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ANKARA: Will Turkey ever apologize to other oppressed groups?

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  • ANKARA: Will Turkey ever apologize to other oppressed groups?

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 18 2009


    Will Turkey ever apologize to other oppressed groups?


    Covered women who have faced various obstacles during their academic
    lives because of their headsarves, say they wonder whether the Turkish
    state will one day apologize to them for the suffering it has caused
    them. A series of recent moves by Turkey to confront its past
    mistakes in its treatment of certain groups or individuals has brought
    to mind the question of whether the country will some day seek the
    forgiveness of other groups which have long complained of being
    deprived of religious, cultural or ethnic rights.

    A campaign initiated by a number of Turkish intellectuals who
    collected signatures for a statement personally apologizing for events
    that took place in 1915 that Armenians claim constituted genocide
    dominated the national agenda for several weeks, with many questioning
    whether it could be a historic step for Turkey in confronting its
    past.

    Then came the launch of the country's first 24-hour television channel
    broadcasting in Kurdish, a language that was prohibited in public
    following the 1980 military coup.

    Soon afterwards, a Turkish minister engaged in self-criticism over the
    state's misguided practices in the past, referring to people who had
    been prosecuted on charges of singing Kurdish songs, including Ahmet
    Kaya, Ahmet Arif and Mehmet Uzun. This move was followed by a Cabinet
    decision to restore the citizenship of Nazım Hikmet Ran, one of
    Turkey's first modern, best loved and most illustrious poets. Turkey
    stripped Hikmet of his citizenship in 1951 at the height of the Cold
    War because of his communist views. He died in exile in Moscow in
    1963.

    The series of apologies to various groups and individuals in society
    raises the question of whether other segments that have for many years
    claimed that their basic rights have been violated will receive a
    similar apology some day in the future. Among these segments are
    Alevis, Kurds and women who wear headscarves, the behavior of the
    state toward whom has been criticized on various occasions.

    Havva Yılmaz, a covered woman who has faced various obstacles
    during her academic life because of her headscarf, said she wondered
    whether the Turkish state would one day apologize to her for the
    suffering it has caused her. `I wish the state owed no apology to
    anyone. Nevertheless, it would be pleasing to hear an official apology
    for the headscarf ban years later. I wonder if the state would
    consider taking such a step,' she noted.

    Yılmaz came to prominence last year because of a statement she
    released along with her friends advocating freedom for all oppressed
    individuals in society, including those suffering because of the ban
    on the headscarf. Headscarves were banned at Turkish universities in
    the late 1990s through a Constitutional Court ruling on the grounds
    that they violated the nation's secular principles because the
    headscarf was seen as a political and religious symbol. The question
    of wearing headscarves on university campuses has since remained
    unresolved.

    Parliament, controlled by the Justice and Development Party (AK
    Party), passed a constitutional amendment last February to allow
    students to wear headscarves at universities; however, upon an appeal
    by the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) and its ally
    the Democratic Left Party (DSP), the Constitutional Court ruled in
    early June that Parliament had violated the constitutionally enshrined
    principle of secularism when it passed amendments to remove the
    headscarf ban, and annulled the amendment.

    `It is very important to grant people their rights in time. I wish
    Nazım Hikmet had not been stripped of his citizenship. I wish
    no one had suffered from the 1915 incidents. And I wish no headscarf
    ban had been imposed; however, if the state takes a step in the future
    to make up for the sufferings caused by the scarf ban, it will be a
    delayed yet pleasing development. At least, we will understand that
    the state has finally realized its mistake,' Yılmaz stated.

    Another group that expects an apology from the state is the Kurdish
    population, which has complained that the state has withheld the
    cultural rights Kurds yearned for. The Kurdish population's aspiration
    to enjoy long-desired rights and its fight to this end have turned
    violent in the last 25 years, with the outlawed Kurdistan Workers'
    Party (PKK) launching an armed campaign against Turkish civilians and
    security forces for autonomy in Turkey's Kurdish-populated Southeast.

    `As the understanding of apologizing grows more mature in society, I
    believe we will confront our past and restore the rights of those who
    were subjected to unjust treatment. This is something directly related
    to the improvement of democracy. As democracy improves, we will make
    up for our past mistakes. We see some groups and the state expressing
    their regret to Armenians and Nazım Hikmet. So, what about the
    rights of other oppressed groups? When we learn to apologize to all
    groups who were subjected to unjust treatment, then we will become a
    real state,' remarked Mehmet Metiner, a Kurdish intellectual.

    There is another community that believes it deserves an apology for
    the policies the state has pursued toward it for many years. Turkey's
    Alevi community, a religious group thought to have between 6 and 12
    million adherents in Turkey, has complained on various occasions about
    being subjected to discrimination and deprived of their cultural and
    religious rights.

    Alevi demands include making state-run religious classes
    noncompulsory, abolishing the Religious Affairs Directorate and the
    recognition of cemevis (Alevi places of worship) by the state. They
    also want full implementation of the principle of `equal citizenship,'
    so that all citizens can enjoy their fundamental rights and freedoms
    without being subjected to discrimination regardless of their
    religion, origin, language, race or gender.

    The governing AK Party recently shaped a new initiative to respond to
    the demands voiced by Alevi citizens. As part of the new initiative,
    Alevi dedes (religious leaders) will be granted a monthly salary. The
    electricity and water bills of cemevis will be paid for by the
    state. And the Madımak Hotel, where several Alevi intellectuals
    were killed in a fire set by religious fanatics in 1993, will be
    turned into a museum.

    Though a considerable majority of the Alevi community is pleased with
    the recent initiative that is aimed at thawing the ice between the
    state and Alevis, some say the initiative wouldn't suffice.

    `Apologizing for mistakes shows the greatness of a state. A state has
    pluses and minuses. Being sorry for the bad things experienced in the
    past is not something wrong. On the contrary, it renders the unity in
    society stronger and makes the state more powerful. The state should
    apologize to various individuals or groups for its past mistakes,'
    stated Fermani Altun, president of the World Ehli Beyt Foundation, a
    prominent Alevi association.

    Altun said society should as a whole react against the mistakes that
    have been and are being committed. `In this way, we can develop into a
    more democratic and improved society,' he added.

    18 January 2009, Sunday
    BETÃ`L AKKAYA DEMÄ°RBAÅ? Ä°STANBUL
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