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Land of the Mahdi: Signs of a Diasporic Kingship in the Caucasus Serkan Yolacan Research Fellow Middle East Institute, National University of Singapore Followers of Fethullah Gülen, a self-exiled cleric accused of plong the Turkish coup aempt of 2016, are buried under a cacophony of labels: ‘moderate Muslims,’ ‘pioneers of interfaith dialogue,’ ‘American stooges,’ and ‘sedious infiltrators.’ Much less known to the outsiders but more capvat - ing to the followers is another debate: Could Gülen be the awaited Mahdi, the eschatological re- deemer of Islam? If so, how does one read the signs of him being the savior? In following the signs, I shiſt the focus from Turkey to the Caucasus, where the movement gained prominence for bringing former Soviet cizens back into the fold of Islam aſter seventy years of communist rule. Seen from there, Gülen appears as only the latest in a long line of religious figures who, by crossing into the Caucasus, climbed the spiritual ladder toward a holier status. In the Islamic and pre-Islamic folklores of the Middle East, Central Asia, and South Asia, the Caucasus has a reputaon as the boundary space between what is familiar and what lies beyond—the farthest point of the earth where one could encounter the peris of Persian mythology, Gog and Magog of Abrahamic tradions, nomadic hordes of Central Asia, or the Communist Red Army unl more recent mes. As a three-way land bridge between Turkey, Iran, and Russia, the Caucasus is a place of encounters and transformave possibilies, where leaders could cast themselves in a messianic mold by repelling foreign threats or conquering evil forces. Drawing on ethnographic work in the Caucasus with those who read the signs, tracing them further in the esoteric texts that inspired Gülen, and reading them in relaon to Mahdist movements in the past, I recast Gülen as a messianic figure and demonstrate how old im- perial froners, such as the Caucasus, become ferle grounds for messianic imaginaon. In the fron- er, horizontal mobility leads to vercal ascension in spiritual rank and generates a form of authori- ty—conceptualized here as ‘diasporic kingship’—that haunts polical centers from the periphery. Serkan Yolaçan is a Research Fellow at the Middle East Instute, Naonal University of Singapore. He received his PhD degree in cultural anthropology from Duke University. His research straddles anthropology and history to examine how diasporic networks of business, religion, and educaon act as conduits of polical change in the Middle East and Asia. His book project, Time Travelers of Baku: Conversion and Revoluon in West Asia, brings to light the role of the Azeri diaspora in connecng the modern histories of Iran, Turkey, and Russia. Friday, January 10th, 2020, 3:30PM Building 50, Room 51A sponsored by Department of Anthropology and the Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies

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Page 1: Serkan Yolacan - anthropology.stanford.edu · Serkan Yolaçan is a Research Fellow at the Middle East Institute, National University of Singapore. He received his PhD degree in cultural

Land of the Mahdi: Signs of a Diasporic Kingship in the Caucasus

Serkan YolacanResearch FellowMiddle East Institute, National University of Singapore

Followers of Fethullah Gülen, a self-exiled cleric accused of plotting the Turkish coup attempt of 2016, are buried under a cacophony of labels: ‘moderate Muslims,’ ‘pioneers of interfaith dialogue,’ ‘American stooges,’ and ‘seditious infiltrators.’ Much less known to the outsiders but more captivat-ing to the followers is another debate: Could Gülen be the awaited Mahdi, the eschatological re-deemer of Islam? If so, how does one read the signs of him being the savior? In following the signs, I shift the focus from Turkey to the Caucasus, where the movement gained prominence for bringing former Soviet citizens back into the fold of Islam after seventy years of communist rule. Seen from there, Gülen appears as only the latest in a long line of religious figures who, by crossing into the Caucasus, climbed the spiritual ladder toward a holier status. In the Islamic and pre-Islamic folklores of the Middle East, Central Asia, and South Asia, the Caucasus has a reputation as the boundary space between what is familiar and what lies beyond—the farthest point of the earth where one could encounter the peris of Persian mythology, Gog and Magog of Abrahamic traditions, nomadic hordes of Central Asia, or the Communist Red Army until more recent times. As a three-way land bridge between Turkey, Iran, and Russia, the Caucasus is a place of encounters and transformative possibilities, where leaders could cast themselves in a messianic mold by repelling foreign threats or conquering evil forces. Drawing on ethnographic work in the Caucasus with those who read the signs, tracing them further in the esoteric texts that inspired Gülen, and reading them in relation to Mahdist movements in the past, I recast Gülen as a messianic figure and demonstrate how old im-perial frontiers, such as the Caucasus, become fertile grounds for messianic imagination. In the fron-tier, horizontal mobility leads to vertical ascension in spiritual rank and generates a form of authori-ty—conceptualized here as ‘diasporic kingship’—that haunts political centers from the periphery.

Serkan Yolaçan is a Research Fellow at the Middle East Institute, National University of Singapore. He received his PhD degree in cultural anthropology from Duke University. His research straddles anthropology and history to examine how diasporic networks of business, religion, and education act as conduits of political change in the Middle East and Asia. His book project, Time Travelers of Baku: Conversion and Revolution in West Asia, brings to light the role of the Azeri diaspora in connecting the modern histories of Iran, Turkey, and Russia.

Friday, January 10th, 2020, 3:30PMBuilding 50, Room 51A

sponsored by Department of Anthropology and the Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies