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FT: Taboos around Ataturk era begin to crumble

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  • FT: Taboos around Ataturk era begin to crumble

    November 25, 2011 6:00 pm
    Taboos around Ataturk era begin to crumble

    By Daniel Dombey in Istanbul and Funja Guler in Ankara


    At five past nine on the morning of November 10, much of Turkey came to a
    stop. People clambered out of their cars; pedestrians hung their heads.
    Schools and offices fell silent.

    The annual moment of remembrance was to mark the death in office in 1938 of
    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey.

    Some nine decades after Ataturk fought off foreign powers, unified Turkey
    and established a secular republic in the wake of the Ottoman Empire, his
    face still gazes down from photographs in just about every shop and office
    in the land.

    But despite such acts of near-universal reverence for its national hero,
    Turkey has unleashed a fierce debate about the early years of the republic.
    Taboos about the flaws - and crimes - of Ataturk's era are beginning
    to
    crumble.

    This week Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister, made history by
    apologising for the killing, in the province of Dersim in 1937 and 1938, of
    thousands of people at the hands of the state.

    For a country that has long valued strong leaders - and has proved
    reluctant to say sorry - it was an unprecedented step.

    Levent Koker of Turkey's Gazi university says a more open-minded approach
    to the country's early history has allowed greater debate of other formerly
    taboo topics - including Turkey's resistance to describing *the Ottoman-era
    massacres of Armenians as `genocide'.*

    The deaths in Dersim - Mr Erdogan said 13,806 people were killed and more
    than 11,000 put to flight - came during a campaign against what has long
    been depicted as a revolt by Kurds and members of the Alawite sect. But the
    action is increasingly seen as being part of the forced `Turkification' of
    the era.

    *Ataturk's adopted[, ethnic Armenian] daughter, Sabiha Gokcen *- a fighter
    pilot after whom Istanbul's second airport is named - carried out
    low-altitude bombing raids during the campaign.

    In the 1980s, the late Ihsan Sabri Caglayangil, a former foreign minister
    and security official, said the military had sprayed poisoned gas into
    caves in Dersim, killing people `like rats'.

    But the recent debate flared into life when Huseyin Aygun, a member of
    parliament from Tunceli province, as Dersim is known today, said the
    country's founder was aware of the massacre.

    Mr Aygun is a member of Ataturk's Republican People's party (CHP), which is
    now in opposition and which has been thrown on to the defensive by the
    debate and, in particular, Mr Erdogan's apology.

    Kemal Kilicdaroglu, the party's leader, is from Tunceli and had relatives
    killed. But many CHP members and supporters resist attempts to bring the
    party and Ataturk himself into the debate.

    `We know from our parents that it wasn't an easy thing to establish a new
    republic,' said an elderly lady walking by the Ataturk mausoleum in Ankara.
    Declining to give her name, she added: `There were riots in different
    places - you couldn't take risks.'

    Many other episodes in Turkey's early history await greater debate, from
    show trials in the republic's first years to wartime expropriations from
    Turkey's Jewish population and riots in the 1950s that chased almost all
    the remaining Greeks from Istanbul.

    In a supermarket in Ankara, Pinar, a sales representative, expressed doubts
    about Mr Erdogan's motives, but also showed her discontent with the old way
    of talking about Turkey's early years. `We were told there was an uprising
    and that it was quelled; we didn't ask why or how many people [were
    killed],' she said. `They didn't let us be curious. We knew as much as they
    wanted us to.'

    http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/ac5bad06-177c-11e1-b20e-00144feabdc0.html




    From: A. Papazian
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