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An Islam Compatible With The Republic

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  • An Islam Compatible With The Republic

    AN ISLAM COMPATIBLE WITH THE REPUBLIC
    Jean-Francois Bayart

    Liberation
    Nov 13 2009
    France

    When Nicolas Sarkozy rejects accession for Turkey on the grounds
    of Europe's "natural borders," everybody know that he is speaking
    of "cultural borders." And Turkey's culture is Islam: It would be
    incompatible with Europe, and even with the Republic [France].

    Yet Turkey has been a republic since 1924. Islam has democratized
    in Turkey. It has appropriated the idea of the nation, republican
    institutions, the civil code (introduced in 1926 and modelled on
    Swiss legislation), the market economy, education, the mass media and
    scientific knowledge. It has adopted the political party as method
    of political participation and, because it is as theologically and
    ideologically varied as in the rest of the Muslim world, it has given
    rise to a pluralist education, the one rivaling the other to a greater
    or lesser degree. The believers have also themselves divided up their
    votes across the political checkerboard, while non-believers have
    voted for Muslim parties.

    More than that, Islam has made a decisive contribution to the
    democratization of the Kemalist republic. By virtue of the
    parliamentary system, successive Muslim parties or conservative
    parties with a religious sensibility, close to brotherhoods, have
    incorporated within the republican institutions the religious masses
    that do not identify with the aggressive secularism of Kemalism and
    filled the space that could have fallen to the jidahist groups. They
    supported the move of the peasant farmers to the cities during the
    rural exodus. They lent a voice to those of the Kurds who sought to
    express their defiance of a centralizing state but without joining
    the armed struggle of the PKK [Kurdistan Workers' Party]. They
    also permitted the rise of the Anatolian elites that the Kemalist
    establishment was confining to the periphery.

    On the other hand, Kemalist nationalism is less secular than it
    claims. It is ethno-confessional, like its counterparts in the Balkans
    and Caucasus. In the Kemalist republic nationals of Turkish origin
    or Sunnis of the Hanefite rite are implicitly more citizens than the
    Kurdish, Alevi, and Christian and Jewish inhabitants. But the origin
    of this implicit discrimination does not have much to do with Islam
    as a religion. It is political and is part of the unleashing of a
    cultural nationalism from the latter half of the 19th century as
    well as of the crossed operations of ethnic cleansing that followed,
    the genocide of the Armenians being its culmination. The same logic
    is found at work for the benefit of Orthodox, Catholics or Jews, or
    Shi'is or even Sunnis, depending on the Balkan, Caucasian, or Middle
    Eastern country in question. After all, an Arab Israeli is a little
    less Israeli than a Jewish Israeli and it is not so long ago that that
    religion ceased to be indicated on the identity cards of the Greeks.

    The paradox of Turkey is due to the fact that the secular nationalists
    are the ones that hold this ethno-confessional conception of
    citizenship and the ruling Islamic party, the AKP [Justice and
    Development Party], with the support of the conservatives, is
    questioning it. Closing the door to Europe on Turkey by claiming it is
    a Muslim country is clearly to play the game of this conception. There
    is, moreover, a certain coherence in hearing Nicolas Sarkozy, a man
    so concerned about "national identity," inadvertently assume the
    slogan of the Turkish far right: "France, you must like it or leave
    it!" On the other hand, many Turks who are not necessarily believers
    but who vote for the AKP to oppose nationalist authoritarianism,
    say to Europe, along with the left-wing intellectual Murat Belge:
    "Do not allow us to become fascist!"

    The Europeans have two reasons to be concerned about the future
    of Turkish democracy. It is not in their interest to see the
    development of an ultranationalist Moscow-Ankara axis. And they
    bear a direct historical responsibility for the development of these
    ethno-confessional nationalisms in the Eastern Mediterranean, which
    they fuelled ideologically and supported politically, even militarily,
    under cover of "protection" - a self-interested one - of Christian
    minorities. We are still paying the price in Lebanon, in Palestine,
    in Iraq, in the Balkans, of the disastrous way the "Orient question"
    was handled.

    The failure of negotiations between Turkey and the European Union
    would be a continuation of this disaster.
    From: Baghdasarian
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