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  • ANKARA: A lightning rod for Turkey's Alevi community

    Hürriyet, Turkey
    Nov 29 2008


    A lightning rod for Turkey's Alevi community

    ISTANBUL - Modern times have called for a leader who would be
    courageous and willing to speak up and Ä°zzettin DoÄ?an is
    just such a person...


    [He] is a committed Alevi and leader in his community and has in fact
    the best known name among the Alevis today, nationally and
    internationally. The Alevis are facing problems that only a government
    can deal with and not just the present one but others in the past that
    have promised help just to gain Alevi votes. Prof Ä°zzettin
    DoÄ?an could be described as something of a lightning rod.

    His comments and pronouncements as one of the leading dedes (elders)
    of the Alevi community often attract support and criticism. But he
    comes intellectually well-equipped to explain, argue, comment and
    pronounce to and for his community.

    In spite of white hair, DoÄ?an's energy and activities make him
    seem younger than his 68 years. Born in Malatya to parents who were
    both from the families of Alevi dedes, he spent his formative years
    there. He went on to study at Galatasaray Lycee, then abroad in
    Switzerland and France and eventually obtained a doctorate in law. His
    studies and thesis show a special interest in Turkey and its relations
    with the European Union from a legal point of view. His experience
    left him western oriented but at the same time he hasn't wanted to
    lose the values he has from Anatolia.

    DoÄ?an's continuing to work in academia Ä? he has taught
    in universities in Istanbul - shows that he is disciplined, has a good
    memory and enjoys reading and learning new things but not just
    superficial things, he likes to go to the heart of matters. He also
    likes and trusts the young people who are around him.

    Where the Alevi community in Turkey belongs has become a bone of
    contention since the end of the Ottoman Empire. The Alevis to some
    extent agree with the Shiite branch of Islam that believes the
    rightful heir of the Prophet Mohammed was Ali, the latter's cousin and
    son-in-law, and his heirs by blood. Hence their name is Alevi or the
    follower of Ali, but they are not Shiites. Turkey on the other hand
    throughout the Ottoman Empire was Sunni for the most parts and Sunnis
    and Alevis believe that the leader of the Muslim community can be
    chosen by that community.

    Shiite Islam
    The followers of Shiite Islam are mostly to be found in Iran and Iraq
    and today constitute only about 15 percent of Muslims
    altogether. Although the origin of the Alevis is none too clear, they
    historically were mostly found in the eastern part of Turkey and
    scattered throughout the many villages there. They likely came from
    Central Asia in the 10th century. At some point, they mingled with the
    mystic sect based on the teachings of Haci Bektasi Veli, a 13th
    century mystic philosopher and humanist from Khorasan in northeastern
    Iran. Haci Bektasi's philosophy that was adopted by the Alevis had
    three major points: love and respect for all people, tolerance for
    other religions and ethnic groups and respect for working people.

    When the Alevis began migrating west in search of work and a better
    life, they brought their religious beliefs and practices with
    them. But the Sunnis had trouble accepting that the Alevis were
    Muslims since they followed practices that did not conform to what the
    former believed. For instance the Alevis do not believe in fasting
    during the month of Ramadan or going to a mosque to pray. They have
    their own places of worship known as cemevis and their services
    include singing and dancing. The Sunnis who are in the majority and
    control the government refused and continue to refuse accepting the
    cemevi as the equivalent of a mosque. There are other areas of
    disagreement.

    Modern times have called for a leader who would be courageous and
    willing to speak up and Izzettin DoÄ?an is just such a
    person. The dedes in the rural areas had been able to control of the
    Alevi communities but this power dissipated as people migrated to the
    large cities of Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir and even immigrated to
    other countries. Today their role is rather limited to social
    activities, rituals and rites and the communal use of the cemevi.

    But DoÄ?an is a committed Alevi and leader in his community and
    has in fact the best known name among the Alevis today, nationally and
    internationally. He writes letters and articles, gives interviews and
    speaks at conferences and he has set up his own association, Cem Vakfi
    or Cem Foundation. Established in 1995, it has a website and publishes
    information on Alevi-ism and its beliefs, has links to its radio and
    television stations and provides a host of other information about the
    community.

    DoÄ?an told the Daily News that he set it up as a means of
    warning about the politicization of Islam. "If western democracies
    continue with values that rely on intelligence and knowledge that will
    neutralize political Islam, I believed that it was necessary that an
    understanding of Alevi Islam had to be offered to the Turkish people
    anew in order to secure its continuation."

    DoÄ?an added, "Turkey has witnessed Alevi-ism slowly appearing
    in the light of day. If you don't provide people with an understanding
    of Alevi Islam, the majority will suffer a very great loss and it will
    be inescapable that Alevi-ism will become a problem of trust in
    Turkey."

    DoÄ?an is a staunch supporter of Atatürk and his
    reforms. He in fact sees Atatürk as having set out to establish
    the Turkish Republic on a new foundation. He explained, "Many people
    are unaware that Ataturk wanted the new republic to rest on a new
    cultural basis. He established the Turkish Language and History
    Societies for this reason and for the first time in nearly 400 years
    books related to Alevi-ism were published."

    The Alevis are facing problems that only a government can deal with
    and not just the present one but others in the past that have promised
    help in order to gain Alevi votes. After all the Alevis are several
    million strong. But once a political party was in power, its leaders
    would renege on their promises. In the most recent general election,
    DoÄ?an called on the Alevis to vote for whichever party seemed
    to be the most helpful in addressing the Alevis' problems.

    Some of these problems are based on the fact that the government has a
    government office called the Directorate for Religious Affairs. This
    office considers the Alevis to be Sunni Muslims and therefore should
    use mosques instead of cemevis as their places of worship. So it
    permits the building of mosques in areas where the majority of the
    people are Alevis while limiting the number of cemevis built. This
    started in the 1980s and while it still happens, it is much less
    frequent than before.

    Another problem is the Directorate's insistence on religious
    instruction in school, that is Sunni Islam, on a compulsory basis. The
    only children that are not required to attend these classes are those
    of minority religions such as Christianity or Judaism. But the catch
    has been that questions on the annual examinations for educational
    advancement include some on Islam. They're not compulsory questions
    but the added points won from correct answers may mean the difference
    between having enough to go on to university or not or winning the
    university of one's choice.

    DoÄ?an and other Alevi leaders have their work cut out for
    them. DoÄ?an has repeatedly called on the government to
    eliminate the Directorate of Religious Affairs or include a section in
    it for the Alevis. He is adamant about Alevis being Muslim.

    He recently described those who said the opposite as "stark raving
    ignoramuses." Such statements have attracted widespread publicity and
    don't sit well with the current government whose members tend to be
    religiously conservative. In fact the Turkish government regardless of
    which party is in power is trapped in a definition of minority
    enshrined in the Lausanne Treaty that was signed in 1923 and allows
    for only Orthodox Christians, Jews and Armenians. Alevis are Muslims
    and so don't qualify as a minority even if their practices are
    different from those of Sunni Muslims.

    There also is a tendency to equate Alevi-ism with being Kurdish,
    although most Kurds are not Alevi, thus turning Alevis from a group of
    people following the same beliefs into an ethnic group, in a way
    politicizing them. One has only to look at the situation in Iraq with
    two religiously based political groups, the Sunnis and the Shiites,
    and one ethnic group, the Kurds who may or may not have Alevi
    members. Just as the Sunnis and Shiites there cannot agree, the Alevis
    and the Sunni Turks also cannot agree.

    Is DoÄ?an something of a lightning rod? Yes, one could describe
    him that way since he doesn't mind saying provocative things. He
    prefers what is concrete although he is open to reform and is bothered
    when he thinks that he is faced by a fait d'accompli. And like a good
    lawyer, he asks penetrating questions in order to get at the heart of
    matters. Tolerance, peace, principles and uniting Alevis and Sunnis
    help guide him on his way.

    Certainly he faces criticism within his own community from time to
    time. The Alevi groups that have formed in groups abroad are sometimes
    critical of his actions as well. When DoÄ?an did not attend
    anniversary services at the Madımak Hotel in Sivas, he met with
    criticism. Thirty-three people, who were there to attend a memorial
    service for Pir Sultan Abdal, died when the Madımak Hotel was
    set on fire in 1993. Every year since then people have gone there to
    lay flowers at the hotel but DoÄ?an didn't go on this, the 15th
    anniversary. Pir Sultan Abdal was a Turkish Alevi mystic poet who
    lived in the 16th century until he was hung by Ottoman authorities.

    Comparison between Nazım Hikmet and Fethullah Gülen
    DoÄ?an also met with reaction in June this year when he
    seemingly compared Fethullah Gülen's stay in the U.S. that
    began in 1998 to Turkish poet Nazım Hikmet's going into exile
    in 1950. Gülen himself is a controversial figure who preached a
    philosophy of Islam that maintained Muslim faith based on the Qur'an
    and added his belief in modern science, inter-faith dialogue and
    multi-party democracy. People felt the comparison was inappropriate.

    A recent march and meeting in Ankara that Alevi dedes called for met
    with DoÄ?an's disapproval and he didn't attend. He disapproved
    because he felt that the participants shouldn't just be Alevis. Rather
    people who were not Alevis but supported them ought to have been
    called as well.

    Some of the Alevi community decided in 2005 to battle for their rights
    through the Turkish courts and legal system because the Turkish
    constitution allowed for freedom of religion. If after the years of
    court battles came to naught, then the community would appeal to the
    European Court of Human Rights. They are still in the courts. Peace,
    cooperation and a communal spirit and having to figuratively fight for
    these seem rather like a contradiction in terms. But it has to be done
    and DoÄ?an is determined to carry on.
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