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ANKARA: How patriotic are you?

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  • ANKARA: How patriotic are you?

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    July 11 2008


    How patriotic are you?


    Many Turks uphold links with the West and look for modernization at
    every opportunity. First-time visitors to Turkey are always impressed
    with many things they see.


    They also will immediately notice Atatürk's statue in every
    public place, and may think that this is similar to former communist
    countries. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk: the founder of the republic
    and democracy in Turkey.
    Visitors notice many different ways that you can show your support of
    Atatürk -- the first being by wearing a lapel pin of him; many
    secularist Turks do! Another way support is shown for Atatürk
    is by hanging his picture up. You'll see his picture hanging in the
    majority of workplaces, offices, schools and government buildings. On
    holidays his portrait is draped from multistory office buildings and
    on banners everywhere. Also many important places such as dams,
    airports, roadways and others are named after him.

    While in the US over the Independence Day holiday on July 4, I saw a
    few flags hanging from skyscrapers, but nothing like the impressive
    show of flags that I see in Turkey.

    I didn't see any pictures of any of our American founding fathers of
    the great nation¦ Hmm¦ Maybe I was not in the right place at the
    right time.

    Many people of other nationalities often comment on how "American"
    Americans are. I used to think this meant they thought we are very
    patriotic, but being back in the US on July 4, the most patriotic
    holiday of the nation, it did not seem folks were that patriotic!
    Everyone was having a fun day and eating barbecue ribs, but it
    certainly doesn't compare to Turkish patriotism.

    If you visit some of the immigrant neighborhoods in the United States
    where Turks live, you would think you were in Turkey. The first influx
    of Turks to America was to Ellis Island -- it was seen as a beacon of
    hope to those thousands of Muslim Turks of the Ottoman Empire who came
    to the United States between 1900-21, according to historian John
    Grabowski.

    "Religion was the dominant identity for millions of immigrants who
    came from countries in which national identity was nascent and
    subordinate to ethnic and religious identity," Grabowski says. "This
    official transformation had its most significant impact on immigrants
    from the Ottoman Empire."

    Turks and others from the old Ottoman Empire were considered subjects
    of their sultan and, beyond that, were identified as Orthodox,
    Maronite, Armenian, Catholic, Muslim or people of other faiths or
    ethnicities. Upon entering the US, they were registered not by their
    religious identities but usually as immigrants from Turkey in Asia or
    Turkey in Europe.

    The first Turkish Muslim immigrants to America were predominantly
    male, from the poor rural class and primarily from Anatolia or the
    Balkan region of present-day Bulgaria and Albania. Their intentions
    were to eventually return to their home country after working for a
    period of time in the United States. The immigrants primarily worked
    and earned money in such places as the leather factories of
    Massachusetts, the railroad companies around Chicago, the steel mills
    of Gary, the auto plants of Detroit or dye factories in Cleveland.

    Traveling and living in Europe for a period of time, I noticed that
    Turks from Turkey in the late 1970s congregated together and formed a
    mini-Turkey. We used to joke about Berlin being the fourth largest
    city of Turkey! Similar to Turks in Germany and Holland, the Turks in
    America clustered together in enclaves nearby work and sometimes
    formed alliances or groups to provide assistance or support to one
    another.

    Two more waves of Turkish immigrants would arrive in America: students
    and army officers in the 1950s after Turkey became a member of NATO,
    and larger numbers after 1965 when America's old restrictive
    immigration laws changed.

    "The stories of the early immigrants raise questions about religious
    differences and the creation of the modern secular Turkish identity,"
    Grabowski said. "Did their time in the US and the way this country
    identified them in secular terms move them away from a primarily
    religious identity?"

    I wonder, when did Turks become so nationalistic and patriotic?

    Could it be that there was already a sense of national identity and
    after they immigrated the American (or whatever experience abroad
    wherever) helped cement that identity?

    Haven't you ever noticed that some Westerners tend to become more
    patriotic and nationalistic when away from their homeland?

    Let's explore this further next time¦drop me a note and tell me
    what you think!

    Please keep your questions and observations coming: I want to ensure
    this column is a help to you, Today's Zaman `s readers. Note:
    Charlotte McPherson is the author of `Culture Smart: Turkey, 2005.'
    Email: [email protected]
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