Bashkortostan Zaynulla Rasulev, a prominent Bashkir leader in the 19th century, was among the most important representatives of Jadidism and the organizer of one of the first Jadidi madrasah.
Tatarstan Some of them were supporters of reforms (
Ğ. Barudi,
Musa Bigiev,
Ğäbdräşid İbrahimov, Q. Tärcemäni,
C. Abızgildin, Z. Qadíri, Z. Kamali, Ğ Bubí et al.), while others wanted educational reforms only (R. Fäxretdinev,
F. Kärimi,
Ş. Kültäsi et al.).
North Caucasus North Caucasian and Turkic languages were used in writings circulated by Jadids in the North Caucasus. Persian was the language of Jadidists at the commence of the 1900s in Central Asia and there was no broad scheme or ideology of Pan-Turkism among Jadidists.
Central Asia For the most part, the Russian population of
Turkestan viewed religious practice as counter to civilization and culture. Therefore, the Russians had a particular distaste for traditional authority figures, like the
Ulama and the Islamic clergy, who they viewed as dangerous extremists. On the other hand, the Russians held the Jadids in much higher regard because of the progressive and secular nature of their reforms. However, the Russians maintained the idea that the Central Asian population of Turkestan should have separate living spaces and limited voting rights. In terms of keeping the Russian and Central Asian populations separate, residence in
Tashkent, the capital of Turkestan, was limited to Russian elites. Furthermore, most cities in Turkestan had distinct quarters for Russians and "natives" (a pejorative term for Central Asians). To limit the political power of the Jadids, while giving the appearance of creating a more accessible political system in line with the 1905
October Manifesto, the Russians divided Turkestan's population into "native" and "non-native" electoral franchises, each with the ability to send one representative to the
Duma. Russian, Jadidist, and traditionalist schools all ran alongside one another under Russian rule. A policy of deliberately enforcing anti-modern, traditional, ancient conservative Islamic education in schools and Islamic ideology was enforced by the Russians in order to deliberately hamper and destroy opposition to their rule by keeping them in a state of torpor to and prevent foreign ideologies from penetrating in. Russia's institutions of learning run by Jadidist numbered over 5,000 in 1916. The Jadidists inspired an
Artush-based school founded by Bawudun Musabayov and Husayn Musabayov. Jadid like schools were built by the Uyghur Progress Union of Kashgar after 1934. Jadidist leader Gasprinskii inspired
Burhan Shahidi. The First East Turkestan Republic in Kashgar's Interior Minister was Yunus Beg, who previously worked with Maqsud Muhiti, a merchant who spread Jadidism in Turfan. Jadid schools were founded in Xinjiang for
Chinese Tatars. Jadidist Tatars taught the Uighur
Ibrahim Muti'i. The Jadidists popularized the identity of "Turkestani". Some Jadids and
Muhammad Amin Bughra (Mehmet Emin) and
Masud Sabri rejected the imposition of the name "Uyghur" upon the Turkic people of Xinjiang. They wanted instead the name "Turkic ethnicity" to be applied to their people. Masud Sabri also viewed the
Hui people as
Han Chinese and separate from his own people.
Muhammad Amin Bughra, Shemsiddin Damolla, Abdukerimhan Mehsum,
Sabit Damulla Abdulbaki, and Abdulqadir Damolla were all Jadists who took part in the
First East Turkestan Republic. In 1913, in Turfan, an institution for training teachers in Jadidist methods was founded by Heyder Sayrani, a Tatar, and Mukhsut Muhiti, a local merchant in Turfan. Some Turkmen were hostile to the idea of one Turkestani language for all Central Asians proposed by the Jadidists. Some Turkmen were against the Turkestani identity promoted by the Jadid and the Chagatai-based Turkestani speech promoted by the Jadid. Alyshbeg Aliev, Muhammetgulu Atabaev and Muhammetgylych Bichare Nizami were among the Jadidist Turkmens while Bukhara and Tashkent were the centers of Jadidist activity. The policy of deliberately encouraging the neglect of culture and economy of the Turks was implemented by the Russian government and struggled against by the Jadid. Turar Ryskulov, a Kazakh, was a Jadidist. Muhammad Geldiev, a Jadidist, was an influence on the formulation of literary Turkmen whose genesis was tasked to a commission in 1921. The creation of accurate historical narrative was desired by the Jadidists. ==Jadid–Bolshevik relations==