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  • ANKARA: Schools open with anti-discrimination lecture...

    Today's Zaman
    25 September 2009, Friday

    Schools open with anti-discrimination lecture, have long way to go

    The new academic year started yesterday as around 15 million students
    and 650,000 teachers returned to their classrooms. The education
    minister was seen wiping the nose of a student.
    The new academic year started yesterday as around 15 million students
    and 650,000 teachers returned to their classrooms. The education
    minister was seen wiping the nose of a student.

    The new academic year kicked off yesterday for around 15 million
    students and 650,000 teachers. Education Minister Nimet
    �ubukçu gave the country's first lecture devoted to
    democracy and discrimination at a school in Ä°stanbul. Education
    experts welcomed the move but underlined that Turkey has a long way to
    go in its fight against discrimination.

    President Abdullah Gül lauded the inclusion of such a course in
    curricula in a message he issued on the occasion of the start of the
    new school year. He focused on the importance of raising individuals
    who are respectful of human rights. `We give priority and great
    importance to the raising of new generations as individuals who are
    respectful of human rights, human beings and ideas, who are tolerant,
    able to develop their skills, think, read profusely and know the
    values of the modern world and democracy,' the president said in his
    message.

    The Ministry of Education last month issued a circular to all schools
    and asked them to devote their first lectures to the subject of
    discrimination. While explaining the reason of the anti-discrimination
    lecture, Minister �ubukçu said the move could be
    considered part of the government's `democratization initiative.'

    The government launched an initiative two months ago to solve the
    country's decades-old Kurdish question. It is expected that the
    government's yet-to-be-announced plan will include the removal of some
    obstacles before the Kurdish language in addition to many other new
    regulations.

    �ubukçu gave a lecture on the fight against discriminat
    ol in Ä°stanbul. The speech was broadcast live by TRT 2.

    �ubukçu underlined in her speech the importance of
    tolerance toward others who are not from the same ethnic group or who
    do not speak the same language. `Tolerance means to be able to listen
    to those who do not defend the same idea as you, without getting
    angry,' she told the students. �ubukçu underlined that
    everyone is talking about the importance of democracy, respect for
    human rights and the wrongfulness of discrimination but that not
    everyone is able to absorb these ideas and act accordingly.

    During her lecture she also underlined the issue of `exclusion' and
    added that there are many ways to do so. `To laugh at, to not to speak
    with, to ridicule, to not greet those who are not similar to you --
    all these mean to discriminate against them,' she said.

    �ubukçu stressed gender equality and said that one of
    the most awful types of discrimination is based on gender.

    In Ä°stanbul, Robert College welcomed its new class on
    discrimination in an unconventional way. Pieces of paper with the
    words `Kurdish,' `Armenian,' `Jewish' and `Turkish' were placed on the
    foreheads of students as an open call for respect for all citizens of
    the country.
    `Very encouraging but a long way to go'

    Ã-ztürk TürkdoÄ?an, the chairman of the Human
    Rights Association (Ä°HD), told Today's Zaman that it is very
    hopeful to see the first lecture at schools devoted to discrimination
    but added that Turkey has a very long way to go.

    He said that although Turkey has ratified major international
    agreements about anti-discrimination and despite Turkish law being
    based on the principle of equality, there remain many shortcomings in
    the fight against discrimination.

    `Discrimination is a matter of culture. To fight it and to prevent it
    requires time, but still it is very important to devote the first
    lecture to the subject to at least improve awareness,'
    TürkdoÄ?an said.

    He added that as long as the Constitution remains as is, it will be
    very diffi
    t to overcome discrimination. `Schoolbooks contain many
    discriminatory, nationalistic, militarist and gender-based ideas of
    discrimination,' he said.

    Commenting on the new lecture, Nationalist Movement Party (MHP)
    parliamentary group chairman Oktay Vural said he found it unnecessary
    as Turkey has no problem of discrimination.

    `It is wrong to give the impression that there is a deep-rooted
    problem of discrimination in our country. We have no such
    problem. Rather, we have assets arising from our diversity. It would
    be better if �ubukçu had explained our common values
    that bind us together and our assets resulting from our diversity
    instead of focusing on diversity or discrimination. With this move,
    the government is emphasizing discrimination. We don't think this is a
    good step. A major mission of our national education system is to
    endow our children with a culture of coexistence through national
    upbringing. In this regard, I strongly disapprove of the government's
    discrimination move. This is because if you bring diversity to the
    forefront, you lead people to concentrate on separation, paving the
    way for actual division,' he noted.
    Textbooks full of discrimination

    Turkey reviewed its schoolbooks two years ago and tried to eliminate
    content deemed to be discriminatory, but a recent report titled `Human
    Rights in Schoolbooks,' the result of a collaborative effort between
    the History Foundation and the Turkish Human Rights Foundation
    (TÄ°HV) involving a survey of 139 textbooks, found that the
    books still contain many militarist, nationalist, racist and
    gender-biased sections. Only 11 percent of the books were found to be
    unproblematic.

    `We did the same study two times. The first was in 2004, and after
    changes were made to schoolbooks, we repeated the survey in
    2008. Unfortunately we noticed that indirect discrimination weighs
    heavily, while improvements were not significant,' Gamze Rezzan
    SarıÅ?en, a History Foundation official, told Today's
    Zaman.

    The report found that the books did not deve
    oblematic in terms of creating an `us versus them' mentality and not
    promoting peaceful values.

    The project suggested that the Turkish school curriculum should be
    reviewed according to international agreements that Turkey has signed
    and that the `National Security Class,' in which children are
    instructed by military personnel, should be abolished.

    `Devoting the first lecture to the subject of discrimination is very
    important, very hopeful and exciting. But we have some concerns,
    too. Both schoolbooks and the mentalities of teachers are very
    important. Our teachers' anti-discrimination training is inadequate,'
    SarıÅ?en added.

    Zübeyde Kılıç from the Education Personnel
    Union (EÄ?itim-Sen) told Today's Zaman that it is very important
    to devote the first lecture to discrimination -- especially in a
    country such as Turkey, where discrimination is a significant
    problem. But she agreed with SarııÅ?ık in
    that Turkey needs to take radical steps to fight against deep-rooted
    discrimination in the country.

    `Discrimination cannot be solved with only one lecture since
    discrimination is deeply rooted in all aspects of the education
    system. Ethnic, gender and religious discrimination is still present
    in school. Teachers also have to be trained to be able to increase the
    students' awareness on the matter, but they have not been given this
    training,' Kılıç said.
    National pledge before first lecture on discrimination

    Before going to class to hear the first lecture on discrimination,
    elementary school students read the national pledge, for many civil
    society organizations a discriminative act.

    Association of Human Rights and Solidarity for Oppressed Peoples
    (Mazlum-Der) Diyarbakır branch Deputy Chairman Abdurrahman Ay
    said he is collecting signatures for the removal of the national
    pledge from elementary schools. `It is a contradiction to give the
    first lecture on discrimination and to still make the children say the
    pledge every morning,' he said.

    The pledge in part says: `I am a Turk. I am
    protect those younger than me and to respect my elders.' Since 1933,
    Turkish elementary school students have had to repeat the pledge of
    allegiance, the `Andımız,' in which they also say, `I
    offer my existence to the Turkish nation as a gift.'

    The removal of the national pledge from the education system is
    expected as part of the government's democratization initiative.

    25 September 2009, Friday
    AYÅ?E KARABAT ANKARA
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