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A nation in search of an identity

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  • A nation in search of an identity

    New Statesman
    November 22, 2004

    A nation in search of an identity; Turkey appears to be moving
    eastwards and westwards at the same time. But is it really possible
    to invent a pro-market Islamism? Report by Maureen Freely

    by Maureen Freely


    On its travel posters, Turkey is the land 'where east meets west'. An
    alluring sales pitch, but what does it mean? As they contemplate
    Turkey's bid to join the EU, nervous westerners are very keen to
    know. Journalists have worked to furnish nutshell histories and
    thumbnail sketches of 'Turkey today', but the more people read about
    this strange country, the less they understand it.

    The central paradox is the prime minister, who is Islamist but
    fervently pro-Europe. Recep Tayyip Erdogan has introduced radical
    legal, economic and political changes to bring the country into line
    with European standards, but has also tried to slip in a new law that
    would have criminalised adultery. Can he be trusted? In this volatile
    age, how can a nation move both eastwards and westwards without
    splitting in two?

    More confusing still, at least to concerned Europeans, is the
    consensus inside Turkey. It would be wrong to say that everyone wants
    to join the EU: there are Eurosceptics there who think Turkey should
    turn its back on Europe to build (and head) its own regional power
    base. But, paradoxically, this is not at present an eastern dream:
    the most fervent nationalists of the moment belong to the Republican
    People's Party, traditionally the voice of westward-looking
    secularism.

    Meanwhile, three-quarters of the Turkish electorate are in favour of
    joining. No one is saying there aren't Herculean feats to be
    performed beforehand, or that there wouldn't be large adjustment
    problems afterwards. Even if it met every challenge before the
    deadline, Turkey would be not just the poorest and most populous
    nation in the EU, but the most unevenly developed, with the country's
    cities and western provinces far outstripping its eastern regions,
    long impoverished and only just recovering from the 15-year conflict
    between the army and the Kurdish paramilitary PKK. But when the
    European parliament's president, Joseph Borrell, last month met Leyla
    Zana (the former parliamentarian, recently released after ten years'
    imprisonment on charges of advocating Kurdish separatism) she pressed
    for membership as strenuously as Erdogan had done in the same office
    two weeks earlier. Certainly, her priorities were different. But the
    bid to join Europe has strong support not just in Ankara and the
    business sector, but also among human rights campaigners; not just in
    the country's industrialised western regions, but also in its largely
    Kurdish provinces in the east.

    Erdogan explained in a recent speech that joining the EU bid would
    not (as nationalists have argued) be a departure from the republican
    ideals set out by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk 80 years ago; rather, he
    said, it would be its 'natural outcome'. This neat rhetorical
    flourish indicates the distance between our view of Turkey's EU bid
    and theirs. For us it's an east-west conundrum. For them it's about
    sovereignty, national identity, citizenship and those republican
    ideals.

    What exactly did Ataturk have in mind all those years ago, when he
    conjured up a modern state from the ashes of the Ottoman Empire? When
    he spoke of all Turkey's peoples working together as one, did he mean
    its non-Muslims as well as its Muslims? Its Alevis as well as its
    Sunnis? To become true Turks, were non-Muslims expected to shed their
    religions, and were Muslims compelled to give up also thinking of
    themselves as Kurdish, Laz, Turkmen, Azeri, Bosnian, Circassian?

    Today many would say he had no such thing in mind - that it is (or
    ought to be) possible to be a fully-fledged Turkish citizen without
    suppressing one's religion or ethnic origins. But in the Turkey I
    knew as a child, this was literally unsayable. The Turkey I knew in
    the Sixties was a beautiful, sleepy backwater, valued by its Nato
    allies mostly (some would say only) for providing a 'bulwark against
    Communism'. The news on the radio was the news as the state wished us
    to view it. The state was defined less by the prime minister and the
    National Assembly than by the generals in the National Security
    Council. The military presented itself (and was largely accepted as)
    the guarantor of the Kemalist project.

    At the same time, it was forever mindful of its prime backer, the US.
    The economy was closed, to protect fledgling industries; the practice
    of religion permitted but kept under strict surveillance. The state
    kept an almost perfect control over what children learned in school,
    and what they learned in their history books was very much in keeping
    with the narrow, purist nationalist project as refined by Ataturk's
    successors. To express difference was unpatriotic: to be different
    could be life-threatening, as tens of thousands of Greeks and
    Armenians discovered on 6 September 1955 when bands of thugs (now
    acknowledged to have been government-sponsored) went on a rampage
    throughout Istanbul, setting fire to Christian-owned businesses,
    raping and maiming and killing as they went. When my family first
    came to Istanbul five years later, it was still the multicultural
    city it had been throughout the Ottoman Empire. The turning point was
    1964, when the Cyprus crisis prompted the state to chase most of the
    remaining Greeks away.

    The state flexed its muscle frequently over the next three decades,
    meeting all challenges to its authority. There was a coup in 1971 and
    another in 1980; although they had various aims there was in both a
    serious effort to suppress the intelligentsia, and with it the basic
    freedoms we in the west take for granted. In 1974, there was the
    invasion of Cyprus. Beginning in the mid-1980s, there was the
    conflict with the PKK in the south-east. Running through all these
    stories is the long catalogue of human rights abuses.

    The EU has long made it clear that these issues had to be resolved
    before Turkey could become a member. For almost just as long, its
    warnings had little effect. But over the past two and a half years,
    there's been a dramatic shift. The first 'EU laws' were passed
    several months before Erdogan's Islamist Justice and Development
    Party came into power - in a single session, the National Assembly
    removed the death penalty, paved the way for teaching and
    broadcasting in Kurdish, and lifted restrictions on freedom of
    assembly. Since Erdogan took over, control of the National Security
    Council has been switched from generals to civilians. The penal code
    has been reformed and a 'zero tolerance' stance adopted on human
    rights abuses.

    The EU is dismantling the state as we used to know it and, in so
    doing, challenging the way the state defines 'the Turk'. This is ex-
    plosive stuff. (Just imagine if Brussels were to march in tomorrow to
    tell us how we were to define Englishness.) If three out of four
    Turks are still prepared to support these radical changes, it is
    because they have gone through radical changes, too. Not only has
    there been mass migration to the cities: millions have gone on to
    northern Europe as guest workers. Visit any village in Anatolia and
    you'll find its networks extending not just to Istanbul and Ankara
    but to cities in Germany, France and the Netherlands.

    In the Sixties there was only a handful of universities, which, with
    few exceptions, were open only to the elite. Now there are more than
    80. The expansion of higher education and the opening up of the
    economy in the late 1980s have spawned a new and formidable
    generation of entrepreneurs. Many have spent time studying in Europe
    and the US; as comfortable in these cultures as they are at home,
    they bring Turkey closer to Europe every time they pick up the phone.

    Forty years ago, most Turks had no knowledge of the outside world and
    their only source of information was a highly censored press. Now
    millions have lived and worked and studied in Europe, and what they
    want is, well, a lot more European. The borders have opened - even
    the one with the old arch enemy, Greece. The rapprochement that began
    with the 1999 earthquake continues still, with hundreds of small
    groups (from the business world, the professions, the universities
    and the arts) quietly forging ties with their colleagues across the
    border. The cultural renaissance is multicultural, but at its core is
    a desire to define what it is to be Turkish in a 21st-century world.

    If it's possible to be Turkish and European, is it possible to be
    Turkish, European and Kurdish? If non-Muslim minorities are to enjoy
    full cultural and political rights, shouldn't Muslim minorities
    receive the same consideration? In a secular state, what is the
    proper place of religion? Is it possible to modernise without losing
    one's traditional values? How to prosper in a globalised economy
    without becoming its slave?

    These are urgent questions: no politician will get far unless he
    addresses them. Erdogan's answer, so puzzling when viewed from
    abroad, makes perfect sense to the people who voted him in. Many are
    (as is his family) recent urban migrants, social conservatives who
    wish to prosper. So what better than pro-market Islamism? Turkey's
    established secularist bourgeoisie remains suspicious, but Erdogan
    has won friends even in these quarters. 'For the first time ever,'
    one non-Muslim businessman told me recently, 'we have a government
    that actually understands business and wants to help us.' In place of
    the delaying and bribe-taking bureaucrats who once directed the
    economy is a new breed of Islamist MBAs who are there to expedite and
    enable and whose hands (so far) remain clean.

    Where it will all lead is another matter. If George Bush invades
    Iran, if Saudi Arabia slides into civil war and takes the rest of the
    region with it, if the EU refuses Turkey's bid and American GIs
    continue to machine gun wounded men in mosques, we could see a Turkey
    torn between east and west. But right now it's a republic struggling
    to better itself along European lines. At the same time, it wants to
    remember where it comes from and what it means to bridge east and
    west. Therein lies its promise - not just to itself, but to us all.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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