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  • My Word: Turkish dramas

    Jerusalem Post
    Jan 16 2010


    My Word: Turkish dramas
    By LIAT COLLINS

    The scene was something out of a poorly scripted TV series. The
    incident in which Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon tried to show
    Turkish Ambassador Ahmet Celikkol that Israel would not take his
    country's latest insult sitting down has itself turned into the bigger
    story.

    Clearly Jerusalem could not remain quiet in the wake of the Turkish
    television series called The Valley of the Wolves, which portrays
    Israeli agents and diplomats as bloodthirsty baby-snatchers. Not only
    Ayalon lacks subtlety. Just three months ago, a different series,
    Ayrilik, portrayed IDF soldiers shooting Palestinian children at
    point-blank range.

    But Ayalon's response, dubbed in the Hebrew press "the height of
    humiliation," meant attention quickly turned from Jerusalem to Ankara,
    where Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was ready and
    waiting. Erdogan is no friend of Israel, despite his oft-professed
    desire to act as a grand mediator on the Middle East diplomatic scene.
    Tellingly, he gets on much better with Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
    Syria's Bashar Assad and Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri. Hariri,
    indeed, was on hand in Ankara last week to hear Erdogan blast Israel
    as "a threat to global peace" and question an IDF decision to strike a
    terror cell preparing to launch rockets, with a laconic "What's your
    excuse this time?"

    Ironically, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman was visiting Cyprus as
    the diplomatic crisis stepped up. That's Cyprus, the island split in
    two by Turkish occupying forces.

    The incident is just the latest in a series of undiplomatic dramas,
    perhaps the most memorable being Erdogan's upbraiding of President
    Shimon Peres at last year's Davos economic summit before walking off
    the stage. Talk about public humiliation.

    IN 2004, I visited Istanbul on a trip that taught me a lot about
    Turkey behind the scenes and was also a lesson in international and
    interpersonal relations.


    I was invited to cover what I was told was a textile exhibition. I'm
    still not sure if it was the result of poor communication or the
    warped sense of humor of a colleague that I found myself, less than 24
    hours after receiving the invitation, sitting at a table in an
    Istanbul hotel staring at a folder containing all the details on a fur
    and leather trade show.

    As I came to terms with being the only vegetarian and animal rights
    activist in the room, the group leaders introduced the journalists to
    each other.

    Obviously vegetarianism wasn't the only thing that set me apart. The
    rest of the press tour included, among others, members from Iran,
    Pakistan and Jordan, as well as Bulgarians, Russians, a Greek and a
    Chinese woman.

    Nonetheless, we quickly united, as travelers crammed into tour buses
    on a set itinerary are apt to do, and slowly I began to appreciate
    what a strange sample of the global village we were: The former
    Pakistani colonel and a journalist who had made the equivalent of
    "aliya" - leaving London where he had grown up for what was meant to
    be a better life in Pakistan; two fun-loving Iranians, who
    enthusiastically introduced me to compatriots; the Chinese woman who
    was six months pregnant with the only child she will be allowed to
    have; the Greek who marveled at the similarity of the cuisine and
    culture; and the Jordanian whose mother was Turkish.

    And then there were the Bulgarians, who swapped stories of ethnic
    cleansing with the Turkish tour guide. Having Armenian friends in
    Jerusalem, I was aware of the treatment that community had received in
    Turkey. What I hadn't heard were the stories of the Turks expelled
    from Greece and the Balkans in a massive tragic swap, so that our tour
    guide's family, while Turkish, had Bulgarian roots. (Later, when I
    read Louis de Bernieres's incredible Birds Without Wings, many missing
    pieces of the puzzle fell into place.)

    TURKEY'S LOCATION on the crossroads between Europe and Asia affects
    every aspect of its commercial and political affairs. During my visit,
    the emphasis was on its plans to join the European Union.

    More than one local businessman told me how Turkey needed Europe, not
    only to improve its economy and lifestyle but also to allow it to
    complete its modernization process and remain democratic. Most also
    stressed: "Europe needs Turkey, too. Turkey is in an excellent
    position to act as a mediator between Europe and the Islamic world."

    Several participants at the exhibition envisaged a natural trade route
    that would include Iraq and Jordan and, perhaps, Israel.

    Throughout the exhibition hall, I met Iranians who assured me: "The
    Iranian people has nothing against the Israeli people." One man all
    but hugged me. In the days of the shah, his baby sister had required
    cardiac surgery and had been flown to Haifa, where doctors at Rambam
    Hospital had saved her life.

    Of course, it wasn't all peace and light. I visited one of the two
    synagogues hit during an al-Qaida attack in 2003. And the Syrians I
    encountered refused to talk to me.

    THE WHOLE region is now waiting to see which way Turkey is facing.
    With its efforts at joining the EU still stymied, the country now
    seems to be looking eastward and weighing its options.

    That Erdogan has managed to stay in power since 2002 - periodically
    shooting insults at Israel - might mean that Turkey's proximity to
    Syria and Iran is pulling the country toward the hard-line Muslim
    world.

    As the Pakistani journalist with whom I'm still in touch puts it:
    "These are troubling times."

    But perhaps the fact that so many years later more than one
    participant from my trip still maintains contact means there is some
    hope for the global village. It may not make good TV footage, but it
    is good news.

    http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid= 1263147904952&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FSho wFull
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