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ANKARA: This Nationalist Wave Is Not Temporary

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  • ANKARA: This Nationalist Wave Is Not Temporary

    THIS NATIONALIST WAVE IS NOT TEMPORARY
    Cengiz Aktar

    Turkish Daily News, Turkey
    Nov 7 2006

    There are various interpretations concerning the rise of nationalist
    sentiment. Most believe this wave is temporary and is mainly due
    to the elections that will be held next year. It is believed that
    the reactions won't go beyond calls like "Europe, Europe hear our
    voice." In my opinion, the issue goes much deeper, and the rising
    nationalism we are witnessing is new and more permanent and structural
    than ever before.

    The sources that feed today's nationalism are multiple. Our education
    system is certainly one of these. But, the most important factor
    is our country opening up and integrating with the world and the
    consequent mindset that reacts to this development. Actually, when
    a country that was closed to the world until the 1980's is opened
    up so fast it causes a deep social transformation and means new
    traditions will enter our lives. For the last 25 years, Turkish
    people have begun to see themselves in the mirror and this mirror
    constantly shows the deficiencies and deformities of our country,
    compared to developed countries.

    Actually such a depressing self-evaluation is something that can happen
    in any developing and changing country, but the European Union and the
    International Monetary Fund (IMF) processes add to it a substantial
    and different meaning.

    This twin process has been dominating our daily lives in almost
    every way since 1999. Moreover, the achievements on the economic
    front thanks to the IMF process are definitely not being reflected
    in the way ordinary people live. This failure results in the process
    being perceived only as more taxes and unemployment. On the other
    hand the EU process is a fabulous Pandora's box, whose lid is wide
    open. It involves a relationship with the EU that allows Turkey to
    come face to face with the fact that the innumerable political and
    social problems it has tried to solve its own way or to ignore over
    the years are simply not being resolved.

    We also need to add the realities of the post-Sept. 11 world, the
    regional repercussions of the irrational reaction the United States to
    the events of Sept. 11 and the natural uproar against the U.S. reaction
    to the twin process mentioned above.

    Today's nationalism feeds on the fear of change, is reactionary
    and contains no constructive aspects. Its multitude of versions
    is discriminatory, isolationist, rejectionist and hate-filled. The
    reactions generally abide by the rule of an eye for an eye. If someone
    mentions the Armenian genocide, a statute that shows that the real
    victims were Turks is erected. If a cartoon about the Prophet Mohammed
    appears in Danish dailies, a Catholic priest is shot in Trabzon.

    Politicians who are aware of this public mood feed it with political
    populism. The IMF discipline has limited the number of economic tools
    for populism and this leaves nationalism as the last trump card. The
    latest example is the insistence not to amend Turkish Penal Code's
    (TCK) Article 301 that protects the Turkish world from insults.

    Just have a look at the public expressions of the nationalist wave:
    The "national" reaction against Nobel Laureate Orhan Pamuk; books
    and movies that glorify Turks, such as "Cýlgýn Turkler" (Those
    Crazy Turks), "Metal Storm" and "Valley of the Wolves Iraq," as
    opposed to the "antinational" books of Elif Þafak and Orhan Pamuk;
    the insults directed against the Greek Orthodox Patriarchy and
    the ecumenical patriarch; the incredible lies and accusations that
    flood the Internet; the race to produce the biggest Turkish flag;
    anti-Jewish and anti-Western sentiments, which have always secretly
    existed in our society, spewed at every opportunity and much more.

    If we assume Turkey's transformation process as structural and
    impossible to wind back, we come to the conclusion that today's
    nationalist reactionism is equally structural. If we fail to properly
    define the reasons behind the variety of nationalist sentiments voiced
    by the most coarse or the most intellectual, the classic rightists or
    within the Republican People's Party (CHP), by those who come up with
    a Turkish-Islamic synthesis or the secularists, it will become harder
    to deal with them in the future and this will increase the possibility
    of the country being whisked away to other unpleasant shores.

    --Boundary_(ID_OmiABIkBQdlhvmI+6Y6qYQ)--
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