Russian Hajj. Empire and the Pilgrimage to Mecca - Eileen Kane

(John Hannent) #1
Notes to Pages 131–141 213


  1. Schapiro, “Stolypin,” 615.

  2. Waldron, “Religious Toleration in Late Imperial Russia,” 117.

  3. See, for example, Robert D. Crews, For Prophet and Tsar: Islam and Empire in Russia and
    Central Asia (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006), 10–11.

  4. DAOO, f. 2, op. 3, d. 3391, l. 64.

  5. Ibid., ll. 204–205.

  6. Ibid., ll. 92–92ob.

  7. Ibid., ll. 64, 82; 79–79ob, 274ob; 80ob, 276.

  8. Ibid., ll. 62, 71.

  9. Sibgatullina, Kontakty tiurok-musulʹman Rossiiskoi i Osmanskoi imperii na rubezhe XIX–XX
    vv., 30; DAOO, f. 2, op. 3, d. 3471, ll. 5, 7, 12; f. 2, op. 3, d. 3391, ll. 40ob–42.

  10. DAOO, f. 2, op. 3, d. 3391, ll. 56–61.

  11. Ibid., l. 81ob.

  12. Ibid., l. 87ob.

  13. Ibid., l. 88ob.

  14. Ibid., l. 74.

  15. Ibid., ll. 95–96.

  16. Ibid., ll. 91–91ob.

  17. Ibid., ll. 125–125ob.

  18. Ibid., l. 78ob.

  19. Ibid., ll. 76–85.

  20. Ibid., ll. 79ob–80ob.

  21. Ibid., ll. 62, 71.

  22. Robert Weinberg, The Revolution of 1905 in Odessa: Blood on the Steps (Bloomington: Indi-
    ana University Press, 1993); Stephen Zipperstein, The Jews of Odessa: A Cultural History (Stanford,
    CA: Stanford University Press, 1987).

  23. DAOO, f. 2, op. 3, d. 3391, ll. 270ob–272.

  24. Ibid., ll. 104–106.

  25. Ibid.

  26. These institutions were built in cities across the empire starting in the 1890s to address the
    growing problems of unemployed workers in cities and labor unrest. See Adele Lindenmeyr, Poverty
    Is Not a Vice: Charity, Society, and the State in Imperial Russia (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
    Press, 1996), 168–195.

  27. DAOO, f. 2, op. 3, d. 3391, l. 276ob. He originally proposed 4,000 rubles, but later reported
    that he spent 7,500. See l. 110.

  28. DAOO, f. 2, op. 3, d. 3391, ll. 110, 270ob.

  29. Odesskii listok, no. 270, Nov. 21, 1908. On newspapers in early twentieth-century Odessa, see
    Roshanna P. Sylvester, Tales of Old Odessa: Crime and Civility in a City of Thieves (DeKalb: Northern
    Illinois University Press, 2005), 5–8.

  30. DAOO, f. 2, op. 3, d. 3391, ll. 204–204ob.

  31. For the full text of the rules, see A. T. Sibgatullina, “ ‘Delo’ Saidazimbaeva—Rukovoditelia
    musulʹmanskogo palomnicheskogo dvizheniia iz Rossii,” Nauchnyi Tatarstan 1 (2009): 86–87.

  32. Peters, The Hajj, 267–315.

  33. DAOO, f. 2, op. 3, d. 3391, l. 100.

  34. Stephen J. Zipperstein, “Urban Legend,” New Republic, Feb. 1, 2011.

  35. Sylvester, Tales of Old Odessa, 22; Robert Weinberg, “Workers, Pogroms, and the 1905 Revo-
    lution in Odessa,” Russian Review 46, no. 1 (Jan. 1987): 53–75.

  36. DAOO, f. 2, op. 3, d. 3391, ll. 148–149ob.

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