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ANKARA: The way I think after Srebrenica tape

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  • ANKARA: The way I think after Srebrenica tape

    Journal of Turkish Weekly
    June 20 2005

    The way I think after Srebrenica tape
    View by Baris Sanli
    JTW Ankara

    After the Srebrenica tape, the ghosts of the past haunted the
    headlines. The tragedies, the hatreds and denials were all back
    again. It was as if, some one is digging the past with a knife. It
    was painful for some, heroic for the other some and unbelievable for
    the rest.

    In ISRO/USAK we made several discussions about the events. Instead of
    blaming the Serbians, we preferred discussing the possibility of
    constructive policies for the Balkans. Some of optimistic, some were
    pessimistic. During last week, whatever we published about Serbia was
    used as an evidence for proving the hatred between Serbs and Turks by
    some foreign media. It was definitely unbelievable, whatever the
    subject is, the conclusion was ready: `They said this because they
    hate us'.

    As an Internet media, we regularly check our inboxes, read your
    messages and listen our readers. Generally the readers shape our way
    of writing and dealing with issues. On the other hand, as Dr. Laciner
    reminds all our writers : `The sincerity is the key'. So, after all
    the emails and forums, we tried to look differently to the Balkans
    and think sincerely.

    Turkey's Dilemma

    Most of the people may say, `what the hell Turkey has to do with
    Balkans?'. This was true until late 1980s. Bulgaria's attitude
    towards Bulgarian Turks, and forcing them to immigrate were the first
    signs of Turkey's reluctant involvement with Balkans. On one hand,
    Turkish Foreign Policy is based on peace and not interfering other
    nation's internal matter. On the other hand, Turkey is inherently
    multicultural society. There are lots of lobby groups like
    ethnic(from Balkans and Caucasus) organizations or groups those can
    affect Turkish Foreign Policy.

    Bosnian war was the biggest single event that attracted Turks
    attention to the Balkans. In terms of Balkan policy there is `Before
    Bosnia' and `After Bosnia'. `Before Bosnia' period was when most of
    the Turks do not have any idea about the Bosnia or Balkans. The
    reflection of this event even continued during the war. For example a
    Serbian football player has become the key player of one of Turkey's
    most prominent teams. The crowds were cheering his name. It was
    absolutely a time of neutrality.

    `After Bosnia' period was when the Bosnian's started immigrating to
    Turkey. Their tragedies were slowly becoming part of ordinary Turks
    memories. While Serbs were ethnically cleansing Muslims and
    -according to them Turkish presence, they were achieving the
    impossible, namely `increasing the Balkan awareness in Turkey'.
    Nowadays, once in a week Turkish State Television (TRT) is
    broadcasting programs in Bosnian, which is hard to imagine in 1990s.

    During the Kosovo events, I perfectly remember, the reporter girl
    from ATV(Turkish channel) started crying when she saw the shattered
    lives of the immigrants those forced to the borders. So all these
    events, forced the governments to do something about the Balkans. But
    the governments and their policies have ignored this pressure on
    them. If Turkey has increased its influence in the Balkans, the
    Serbian nationalism will grow stronger and hence may damage the
    Muslims and Albanians living there. On the other hand, the weaker
    Turkey acts, the more violent Serbians become. `Where are Turks now?'
    like sentences from Serbs are also etched in the memories of some
    Turks.

    Why Balkans?

    Turkey didn't need an immigration policy until 1980s. But first the
    Bulgarian, then the Bosnia and the Kosovo events led to changes in
    Turkish immigration policy. Anytime a dispute starts in the Balkans,
    Turkey welcomes the immigrants and hosts them. But most of the
    immigrants reject to go back to their countries even after the
    disputes end. An important ratio of them tries to get a Turkish
    passport for their future as a sign of distrust to their home
    countries' attitudes.

    This psychology is hazardous, because it helps to the aims of the
    tyrants and changes the dynamics of the Balkans.

    USAK/ISRO's attitude

    USAK/ISRO is an NGO. Generally, as an NGO we try to think about
    constructive policies. And during this week it was such. The
    discussion subjects varied from Greater Serbia to free roaming for
    Balkan countries and bursaries for students. There is one way for
    peace in Balkans and it is coexistence. But this is not easy.
    According to BBC, two thirds of the Serbs still thinks that Mladic
    and Karadzic are heroes. And this makes things very complicated.

    National Heroes and the Turks of the Fantasies

    National heroes are part of a cultural identity. What kind of
    cultural identity should we expect from a nation whose heroes are
    Mladic and Karadzic? The answer is not easy and a positive one for
    Serbs. Instead of blaming Serbs, we tried to understand them. Serbia
    as a country and nation has been at the cross roads of wars and
    disputes. Is Serbia traumatized by all these wars? Can we conclude
    that Serbian people are not thinking the way we think?

    In the orthodox world, there is this image of Turks. I have mails
    from Armenian and Greek readers, those claim Turks are not as they
    were described. Nearly all claims that we(Turks and Greeks, Turks and
    Armenians) are so similar. In one real life story told to me by an
    academician, an Armenian who promised himself to spit to every Turks'
    face he meets, was stunned by the similarities between he and a Turk,
    they went for a drink after an hour or so.

    The Turks in the fantasies of the Serbs, Armenians and Greeks have no
    relation whatsoever with Turks. They are just `the other' puppet used
    by authorities to gain ground domestically. Greeks are slowly
    embracing the real Turks. The similarities between two nations
    surpass the disputes between each other. When a Greek sits with a
    Turk he may talk about three or four disputes, but they can talk for
    days about the common points.

    Now, I believe, it is time for Serbs to wake up from the
    hallucinations. To achieve this, education is a must. Education is
    the key to wake up people from dreams to realities. For example,
    there must be a student exchange programs between two nations. Serbs
    may think that they are better than Turks, but the new generation in
    Turkey has a potential. Even this year, I was surprised by a Leonardo
    da Vinci project from a high school student from Trabzon about
    nanotechnology. They should see Turkey and judge their fantasies.

    In terms of nationalism, most of the Balkans think that Turks are
    like them, nationalist. We talked about it a lot, we are not
    nationalist but patriotic. Turkish nationalism is very hard to
    implement, because there are lots of groups and races in Turkey. It
    is hard to define a race as Turkic race. Instead, as appeared in the
    Economist few weeks ago, being a Turk is more or less defined with
    sentences like `strong family relations, risk takers and etc.'
    On the other hand, Turkish nationalism is a one of its kind. Turkish
    nationalists are annoyingly relaxed people. Whenever you ask them
    about their policies, they will say `We will sort it out'. Of course
    what is meant by `sorting out' is a mystery, because most of the
    nationalist are silent and calm figures in Turkish society. As one
    high ranking nationalist puts it, young generation of nationalists
    are more interested in girls than politics.

    The Future

    Serbia, with Russia, is key to the peace in the Balkans and with the
    crisis EU and US struggling, the region may turn to bloodbath.
    Turkey, although reluctant, must calculate and consider the future of
    Balkans for the sake of its stability. The peace and stability in the
    region is -as always been, the priority of Turkey. To achieve this,
    there had to be constructive policies. Policies those need the
    cooperation of Russians, Turks, Serbs, Bosnians, Croatians, Albanians
    and Macedonians. The process may be painful and may require lots of
    commitments from both parties, but doesn't it worth for our children?

    [email protected]

    ISRO : International Strategic Research Organization
    USAK: Uluslararasi Stratejik Arastirmalar Kurumu (Turkish of ISRO)
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