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Economist: Faith in Europe; Turkey, the EU and religion

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  • Economist: Faith in Europe; Turkey, the EU and religion

    The Economist
    December 18, 2004
    U.S. Edition

    Faith in Europe; Turkey, the EU and religion

    It's not Turkish Islam that challenges Europe, but the
    micromanagement of faith

    The Turkish republic is not as secular as it seems. To become
    European, it will have to change

    AN EVER closer partnership between Turkey and the European Union,
    culminating in full Turkish membership, can only be good for
    relations between Islam and the West. It will show that western
    nations have no insuperable prejudice against Islam—and it will
    confirm Turkey's role as a nation whose Muslim heritage is fully
    compatible with democracy.

    Those are the main reasons why European leaders were expected on
    December 17th to endorse the opening of talks to make Turkey the EU's
    first mainly Muslim member. The Turks have worked hard to groom
    themselves for Europe. But the negotiators from Brussels and Ankara
    will be deceiving themselves, and perhaps riding for a fall, if they
    underestimate the amount of ground they still need to travel. Among
    the trickiest issues is the existence in Turkey of a relationship
    between religion and the state that differs from the varied, and
    often bizarre, arrangements of western Europe.

    Paradoxically, the aspect of Turkey's system that Europeans find
    strangest is the curb it places on its own prevailing religion.
    Turkey is often called a secular state, whose citizens happen to be
    Muslim. In fact, Turkey is far from secular, if that implies an
    arm's-length relationship between faith and politics. The masters of
    Turkey's 81-year-old republic have always felt that religion is too
    sensitive to leave to clerics alone. A vast state bureaucracy
    oversees spiritual life; it hires imams, tells them what to preach,
    and runs religious schools.

    The effect is to steer most Turks down a narrow religious path; they
    are taught to be devout Muslims, but they may not push their piety
    further than the state allows. By banning headscarves in universities
    as well as all government premises, the state imposes a far harsher
    restriction on devout Muslim women than the ban on scarves (and other
    obvious signs of faith) in French schools. As a result, some Turkish
    women get no higher education. Nor is life easy for millions of Turks
    who follow the liberal Alevi form of the Muslim faith, not the Sunni
    Islam taught in schools. For the state, all Muslims are the same; too
    bad for Alevis who want to opt out of Sunni education.

    What about Turkey's tiny non-Muslim communities? Here again, history
    weighs heavily. As Turks learn at school, the avoidance of any
    special status for religious minorities was a master-stroke by their
    state's founders: the western powers wanted such privileges, but the
    republic resisted their wiles. Those negotiations ended in the 1923
    Treaty of Lausanne, which promises limited cultural and religious
    rights for the Greek Orthodox, the Armenians and Jews—with the result
    that Turkish policy still distinguishes "Lausanne minorities" from
    others. When some Turks argued recently that the treaty, properly
    read, implied fair treatment of all minorities, this triggered a
    furious row—and dark murmurings from the military.

    In any case, joining the EU will oblige Turkey to be far more decent
    in its treatment of religious minorities than the Lausanne treaty
    ordains. As evidence for a lack of decency, witness Turkey's de facto
    ban on training for Christian clergy; and the recent Turkish-American
    row over the Orthodox Patriarchate in Istanbul. As Turkey's
    government reaffirmed, it disputes the right not just of its own
    citizens, but of Christians in America, to accord the patriarch his
    "primacy of honour" in the Orthodox world: this is a curious act of
    discourtesy to a religious leader who warmly backs Turkey's European
    hopes.

    Whatever Turkey's failings, do Europeans have any right to lecture
    the Turks? Europe's religious scene is full of weird anachronisms.
    The British prime minister still chooses the senior prelate of the
    Anglican Church. In one part of Greece, Muslim muftis exercise
    judicial powers, while in Athens, Muslims cannot get official
    recognition for a single mosque. Denmark is one of Europe's most
    secular societies, but its Lutheran church enjoys huge privileges.
    All these arrangements are likely to be challenged as Europe grows
    more diverse.

    Where does that leave Turkey? It would be nice, but naive, to regard
    its system as simply one small variation in a colourful religious
    scene. It is one thing for a state to give privileges to a particular
    church, which then governs itself; quite another for a state to
    micro-manage the whole of religious life.

    Given its own diversity, it would be silly for the EU to impose on
    Turkey some precise model for religious affairs. But Turkey won't be
    a liberal democracy in the European sense until state interference in
    the world of faith becomes the exception, not the rule—and unless all
    religious communities can worship, own property and form associations
    freely.

    --Boundary_(ID_N2XB+RO+3/SG593ymrf0GQ)--
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