem to have targeted
Prinkur. All his personal possessions, including books, two cameras and a
tape recorder, as well as all his documents (internal passport, military
book, birth certificate and labour record book) were confiscated. The
republican KNB kept them for two months, despite Prinkur’s repeated
attempts to get them back. `One KNB officer, ORAZ NEPESOVICH, told me that
they would keep the documents until my identity had been established. He
told me that I was a citizen of Uzbekistan and that I was allegedly
staying in Turkmenistan illegally, although I was legally registered in
the village of Anau in Ahal region from 2 April 1997. From 2 March 1999 I
reregistered in the town of Bezmein in Ahal region, and had a temporary
registration certificate valid until 1 March 2000.’ On 16 August - four days after Hare Krishna members
had been forced to pull down the temple - two KNB officers came by car for
Prinkur, but he was not at the site of the former temple, as he had moved
to another home. They said they had come to talk about registering the
community and returning his documents. The following day Prinkur went to
the offices of the republican KNB in Ashgabad. There they told him that
his documents would be passed to the city KNB for them to deal with the
matter. An officer of the city KNB then arrived and he was handed
Prinkur’s documents. He then proposed taking Prinkur to the city KNB,
but instead took him to the visa and registration office, where they drew
up documents for his deportation without his knowledge. He was told his
registration had been removed and he was shown a piece of paper filled in
with his name (and with his forged signature) declaring that he was moving
to Uzbekistan. The KNB officer then informed him that his train was
leaving in half an hour and that he had to hurry to catch it. Prinkur
asked for time to collect his things, but this was refused. `They began to
threaten me that they would put me in a cell if I did not leave the
country within an hour. I was taken to the station by police officers and
put on the train, accompanied by a guard.’ He was then deported. The Hare Krishna community has been unable to gain
registration with the Turkmen authorities, despite repeated attempts.
Under current Turkmen law, each religious community needs 500 adult
citizen members before it can even apply for registration. The Ashgabad
Hare Krishna community has existed since 1990, while the Mary community -
the bigger of the two - has existed since 1993. Although both communities
were denied registration in the early 1990s, they had been able to
function relatively freely until 1996, when campaigns to close them down
began. In 1997, under the new regulations in the wake of revisions to the
Law on Freedom of Conscience and Religious Organisations, the Mary
community collected the required 500 signatures, but the application was
rejected as some of the signatories lived in the Mary region but not in
the town of Mary. The same year the Ashgabad community tried again to
register. Both the Mary and Ashgabad communities suffered constant
harassment and threats from officials. Only communities of the officially-sanctioned Sunni
Muslims and the Russian Orthodox Church have official registration.
Communities that have been denied registration include Baptists,
Pentecostals, Adventists and Bahais. This summer the Turkmen authorities
stepped up their harassment of Protestant churches in what many believe
was an attempt to halt their activity once and for all. © CHAKRA 11-Sep-1999 Go to the Current Events Page |
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