peoples with communism as an anticolonial instrument. But as we have noted,
Islam is invariably allied in spirit to nationalist impulses when engaged against
non-Muslim forces. So Soviet strategists, particularly Lenin and Zinoviev,
sought
ways in which to skirt the conservative elements of Islamic society and to
stimulate revolutionary forces within them. Even the term
jihad was
appropriated for use, this time in a more secular sense, as speakers referred to
“holy war against imperialism,” and referred (blasphemously, in fact) to a new
kind of “pilgrimage” to the new center
of world revolution in Moscow, which
would bring liberation to all the oppressed peoples of the East. Nonetheless,
Moscow was also well aware that Islam and nationalism represented perpetual
double-edged swords that could be turned equally against Soviet rule in the
Muslim areas of the empire, and had already been linked with the Basmachi
Rebellion.