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ANKARA: Parallel universes and elites

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  • ANKARA: Parallel universes and elites

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Sunday's Zaman
    June 7 2009


    Parallel universes and elites



    I am sometimes unable to prevent myself from thinking that this
    beautiful country and its sovereign political cultures (yes, cultures)
    are like a science fiction movie: There are parallel universes in it
    which never cross one another but exist simultaneously. Each one of
    these parallel universes has its own values, perceptions and `others.'
    Each of them is secretly or openly at war with another -- or at least
    fearing, humiliating, extraditing or ignoring the `other.' There are a
    few humanists who are able to travel between these universes, but they
    are not sincerely welcomed.
    In the parallel universes of the republicans, the democrats, the
    Islamists, the Kurds and the Turkish nationalists, the borders are
    almost very clear; they don't like each other, they don't try to
    understand each other and they are hostile to one another.

    An interesting, but not surprising, survey done by Professor
    Füsün Ã`stel and Associate Professor Birol Caymaz
    strengthen these pessimistic views of mine. The survey, supported by
    the Open Society Foundation, underlines that the `elites' of this
    country have their own universe, which is not very open at all toward
    `others' -- namely, minorities, Kurds and conservatives.

    The `Elites and Social Distance' survey was completed by conducting
    in-depth interviews with members of the upper middle class who have
    graduated from Turkey's `prestigious' schools, such as Galatasaray
    High School, St. Joseph's, Ankara College and the like. All the
    interviewees have good professional positions and perceive themselves
    as devoted to republican secular values. For me, this is exactly the
    point at which the tragedy begins; on the one hand, these prestigious
    schools claim that they are teaching `Western' values and established
    for the `modernization' of the country, but at the end are under heavy
    influence of Turkey's nationalistic education system. The sovereign
    culture of these schools (and I mean sovereign) teaches the students
    that just being a student there is extremely important; although
    acting according to `universal' values, the survey openly shows that
    even graduates of the country's French-built schools are
    unable to absorb Voltaire's idea `I do not agree with what you say
    but I will defend to the death your right to say it' into their
    subconscious.

    The survey points out that it is a matter of prestige for elites to
    have friends from among members of Turkey's non-Muslim
    minorities. Most of them are very proud of having them as classmates
    and as `best friends,' but their sympathies end there. Most of them
    say they did not talk to `their best friends' about groups' rights nor
    about the state's unfair acts toward them. According to the survey,
    most of the interviewees suggested that `minorities can have their own
    school, but these schools should be run by Turks' or `maybe in the
    past they were subject to discrimination, but they aren't paying any
    taxes now.' Some of the elites were also very critical and unable to
    understand the slogan `We are all Armenians, we are all Hrant' which
    began to be used after the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink.

    When it comes to the subject of the ruling Justice and Development
    Party (AK Party), the elites' attitudes are again not
    surprising. According to them, the closure of the AK Party is
    acceptable. The survey points out that the elites think the AK Party
    and its supporters are making the elites a `minority' and threatening
    their position; in short, they are not willingly to share their
    `privileges' with any newcomers. Well, since the basic idea of the
    elites is this, they have a tendency to think that Ergenekon is a sort
    of settling of accounts between the new AK Party elites and the former
    republican elites.

    When it comes to Kurds, the position of the elites is also not
    hopeful. Most of them think the Democratic Society Party (DTP) should
    be closed down. They say the Kurds are lazy and are not subject to
    discrimination because they can be seen on Ä°stanbul's upscale
    BaÄ?dat Avenue. Some of the elites think that if there is a
    Kurdish problem in Turkey, it is simply because of `foreign powers.'

    In any case, thinking that people who hold diplomas from this
    country's prestigious schools can be diplomats between Turkey's
    parallel universes is wrong because at the end of the day they are
    concurrently the products and producers of these parallel universes.
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