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ANKARA: November 10 And The Feeling Of Loss

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  • ANKARA: November 10 And The Feeling Of Loss

    NOVEMBER 10 AND THE FEELING OF LOSS

    Today's Zaman
    http://www.todayszaman.com/columnist-262371-november-10-and-the-feeling-of-loss.html
    Nov 11 2011
    Turkey

    You know Nov. 10 is the date of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk's death. We
    commemorate him every year on this date.

    Alarm bells ring at 9:05 a.m., which is the time of his death, and
    life stops momentarily in Turkey. Memorial ceremonies are organized
    for top officials in addition to ceremonies in schools. Anıtkabir
    (mausoleum of Ataturk in Ankara) is visited. All newspapers use
    headlines that have become meaningless since they have been used over
    and over every year. This year the Cumhuriyet daily was published
    with a poster of Ataturk on both front and back pages. The newspaper
    called Sözcu ran the headline: "Number one spoke," indicating a
    clinical case disguised in the concept of Ataturk. The newspaper
    published an interview as if Ataturk was speaking about contemporary
    issues in Turkey such as the earthquake in Van, a new constitution,
    arrests and teacher assignments. The fact a person who died 73 years
    ago is loaded with such deep meanings and that he can be used for
    fraud is an issue worth consideration despite its being tragicomic.

    Last Nov. 10 at 09:05 a.m. I was sitting in a small bus and waiting
    for it to fill with commuters. When the bells rang, everybody in the
    bus got off. Everybody went out and stood still. A woman and I were
    left on the bus. We did not have a big problem since we were in a
    closed place. The previous year, I was walking on the street.

    Naturally, I kept walking when the bells rang. I did this not only
    because I am not a Kemalist (an ideology linked to Ataturk), but also
    I am a normal human being.

    Actually, I like Ataturk a lot. The influence of the education
    we received is so deep that the inclination to see him as a good
    superhuman, just like we were told when we were children, automatically
    works inside me. I wrote a 35-canto-poem about Ataturk's life when I
    was in primary school. I suppose the fact that an Armenian kid going
    to an Armenian minority group school attempted to do such a thing
    on his own must have rattled the "Turkish chief assistant to the
    head of the school" who was assigned as a commissar of the state by
    the government to monitor our school. (By the way, the assignment of
    Turkish chief assistant still goes on in the minority group schools.)
    My poem was read in a couple of official celebrations, and I received
    many compliments because this case was a special event that proved
    that the republic system in Turkey had attained its goal. An Armenian
    kid was writing a saga for Ataturk by himself without any obligations,
    and I guess the poem was not bad.

    The daily pledge

    However, one morning our chief assistant asked me to read aloud "Our
    Pledge" (the national oath recited every morning in primary schools in
    Turkey; the oath is mostly about the commitment of Turkish people to
    Ataturk and his reforms), a declaration of Kemalist faith. I started
    reading it with excitement, but I forgot the words of the declaration
    after reading a few verses. He showed me no mercy. In front of all the
    students he said things like: "Even Turkish children cannot memorize
    'our pledge'. So I see why you cannot. Get back to your seat." I felt
    so sorry about this event that I could not go to school for a few
    days. When my father learned what had happened, he went to school to
    argue with the chief assistant. It did not matter whether he mentioned
    his apology since I had already undergone a serious trauma that would
    affect the relationship between my country and me.

    Therefore, I can understand how sorry that young girl with a headscarf,
    named N.N.E, felt when a woman approached her and said; "I want you
    to leave this place" in the course of the memorial organized at Izmir
    Republic Square on Nov. 10.

    I understand her sorrow because what that chief assistant implied to
    me with his words or how I perceived his words meant the same as what
    that woman said to the young girl:

    "You do not belong here. I want you to leave this place..."

    Maybe their words would not hurt us that much if we were really
    foreigners. However, that girl and I, we are children of this country.

    Who has the right to order the other from this country?

    This Kemalist republic made millions of children of this country,
    whom it saw as different or as a threat, live through the same trauma:
    You do not belong here. I want you to leave!

    Nobody protected or was able to protect me on that day. I went back to
    my place crying and full of shame. I could hardly stand until evening.

    It was the period of the military coup in Turkey, Ataturk was almost
    a god, and nobody had the courage to utter even a word to that
    government commissar.

    However, in İzmir a Cyprus veteran approached N.N.E., a university
    student, who was crying after the severe abuse she was exposed
    to, and cheered her up by saying: "Good for you; I congratulate
    you. That woman is being insolent. Is it possible that Ataturk would
    be against the headscarf? Such people made Ataturk seem this way. No,
    my daughter, you should be confident about this issue." The young girl
    responded, lamenting: "She does not understand, she does not want to
    understand. If she was just a little bit respectful, she would let
    me speak. Those are the people who depict Ataturk as being hostile
    to religion. Ataturk's mother and wife wore the headscarf. Making a
    connection between wearing the headscarf and the regime is nonsense.

    What is the benefit of insulting people's beliefs in this way? It is
    as if Ataturk just belongs to her. Ataturk is my ancestor, as well."

    When people around supported the ideas of the veteran, the woman left
    the square saying, "If you cannot see that she is the product of a
    counter revolution, I have nothing to say to you."

    I think that is an important change...

    But do why people like that woman have such a pathetic mindset?

    I call it "the arrogance of the property owner." Actually, such people
    do not care about the historical importance and value of Ataturk, his
    faults or rights. First and foremost, today's Kemalists are living
    by constantly referencing issues in the past, as they do not have
    anything new to say with regards to present day and do not have any
    actual political ideas. As the Kemalists had to share the government
    and the sources of the country with various social groups, such as
    minority groups, people of non-Turkish origin and the pious citizens
    from smaller towns, they looked down on them and became surrounded with
    a "feeling of loss" in terms of their privileges. They were the real
    owners of the country. "Their ancestor" Ataturk and his fellow soldiers
    founded this country in spite of the "folk" and entrusted the country
    to them, the real citizens. According to the project, all people in
    Turkey were going to become a single prototype in accordance with the
    "public project" in Ataturk's mind, and they were going to share the
    vision of that woman in İzmir, and Turkey would become a paradise.

    The imprints of Kemalism

    This was not possible and hence it didn't happen. However, Kemalism
    left serious imprints on all social groups of this country as well
    as in me. We became a one-of-a-kind society. For instance, most of us
    suffer from Stockholm syndrome, as we were exposed to fear, oppression
    and disinformation for such a long time. Think of Alevis, Kurds,
    Muslims and minority groups who are the most important targets of the
    Kemalist order. Within themselves, they faced very contradictory,
    neurotic and sociological situations. We are still in tragicomical
    states.

    For instance, the Acık Kapı Association (Open Gate Association),
    whose honorary president, is Suheyla Gönen, nicknamed Mother Zöhre,
    fasted to mourn the death of Ataturk on Nov.10 this year. They broke
    their fast with rice and meat followed by rice pudding, which were
    Ataturk's favorite foods. If such a ritual existed in the Alevi
    doctrine, of course we would respect it. However, Mother Zöhre is a
    "spiritual leader" who is an active member of the Republican People's
    Party (CHP). They wanted to show their reaction with such an act as
    the Oct.

    29 Turkish Republic Feast celebrations were partially cancelled due to
    the earthquake in Van. The majority of Alevis are strict supporters of
    Ataturk. They do not see the ideological connection with Enver Kemal
    Pasha, the founder of Committee of Union and Progress. The members of
    this committee later joined the CHP, the leader and founder of which
    was Ataturk, and the Ergenekon deep state in Turkey. They treat the
    leader who ordered the murder of 50,000 Alevis in Dersim (Tunceli
    province) between 1937 and 1938 almost like a prophet.

    When you examine the speeches of Abdullah Ocalan, the leader of
    outlawed Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK), you can see that he thinks
    highly of Ataturk. He is mostly inspired by Ataturk and the democratic
    sovereignty, and the contract of the Kurdish Communities Union (KCK)
    is a very primitive imitation of the Kemalist state.

    A proportion of minority groups still vote for the CHP as they think,
    "At least I know the way they mistreat me, I am accustomed to it,"
    even though the Kemalist republic made them pay a great cost for
    being minorities and they were the direct victims of racism. This
    inclination towards the CHP is dominant especially among the Jewish
    population. The pogrom in Thrace organized in 1934 the Wealth Taxes
    are just the icing on the cake.

    What about Muslims? Did they not accept an Enverist- Kemalist
    (pertaining to the ideology of Enver Pasha and Ataturk) Turkish
    Islamic synthesis despite the fact that it conflicted with their
    beliefs? There are still millions of Muslims in this country who
    think it is not contradictory to behave as a Muslim under certain
    circumstances and as a Turkish nationalist under others and to behave
    and speak in a militarist way. Whereas, the last sermon of the Prophet
    Muhammad prohibits a Muslim from being a nationalist, does it not? Is
    the fact that the girl in İzmir read about Ataturk normal or is it
    acceptable only in terms of history?

    Then nobody can allege that Kemalism is an unsuccessful ideology. It
    is successful. It transformed us. It became our property. This
    intervention is the reason why we have such serious contradictions
    in today's Turkey, which is undergoing a process of change. Although
    newspapers such as the Sözcu daily, which articulates "the arrogance
    of the property owner," "the feeling of loss," and the feeling of being
    powerless and naked in the face of change are bought by hundreds of
    thousands people, we should admit that the rest of the country still
    has a sick relation with the past and that we are reproducing Kemalism
    over and over together.

    Therefore, change in Turkey has unique characteristics, and it is
    slow and contradictory. It is because our tutor is a man who passed
    away 73 years ago no matter what his good deeds and sins were. And
    this still sounds normal to us.

    What can be said in such a situation?

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