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ISTANBUL: Turkey's dilemma

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  • ISTANBUL: Turkey's dilemma

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 8 2013

    Turkey's dilemma

    MARKAR ESAYAN
    [email protected]


    The state has meant everything in Turkey until very recently. When
    they set out, Mustafa Kemal (Atatürk) and his friends believed there
    was no public that would fit the country they imagined to establish.
    They were positivists and radical modernists, but unlike its Western
    precedents, the establishment process of their regime lacked a popular
    movement or backing.
    Here, by "backing," I am not referring to the sympathy people would
    feel toward Mustafa Kemal for saving the country. That would be
    unfair. What mattered was how preferences would be expressed during
    the establishment of the country in the wake of its salvation. The
    public was never a reference in the formation of the state and the
    regime. Moreover, the public was perceived as the most serious threat
    to the newly established regime. Various methods for exerting
    considerable pressure on this perceived threat were developed and
    implemented to avert this risk with specific reference to
    "revolutions."

    The state was strengthened at the expense of the public in order to
    create the Kemalists' imaginary public and trim away the "unwanted"
    qualities of the actual public. Of course, I am aware of the cliché of
    referring to the "conditions prevalent at that time." Kemalists tend
    to exculpate the inhuman practices imposed at that time by the regime
    on non-Muslim religious minorities, Kurds, Muslims and Alevis by
    stressing the "conditions prevalent at that time." Thus, we are forced
    to perceive the violence and racism in Turkey as "acceptable" and
    mandatory at a time when fascism was on the rise and trying to invade
    the world.

    But it is a big lie. The world didn't consist solely of Germany or
    Italy in the 1920s, the 1930s or the 1940s. Indeed, there were many
    good models around the world, and those good countries eventually beat
    Germany. Initially, Turkey leaned toward Germany and turned a blind
    eye to the slaughter of Jews, but later, as the situation in the world
    changed, it also changed its position and declared war on Germany.

    The fascism-tainted administrative practices seen during the
    single-party era in Turkey actually amounted to a conscious choice. It
    was, indeed, a matter of choice, as an authoritarian and occasionally
    pragmatic system was established deliberately. Social engineering was
    the regime's leitmotif. This was because they never liked the public.
    They assumed they could build a monolithic union out of this
    "reactionary, hybrid" public. This was salient fascism and every
    social group felt the pressure to varying degrees. It was obvious that
    such a mentality would strengthen the state excessively, see the state
    as a tool for disciplining the public and claim a monopoly on its
    benefits. And this was exactly what happened.

    The solution to centuries-old questions stemming from the preferences
    of that state was left to today's Turkey. The Kurdish, Alevi and
    Armenian issues, the Cyprus matter as well as the problems related to
    the Jacobin secularist mentality, gender discrimination, poverty,
    social injustice, culture of violence and many other problems are the
    products of this mentality.

    Naturally, the Justice and Development Party (AK Party), which
    distanced itself from such a state mentality, in 2002 assumed the
    identity of a founding party. The process of rectifying the errors
    made during the initial establishment followed a troubled route.
    Pandora's box was opened and revealed a number of troublesome matters.

    This is apparently not an easy task. But it is both hard and easy
    since the government is backed by the general public and the
    Zeitgeist, the spirit of the times. Furthermore, the wrongs of the
    past are so striking that even the Kemalist and pro-status quo
    opposition cannot defend them openly. Instead, they believe they can
    convince people to stand against change by using empty fears.

    They wait for an evil miracle or chaos to occur. But that is not going
    to happen. If they had realized that the process was really strong,
    they could have joined the game and represented their voters' base.
    But as long as their voters cannot overcome their concerns and their
    fears of loss and return to our time swiftly, their representatives
    will not change.

    So Turkey's change will, as is the case with most changes, continue to
    exhibit a contradictory nature rife with polarizations: extraordinary
    advances followed by brief pauses.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/columnistDetail_getNewsById.action?newsId=314867



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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