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Do Turks want the EU, and does EU want them?

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  • Do Turks want the EU, and does EU want them?

    Pittsburgh Post Gazette, PA
    Oct 2 2005

    Do Turks want the EU, and does EU want them?
    Sunday, October 02, 2005

    By Karl Vick, The Washington Post



    ISTANBUL, Turkey -- The exhibit opened 50 years to the day after the
    mayhem it chronicled in the cobblestone street right outside the
    gallery.

    Captured on black-and-white glossies was a modern-day pogrom, a
    massive, state-sponsored assault on a foreign community that awoke on
    the morning of Sept. 6, 1955, still feeling safe in Istanbul. By
    sunset a day later, a mob of perhaps 100,000 Turks had attacked
    foreigners' homes, schools and churches, and filled whole streets
    with the contents of the ruined shops that lined them. In the
    aftermath of the attack, a city for centuries renowned for its
    diversity steadily purged itself of almost everyone who could not
    claim to be Turkish.

    The exhibit at Karsi Artworks attempts to confront that history,
    dubbed the Events of Sept. 6-7, in the era before "ethnic cleansing"
    entered the popular lexicon. But when ultranationalist thugs swarmed
    into the gallery on opening night -- throwing eggs, tearing down
    photos and chanting "Love it or leave it!" -- the question became
    whether it really is history at all.

    "Just like what happened 50 years ago," said Mahmut Erol Celik, a
    retired civil servant emerging from the defaced exhibit. "It's the
    same mentality. That's what's so embarrassing."

    Appearances have lately counted for a lot in Turkey. Under intense
    international scrutiny, its government hopes to begin negotiations
    Oct. 3 that should conclude with Turkey as a member of the European
    Union. Even if the process takes 15 years, as many predict, the
    result would apparently fulfill an ambition such as that which drove
    modern Turkey's founder, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, who preached that the
    country's future lay firmly with the West.

    But questions arise almost daily about whether either side wants to
    proceed. Europe's mixed feelings about absorbing Turkey's large, poor
    and overwhelmingly Muslim population are well known. But Turkey
    harbors its own ambivalence, apparently rooted in the recurring
    question of how much the country cares about the world beyond its own
    borders.

    That question came up again this month, when a Turkish court made
    headlines by barring a handful of scholars from gathering to discuss
    the deaths in 1915 of perhaps a million ethnic Armenians, in
    circumstances that Armenia and many independent scholars describe as
    genocide but Turkey calls the consequences of war.

    The disagreement has poisoned relations between the neighboring
    nations for decades with an obsessiveness that overtakes Turkish
    efforts to appear poised. This summer, readers of Time magazine's
    international edition found a DVD tucked into a four-page ad for
    Turkish tourism. The disc included 13 minutes of commercials and an
    hour-long propaganda film accusing Armenians of slaughtering Turks.

    "It's not a polemic," said a spokeswoman for the Ankara Chamber of
    Commerce, which paid for the disorienting mix of polished commercials
    and grainy footage of dead bodies. "We just wanted to position Turkey
    on this issue."

    Last May, the prospect of scholars gathering for an independent
    assessment of the controversy brought a chilling warning from
    Turkey's justice minister, who called them "traitors." After
    objections from the EU, the scrapped conference was rescheduled and
    was finally held this past month, but not without an accompanying
    demonstration by Turkish nationalists.

    "There is no other country which harms its own interests this much,"
    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said.

    But then few other countries are so nationalistic. Turks are raised
    to believe that Turkey is surrounded by enemies and can rely only on
    itself. The unitary notion of the state views all citizens as ethnic
    Turks and regards any other presence as a dire threat.
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