Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: A Man Dies And The World Changes

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: A Man Dies And The World Changes

    A MAN DIES AND THE WORLD CHANGES

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    July 16 2013

    BERİL DEDEGLU

    Sometimes societies are ready to change fundamentally; they just wait
    for a spark.

    The spark may be the death of a man. Symbolic deaths, such as the death
    of Jesus Christ, make people realize that the existing socio-political
    order no longer satisfies their demands. Thus, people who were unable
    to express their grievances until then and who notice that the current
    system is unfair take to the streets. Turkish history is full of events
    like this, and the funeral of murdered Armenian journalist Hrant Dink
    is a perfect example of this phenomenon. We also remember Mohamed
    Bouazizi, the young Tunisian street vendor who set himself alight,
    starting a fire that burned down several authoritarian regimes in
    the Middle East.

    The history of the United States is also full of similar dramatic
    events. The 1960s were particularly rich in this regard, and the
    assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Malcolm X
    and Robert Kennedy changed the country fundamentally. Last year,
    a 17-year-old American, Trayvon Martin, was killed by George Zimmerman.

    The problem is that the killer is white, while the victim was black.

    The jury found Zimmerman not guilty by reason of self-defense and
    believed him when he said he is terribly sorry and that he had had
    good intentions but events just went terribly wrong.

    As expected, the verdict has made many people angry. Even US President
    Barack Obama, who is the first black president in American history,
    said he understands the nation's frustration but that the US is a
    nation of law and a jury has spoken. It would seem that seeing "one of
    them" in the White House has not been enough for black Americans to
    feel they are now equal citizens. Obama's election did not eradicate
    all discrimination in the United States. Instead, maybe his presence
    in office has made ongoing discrimination less visible to society.

    People suffer discrimination all around the world because of their
    color, religion, race or sexual orientation. A woman can become prime
    minister or a homosexual the mayor of the country's capital, but these
    things do not mean all that all discrimination has suddenly stopped.

    The Trayvon Martin case has shown that the tension between whites and
    blacks is still strong in the US. Additionally, the entire world has
    learned that someone can kill another man in the US and be found not
    guilty just because he was a neighborhood watch coordinator. It seems
    that Zimmerman's only concern was to "protect" his white neighbors.

    The world is full of people like him. For example, last week, some
    "volunteers" armed with knives and sticks attacked Gezi protesters
    in İstanbul, but a court decided to release one of them. He then
    flew to Morocco.

    The problem is the perceived gap between law and justice. The
    existing laws that judges must follow do not always bring justice. The
    judiciary does not think about what the social consequences of its
    verdicts might be, either. That is why society sometimes believes
    the judiciary itself is the very source of injustice.

    Black people in the US are now demonstrating in the streets, and
    Obama's political opponents will certainly use this against him. They
    will probably say that President Obama, who became president thanks
    to the votes of black people, is not serving them. This is already
    Obama's second term, so he cannot run again for office. The Democrats
    would, of course, like to keep the White House for another four years;
    however, Obama's mistakes are not helping them. As a consequence,
    the Republicans, and the Tea Party, are becoming stronger. A Tea
    Party-ruled US, however, would mean an aggressive country, and this
    would be bad news for all of us.

    The members of the jury in the Trayvon Martin case were most probably
    unaware of global realities, but sometimes a single man dies and the
    world changes.

Working...
X