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  • Different country

    Different country

    The Guardian - United Kingdom
    Nov 05, 2004


    In Soguksu, which has been under the command of fundamentalist sheikhs
    since Ottoman times, few have heard of the EU. Only one man in the
    village of 2,700 has been to university.

    Like many of Turkey's 12 million ethnic Kurds, the girls who weave
    colourful kilims in a chilly room on Soguksu's treeless outskirts do
    not speak enough Turkish to follow events conveyed by the community's
    sole concession to modernity - the satellite dish.

    Of the EU, one girl says: "No, I don't think I know that place. Do
    they have sheep?" Like the rest of the group, her birth has never been
    registered, and she has not received an education."Do people marry
    there?" she asks. "Do they believe in God? What do they eat?"

    Outside the workshop, Bekir Bingol, a father of15, says he has heard
    that Europe is "very clean". He adds: "But I've got the brains to know
    that all these mountains and all these hills don't belong
    there. Anyway, I wouldn't want my daughters not keeping our
    traditions. If they got other ideas they might not read the Qur'an."

    Mr Bingol's neighbour, Ali Cicek, agrees. "In real life we've never
    seen anything like it," he says. "How can we even dream of such stuff?
    Once I went to western Turkey and it was beautiful, but it really felt
    like a different country."

    Soguksu is almost two hours north of the formerly Armenian city of
    Van, one of Turkey's most primitive regions and certainly its
    poorest. It has become a no-go area during the country's bitter
    campaign against Kurdish separatists. Forced marriages have prompted
    at least five newlyweds to take their lives since September. With 70%
    of the population unemployed, most barely scratch a living from the
    land.

    But although it is awash with refugees and smugglers, Van is also on
    the mend. The EU has launched an aid programme and, as in other towns
    in Turkey, civil society has undergone a revolution.

    Zozan Ozgokge, who runs Van's EU-backed women's association, says:
    "Before I even put up our new group's sign, women were lining up
    outside the office door. Sometimes, we've had women rushing in here in
    their slippers, after being beaten by husbands, fathers, uncles and
    even their sons. Before, these women rarely left their homes."

    At 26, Ms Ozgokge is typical of a new generation of bright ethnic
    Kurds now improving lives in what once seemed like eastern Turkey's
    irredeemable badlands.

    "When I was at university, western Turks would sneer and ask if I
    lived in a tent," she says. "They had seen so many TV documentaries
    that portray eastern Turkey in a very bad light, but for Kurds Europe
    has been a salvation."

    Under Turkey's drive to meet EU membership criteria, she says, human
    rights have improved to such an extent that most Turkish Kurds have
    turned their backs on the prospect of violence solving their problems.

    Prof Ergil identifies four types of Turks: the global Turk who lives
    abroad (numbering 500,000); the well-off international Turk, who reads
    the foreign press (5.5 million); and the rural and urban parochial
    Turks (30 and 35 million respectively) who are desperate to improve
    their lot.

    "The first two categories can communicate with each other and the
    outside world, and for them Turkey is just like a European country,"
    he says. "The other two have absolutely nothing in common with the
    first, but they are very supportive of Turkey joining the EU. Frankly,
    these people are like cannonballs chained to the ankles of this
    country. It has to drag them in its race towards civilisation."
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