Zhakiya Beisenbaev (Beisembaev) ( Kazakh. Zhagiya Beisenbaev , , - ) - Muslim religious leader, Kazi of the Kazakh Kaziyat under the Spiritual Administration of Muslims of Central Asia and Kazakhstan (SADUM) in 1972-1979 [1] .
| Zhakia Beisenbaev | ||
|---|---|---|
| kaz. Zhayiya Beisenbaev | ||
| ||
| 1972 - 1979 | ||
| Predecessor | Saduakas Gylmani | |
| Successor | Ratbek Nysanbaev | |
| Education | Miri Arab Madrasah , University of Damascus | |
| Birth | ||
| Death | ||
Parents of Zhakiya Beisenbaev were forced to move to Russia due to persecution by the Soviet authorities [2] . He was born in Omsk in 1932, grew up an orphan. In 1959 he received a direction in the Alma-Ata mosque and entered the Miri Arab Madrasah in Bukhara. In May 1968 he was appointed imam of the Alma-Ata mosque. In 1970 he made a hajj to Mecca, visited Nigeria , Algeria and Mali . From 1971 to 1972 he studied at Damascus University. After the death of Kazakhstan’s kaziya, Saduakas Gylmani in 1972 became his successor. In 1979, during the Islamic conference in Dushanbe, Mufti Ziyauddinhan Babakhanov unexpectedly and without explanation of reasons dismissed Beisenbaev from his post and appointed him successor Ratbek Nysanbaev , who had previously been the secretary of the Kazia [3] .
In the 1980s, an imam-khatib in the Kokchetav mosque [3] . The building of the mosque was returned by believers by Beisenbaev. He died in 1997 [1] . In 2015, a new mosque was built in Kokshetau, which was named in honor of the local religious leader Nauan Hazret (1843-1916). The old mosque, formerly named after Nauan Hazret, was renamed in honor of Zhakiya Beisenbaev [2] .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Kazakhstan. Ұlttyқ encyclopedia (K — Қ) . - 2003. - V. 5. - ISBN 9785898001490 .
- ↑ 1 2 Жүсіп, Қ. Din dep өtken қazhyrly tұlғa edi (Kazakh) . arka-azhary.kz (April 21, 2016). Date of treatment April 30, 2019.
- ↑ 1 2 Abazov, R., Vasilivetsky, A., Ponomarev, V., Verkhovsky, A. Islam and political struggle in the CIS countries . - Information and expert group "Panorama", 1992. - S. 19-21. - 84 p.