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  • What The Sultan Saw

    WHAT THE SULTAN SAW
    By Matthew Kaminski

    Opinion Journal, NJ
    April 11 2006

    Practicing a tolerant strain of Islam, the Ottomans clashed with
    fundamentalists.

    The Ottoman Empire passed into history in 1922, a mere lifetime ago.

    Yet in a certain way it feels as distant as ancient Athens or Rome,
    known to us mostly through architectural relics, a few striking events
    and a mythical aura. Kemal Ataturk's secular Turkish republic, the
    empire's successor state, consciously rejected much of the Ottoman
    heritage and most of its traditions, while the empire's colonial
    outposts have reverted to the imperatives of their local identities.

    Yet the religious aspect of the 9/11 attacks has made the Ottomans,
    who led the Muslim world for half a millennium, topical again. The
    sultans are famous for sacking Constantinople in the 15th century and
    besieging Vienna in the 16th. Both events became symbols of Muslim
    aggression against Christendom. And the "barbarian Turk" is still
    a villain in the folklore of the empire's northern reaches. Yet
    such caricature fails to do justice to the remarkable Ottomans,
    whose story is a corrective to the perceived wisdom that Islam is
    inherently unable to reconcile itself with the West.

    Caroline Finkel takes the title of her Ottoman history, "Osman's
    Dream," from a founding myth, apparently invented in the 1500s, nearly
    two centuries after the death of the first sultan, Osman. It was said
    that one memorable night, Osman dreamed of a beautiful, enormous tree
    growing from his navel, a tree whose shade "compassed the world,"
    including distant mountains and mighty rivers. It was a tale heavy
    with imperial symbolism, meant for a young state that, despite humble
    beginnings, had come to dominate parts of Europe and would eventually
    extend across northern Africa, including Egypt, through the Middle
    East and eastward toward Persia. Osman's tribe was, after all, only
    one of many Turkomen groups that had ventured into Anatolia from
    Central Asia and fought against other Muslims for supremacy.

    The Ottomans first got Europe's attention by conquering parts of
    Byzantium, the eastern half of the Roman Empire and the protector
    of the eastern Christian church. They went on to take the Balkan
    peninsula and moved northward toward Hungary. Indeed, for much of
    their history, the Ottomans were a notable European power--and not only
    geographically. For all the empire's exoticism, it was flexible enough,
    as it spread across continents, to accommodate local laws and customs,
    even local ideas and religions. Unlike many European states of the day,
    the Ottoman regime was tolerant, multiracial and highly decentralized,
    all apparent keys to its success. Jews and Christians weren't forced
    to mass convert, although many did in order to pursue a better career
    or lower tax bill.

    When Spain expelled its Jews in 1492, the Ottomans opened their arms.

    "Can you call such a king"--i.e., Spain's Ferdinand--"wise and
    intelligent?" asked Sultan Bayezid at the time. "He is impoverishing
    his country and enriching mine." Even so, the Ottoman embrace was
    limited. To take but one example: The Jews brought the printing press
    to Ottoman lands from Spain and Portugal, but Sultan Bayezid II soon
    made publishing a crime punishable by death. Only two centuries later,
    during the so-called Tulip Age, when European influence was at its
    height, did the Ottomans allow the printing of books in Arabic script.

    Throughout the empire's history, architecture expressed its blending
    character. Ottoman mosques are decorative and warm by comparison with
    those in Arab countries. They often resemble Christian churches,
    which isn't surprising, since Armenian architects designed a lot
    of them. When Sultan Mehmed II captured the seat of the Orthodox
    Christian church in Constantinople, the Hagia Sophia (the Church of
    Holy Wisdom), he turned it into a mosque with only a few alterations.

    Practicing a more tolerant strain of Islam, the Ottomans clashed
    with fundamentalists, like the Wahhabi who rose up against them
    on the Saudi peninsula in the 18th century. This conflict rages on
    today in different forms. In the Balkans and now in Iraq, Saudi money
    pays for the razing of Ottoman houses of worship. The zealots prefer
    glass-and-steel mosques.

    The peak of the Pax Ottomanica came in the 16th century under Suleyman
    the Magnificent, who ruled, lest we forget, at the same time as
    Britain's Henry VIII and Russia's Ivan the Terrible. He surpassed both
    in the glories of his court, the arts of his culture and the extent
    of his lands. Suleyman defied tradition in one crucial respect: He
    fell in love with a slave girl, Hurrem, and had five sons by her; by
    convention, concubines were to bear only one. When the sultan married
    her, "Hurrem was accused of having bewitched him," writes Ms. Finkel.

    While the empire's source of legitimacy was the Islamic caliphate in
    Istanbul, religion played a fitful role in political life, just as
    it did in Christian lands. Wars were justified as "holy" often after
    the fact. At various times the French, British and Germans--even the
    pope in Rome--stood with the Ottomans against Russia, the Hapsburgs
    and the Poles. Such affiliations were built on the universal concept
    of self-interest. Before joining the Axis powers in World War I, the
    Ottoman rulers called for jihad against the Allies, but geopolitics
    obviously had more to do with the alliance than religion.

    Ms. Finkel describes the rise of the Ottomans in exhaustive detail,
    and their fall, too. Financial trouble, internal strife, wayward
    foreign ventures and rising local nationalism--all helped to hasten
    the empire's decline. Napoleon seized Egypt at the turn of the 19th
    century. By the middle of it the Ottoman Empire was the "sick man of
    Europe," a phrase coined by Russia's Nicholas I, who did his share
    to enfeeble his own country, not least by leading Russia against the
    Ottomans and courting defeat in the Crimean War.

    One wishes that Ms. Finkel had taken up the hard questions about the
    empire's end. Was there a fatal flaw--imperial overreach, for example,
    or the lack of a renaissance in the Ottomans' intellectual culture? Was
    there something in Islam itself, even the Ottoman version, that could
    not adapt to modernity? Ms. Finkel does not say.

    But her clear prose keeps the story going right up to the end, where
    we get another surprise: After the Turks killed more than a million
    Armenians in 1915--the number, the reason and the responsibility
    are hotly debated to this day--the Ottoman powers investigated the
    soldiers involved and started to put on "the first war crimes trials
    in history."

    Ataturk put a quick stop to the trials, drawing a black line through
    parts of the past after his new Turkish state was born in the
    so-called 1921-22 war of independence (from whom, exactly?). Just
    as the Ottomans replaced the turban with the fez in the late 1820s,
    aiming to "Europeanize" their culture, Ataturk forced the brim-hat
    on his people, to de-Islamicize his own. His experiment in social
    engineering went well beyond clothing design.

    Will Ataturk's imperfect secular creation morph into a thriving
    democracy or fail again to modernize itself? The jury is out. Yet in
    no small part thanks to the remnants of the Ottoman heritage, it is
    hard to think of a Muslim country that has a better chance than Turkey
    of putting in place a modern economy and a liberal political order.

    Mr. Kaminski is editorial page editor of The Wall Street Journal
    Europe. You can buy "Osman's Dream" from the OpinionJournal bookstore.

    http://www.opinionjournal.com/la/?id=1 10008215
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