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  • ANKARA: In a fast shrinking world of their own

    Hurriyet, Turkey
    June 6 2009


    In a fast shrinking world of their own

    ISTANBUL - The rise of the religious class and the AKP's hold on power
    has Turkey's traditional elites on the defensive and feeling like
    their role as upholders of Republican values is being usurped,
    according to research based on interviews with the former movers and
    shakers.

    Elites in Turkey are shocked and angry about the ascent of the
    religious class, and while they say they feel an affiliation with the
    country's non-Muslim minorities, they admit ignorance of their
    problems, new research has revealed.

    The research, supported by the Open Society Foundation, was conducted
    via interviews with 21 women and 19 men over the age of 18.

    The aim was to catch a glimpse of perceptions of people who graduated
    from prestigious high schools and universities, who have high levels
    of income and status in their profession and in society, and see
    themselves as carriers of secular, Republican values. The research
    concentrated in three areas: the group's outlook on Islamic circles,
    non-Muslim minorities as defined by the Lausanne Treaty, and the
    Kurds.

    Among the factors that triggered the research were heated debates
    within e-mail groups about the ruling Justice and Development Party,
    or AKP, the murder of Armenian Turkish journalist Hrant Dink, and
    developments in the Kurdish issue. These debates have polarized groups
    of people who joined e-mail groups because they believed they shared
    the same values.

    Researchers Füsun Ã`stel and Birol Caymaz, both from
    Galatasaray University, said their research does not carry the
    ambition of explaining the outlook of the whole group concerned but
    aims to give some clues to certain tendencies. According to the
    findings, there is clear-cut irritation against the ascent of the
    Islamic circles often identified in the AKP. They are shocked by the
    increasing presence and visibility of these groups in society as well
    as in the administration.

    "One day they opened their windows, and they saw people with
    headscarves everywhere," said Caymaz. According to the researchers,
    this group, which has monopolized the modernization process of Turkey
    and see themselves as the carriers of Republican values, feels
    increasingly insecure and in the minority amid the growth of the
    "newcomers."

    They are convinced that there is an unfair "invasion-occupation" of
    what they believe belongs to them, he said.

    "They are dismayed by the Turkey they see, and they are angry," said
    Ã`stel.

    Most who see themselves as representatives of modernity believe
    Turkey's progress stopped with the ascent of the AKP government, which
    in turn has led to "modernization nostalgia," a term used by Esra
    Ã-zyürek, another researcher whose analysis is quoted in the
    research. According to Ã-zyürek, "modern Kemalists believe
    there is a collapse of modernity in Turkey and to be modern again they
    want to go back to some characteristics of the 1930s."

    Anger against the AKP, the headscarf issue and the Islamic lifestyle
    also stems from the fear that the elites' monopoly over Turkey's
    economic and political life is threatened by another group, said
    Ã-zyürek.

    In this respect most of the interviewees said they are convinced the
    AKP is a political structure founded against the Republican secular
    system. The research showed that the general view among them is that
    the AKP should be closed. Although most have voiced skepticism of the
    democratic characteristic of party closures, when it comes to the AKP
    they seem to prefer such a solution, concluded the researchers. The
    researchers have also seen that most do not see a regime problem in
    Turkey, instead they complain about the increasing conservatism that
    has gained impetus under the AKP government.

    Janet, 43, a graduate of Austrian Lycee and BoÄ?aziçi
    University, believes Turkey could become like Iran and Malaysia, and
    Ayla, 40, said openly that she is scared. "I have two daughters. One
    of their friends was not allowed on a bus because her dress was found
    to be too revealing," said Ayla. "If something like that happens in
    Ankara, I fear that worse pressure is exerted in small towns." All
    names of interviewees have been changed.

    Melek, 47, voiced her concern on cronyism: "In the past there was
    cronyism, too, but it included people like us, so we did not feel it
    so much. Now there are different people involved in the cronyism, and
    therefore we are more aware of it. Those who have been on the fringes
    of society have suddenly got hold of power. This is dangerous. When
    you look at the AKP cadres, they are those who have been oppressed
    until now and who never had this chance before."

    The research showed that the young generations are less radical in
    their criticism against the AKP compared with their elders. Cansu, 23,
    does not share what she calls "the paranoia that Shariah law will
    come," but she believes that the AKP is trying to impose a lifestyle
    based on religious references. "There are many bureaucrats whose wives
    wear veils," she said as an example.

    Lausanne minorities

    When it comes to the perceptions concerning non-Muslims, the
    researchers describe their observation of the situation as "a romantic
    relationship." Most in this group have a non-Muslim colleague or
    friend, but there is a lack of awareness of the problems they face.

    The murder of Armenian journalist Hrant Dink has polarized the elites,
    as some only became aware of minorities' problems when debates erupted
    following Dink's assassination. According to interviewee Begüm,
    problems became apparent after the murder, but "until then there was
    nothing."

    According to the researchers, there is a rising rhetoric of
    multiculturalism among the elites, which is also tainted by nostalgic
    feelings of the past when the number of non-Muslims was bigger. "Most
    see it as a richness to be protected," said Ã`stel.

    But they are unaware of the discrimination that minorities face. "I
    don't know whether a Turk in Germany is better off then a Jew in
    Turkey," said Neveser, 51, who believed minorities have no problem in
    Turkey. But she admits her ignorance when reminded that except state
    universities, minority members are excluded from public offices. "Do
    they really want? I don't know. I am quiet ignorant on the subject,"
    she said.

    Meanwhile, some perceive non-Muslim minority members as "local
    foreigners." When asked about the obligation to have a Turkish deputy
    lead the administration of minority schools, Ali, 23, who graduated
    from Dame De Sion High School and the University of Galatasaray, said:
    "Maybe this is to decrease the perception of the threat of foreigners
    in Turkey. Maybe this is done so that education is not out of the
    control of the Turks."

    Sevcan, 38, of Kadıköy Anadolu Lisesi, said she does not
    believe that there are discriminatory policies against minorities. To
    the contrary, she said she believes they are selling the country.

    Ending the silence on discussing minority problems ends in itself with
    rising nationalist tendencies. Ali, 23, said he has no problems with
    Armenian friends whom he went to school with since childhood. But he
    recalled an Armenian who joined Dame de Sion High School after having
    attended a minority school and the negative experience they had. "He
    and his other Armenian friends who went to minority schools had a
    harder stance toward us. They were blaming us. Then I thought
    education must be truly national. What is the function of an Armenian
    school? An Armenian can come to school with me and go to learn
    Armenian at night."

    When it comes to Kurds, the perception of the elites carries striking
    differences compared to their perceptions of non-Muslim
    minorities. First, in contrast to the interaction that elites had with
    members of minorities, Kurds are absent in their lives. There is a
    problem of proximity, according to the researchers, since there is low
    probability for the physical presence of Kurds in a group that has
    graduated from "prestigious institutions" with high-level
    income. Leyla, 30, does not recall having a Kurdish friend. "I heard
    nothing like, 'I am a Kurd.' I don't know," she said. "It's not
    written on their face."

    Lack of awareness

    Mine, 51, only became aware of Kurds due to the "PKK problem," or the
    outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party. "I never questioned whether someone
    was Turkish or Kurdish," she said.

    The elites see the Kurds as the backward part of society, according to
    the researchers. DoÄ?an, who is a graduate of Robert College and
    BoÄ?aziçi University, said he does not like Kurds because
    they still live a tribal life.

    The lack of awareness stems from the denial of Kurdish identity in the
    official discourse, according to the researchers. This, in turn, led
    many elites to believe that the "Kurdish problem" is engineered from
    abroad. According to Ebru, 23, who graduated from Ä°zmir
    American College, the Kurdish issue is an issue definitely provoked by
    the United States and Europe.

    "As far as nationalism is concerned there is not much difference
    between the elites and the ordinary person," said Ã`stel. "Maybe
    their discourse is less violent when compared with the ordinary man on
    the street." The tendency to avoid and ignore different identities in
    society stems largely from the Turkish education system, according to
    researchers Ã`stel and Caymaz. They said the education curriculum
    implemented after the 1980 military coup has affected millions of
    people, including those who studied at "prestigious schools."
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