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Where Traditional And Modern Meet And Sashay Along

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  • Where Traditional And Modern Meet And Sashay Along

    WHERE TRADITIONAL AND MODERN MEET AND SASHAY ALONG
    By Sabrina Tavernise

    New York Times
    Dec 5 2006

    ISTANBUL, Dec. 4 - For every stereotype of a Muslim country, Turkey
    has a fact to break it.

    It has Islamic feminists (a few) and Israeli tourists (lots). Reality
    dating shows have had the highest ratings on television, and Islamic
    fashion sashays down Turkish runways.

    For decades in Turkey the competing forces of the religious and
    secular, Christian and Muslim, East and West, were muted, as
    authorities scrubbed the country of differences while they built
    a modern state. But Turkey has become more democratic in recent
    years, and those forces have burst into full view, creating a sort
    of modern-day identity crisis.

    "We have started to think very differently about our history," said
    Leyla Neyzi, a professor at Sabanci University, one of Turkey's first
    private colleges. "The past is being rethought in terms of the demands
    of the present."

    Nowhere is that questioning more apparent than in Istanbul, the lively
    port that is the cultural and intellectual center of the country.

    Aynur Dogan is a Kurdish singer with a powerful voice who grew up
    in war. Turkish forces and Kurdish separatists were fighting in the
    southern part of the country, where she lived and where speaking her
    native Kurdish was illegal. Kurdish music tapes were buried in the
    yard when government forces entered her village. Her family fled to
    Istanbul in 1992 to escape the fighting.

    She took an interest in Kurdish music, but in the late 1990s the
    only audiences were underground. In Turkish society, Kurdish was a
    bad word. "It looked impossible," she said, smoking a cigarette in
    a dark Istanbul cafe with murals painted on the walls.

    By 2004, she had appeared on mainstream Turkish television singing in
    Kurdish. That year she released her first album, "Kurdish Girl." It
    was temporarily banned by the government, but not before it sold
    large numbers of copies, and finally its sale was permitted.

    Now she performs frequently in Europe, and a film about Istanbul's
    music scene has featured her singing. But there are still limits in
    Turkey. Sponsors of Kurdish musical events are difficult to find,
    and it is harder to get a venue, but young Turks in Istanbul's music
    shops eagerly recommend her album.

    "I felt there was this new group of people emerging," she said.

    Many forces helped release the river of memory. One has been a steady
    series of changes Turkey has enacted to gain entry to the European
    Union. The push to join, led by the pro-Islamic government of Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, elected in 2002, has recently faltered,
    souring Turks on the process. But the changes, which have opened
    Turkey's society and its economy, have stuck.

    Another factor has been the changing international landscape. The
    Muslim world has grown angry at the West, particularly the United
    States, for what Muslim countries say is behavior that singles out
    Muslims and creates a backlash of Islamic identity. Turkey is no
    exception.

    But Turkey has also matured. The young professionals who walk
    along Istanbul's central avenues at a New York pace clutching sleek
    cellphones are only a few generations away from the time when Turkey
    became a state in 1923, yet far enough away from the secular revolution
    of Ataturk, Turkey's founder, to start to question it.

    In recent years there has been a flurry of films, books and oral
    histories about Turkey's past, and the country feels more democratic
    than at any time in its short history, Ms. Neyzi said. Turkish Jews
    now have a museum.

    Last year, Turkey held a conference on the killings of Armenians
    in the World War I era, described as genocide by many in the West
    but not by the Turkish government. Estimates of the deaths given
    by the Allies at the end of the war ranged from 600,000 to 800,000,
    and scholars more recently have put the figure at more than a million.

    It is a painful process. When Orhan Pamuk, a Turkish novelist who has
    spoken out on the Armenian issue, won the Nobel Prize for Literature,
    the president of Turkey did not congratulate him. That is because Mr.

    Pamuk is seen as a tool of anti-Turkish forces, whose views of his
    country can be critical, instead of being seen as a writer who made
    the Turkish novel universal, Ms. Neyzi said.

    "All the skeletons in the closet are spilling out," said Ms. Neyzi,
    who chose to return to Turkey after earning a doctorate from Cornell.

    "It's creating a lot of conflict in society."

    The danger, Turks say, is that too abrupt a process can sharpen
    nationalist and Islamist sentiments and possibly lead to another coup
    by the army, a traditional safeguard of the country's secularism.

    There have been three in Turkey's short history.

    That, in turn, would set back efforts at change and roll back debate,
    and could seriously damage the significant economic gains Turkey has
    made in the last six years.

    To prevent that, Turkish intellectuals like Nazan Olcer, an art
    museum director, are bringing up the past in small bits. Shortly
    after the opening of the museum in 2002, it made arrangements to show
    a collection of an Armenian from Ottoman times.

    "It was a hot iron," said Ms. Olcer, sitting on a gilded loveseat
    in her office near the museum, which like Ms. Neyzi's university
    was financed by the Sabanci family, the Turkish equivalent of the
    Rockefellers, which began building public learning institutions in
    recent years. "Everyone warned us not to do it."

    In the end, people came. By the time they left, they understood a
    little more about the collector and were questioning some of their
    own assumptions, Ms. Olcer said.

    "You remind people to think twice," she said. In 2005 the museum
    brought the first Picasso to Turkey, and this year it exhibited Rodin
    sculptures. The fact that the figures were nude did not seem to bother
    devout Turks, who came in large numbers, Ms. Olcer said.

    On Tuesday, in another dip into the past, the museum will open an
    exhibit about Genghis Khan, including some of the earliest Turkic
    writing and inscriptions.

    "A very important dialogue is beginning," Ms. Olcer said. "I want to
    tell them the history. Not with a heroic approach. Not with strongly
    accented nationalism. What they were missing was the knowledge."

    Sebnem Arsu contributed reporting.
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