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ANKARA: The Jester Is Naked

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  • ANKARA: The Jester Is Naked

    THE JESTER IS NAKED

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 19 2012
    Turkey

    How would a conscientious Christian living in Nazi Germany who sees
    him or herself as a "true German" feel when s/he observed how Jews were
    persecuted? Possibly, his or her overwhelming feeling would be shame.

    She would feel shame for her human identity in general and for
    her German identity in particular. Even if you are not a person
    who feels attached to nationalist sentiments, you will still find
    yourself feeling shame in such circumstances. While the Armenian
    Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA) was killing people,
    many Armenians like me started to feel ashamed for their humanity,
    as well as for their immutable Armenian identities. While the rage
    the perpetrators felt may have rendered the events "humane," this
    only helps us peer into the world of the perpetrators. It does not
    cancel out the severity and moral burden of the crime.

    Yet, we find that humanity becomes corrupted when identity is
    fixed upon an ideology. This is because the emotional backbone of
    the identity will be destroyed and covered by a "covering" that is
    generally manufactured by the state. Those who find themselves with an
    ideologically based identity most of the time form the content of this
    identity with the "enemies" that the state continuously manufactures
    for them.

    In countries filled with ideologically founded identities, no
    emotion can be found behind murders committed with identity-centered
    justifications. Thus, you may reason and perform the necessary
    planning to kill a person for his or her identity as an Armenian,
    and in order to pave the way for a coup, you may make someone who
    knows nothing about that Armenian kill him or her. The reason for
    the murder may appear to be the Armenian identity of the targeted
    person, but perhaps the real cause of the murder is the "Turkish"
    identity of the perpetrator. When you remove the Turkish identity
    from its naturally hybrid and mediocre state, and transform it into
    an identity that is synonymous with nationhood, then the identity of
    the person before you loses its meaning. You won't really be killing
    that person for his or her Armenian identity. Rather, you will give
    an Armenian identity to that person in your mind by killing him or her.

    This was how Hrant Dink was killed, but it didn't stay there. Dozens of
    people from scores of public institutions including the gendarmerie,
    the police department and the National Intelligence Organization
    (MİT) in Trabzon, İstanbul and Ankara, saw this murder in advance,
    but chose to keep silent. Perhaps many of them felt in some corner of
    their hearts that it was an act that would hurt consciences, but in
    the final analysis, the victim was just an Armenian -- an Armenian
    could be killed easily and without feeling any burden; also this
    murder hinted at the underlying logic of the state and it was not
    easy for the Turkish identity to exist outside that state reason.

    That was not all. During the trial evidence was hidden, obscured
    and distorted. Public authorities did not give any answer to the
    court's questions and they did their best to prevent truth from being
    discovered. Those who knew something about this murder did not or
    could not go to court, and the government did not want to flex its
    muscles to make them go to the court.

    Really, how were all these institutions able to act in such a harmony?

    What were the common points of reference for all of these people
    from such diverse institutions? Why did they feel so uneasy with the
    possibility of the truth of this murder becoming known? Because they
    were "Turks." This was a quote-unquote: Turkish identity. It is a
    Turkishness that has not come to being through the lived experiences
    of people; rather, it is a Turkishness stuffed with ideological bias --
    not with culture -- used as a symbol declaring allegiance to the state.

    Meanwhile, the Dink family insistently tried to shed light behind the
    scenes of the murder. If they wanted to trumpet Armenian nationalism,
    they would reject the court and leave the "Turkish state" to its fate.

    But they did not do this. Instead, they chose a way that would make
    living with together with Turks in their natural environments and their
    own lands meaningful and precious. Knowing that this trial was a matter
    of honor for Turkey, they gave Turkey the chance to uphold its honor.

    But the court knew what it should protect. Saying that there was no
    organization involved in the murder, it acquitted the organization
    which everyone knows exists. Indeed, the organization involved was the
    state itself and a Turkish court cannot inculpate the Turkish state.

    But this decision tells us that the jester whom we took to be a king
    is naked. This decision makes the whole Turkish state a partner in
    the murder.

    We are at the same point. It is Jan. 20, 2007. And there are still
    two different types of Turks that have yet to confront each other. One
    group carries the heart and wealth of this land and the other embodies
    the inhuman quality of the mentality that corrupts this land.

    This is an opportunity. Let this shell be crushed now. Let us be
    content with saying there are true human beings in this land; let
    us be able to say those same human beings are able to control their
    own destinies.

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