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ANKARA: Green Shoots

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  • ANKARA: Green Shoots

    GREEN SHOOTS

    Cihan News Agency (CNA), Turkey
    November 5, 2013 Tuesday

    ISTANBUL (CIHAN)- Turkey's halting march toward better democratic
    standards often appears frustratingly slow, marred by setbacks like
    the narrowing space for press freedom or the brutal handling of the
    Gezi unrest.

    It is, however, useful to take stock occasionally and identify issues
    where progress has been achieved. Rewinding the tape allows us to
    measure the distance covered, and it offers hope for the future.

    The long-awaited arrival in Parliament of the headscarved Justice
    and Development Party (AKP) deputies on Oct. 31 turned out to be so
    uneventful that it was tempting to ask "What was all the fuss about?"

    Their presence at Parliament seemed perfectly natural -- and indeed it
    was in a country where some 60 percent of women wear a headscarf. But
    for those who had witnessed the way Merve Kavakci was hounded out of
    Parliament -- and even stripped of her Turkish nationality -- after
    her election in 1999, there was no underestimating the significance
    of this development.

    With the headscarf issue now largely defused, we can hope that tension
    will decrease and the focus will turn to the contribution women can
    make in the political arena and in public life, rather than on what
    they choose to wear. The recent incident of the female TV presenter who
    lost her job for showing too much cleavage has raised concerns that the
    freedoms handed out to women -- unfairly sidelined for too long -- are
    being taken away from others. Putting an end to the injustice that kept
    covered women out of the public sphere satisfies the AKP's constituency
    and Turkey's democrats, but in itself it doesn't constitute proof of
    the party's support for the rights of individual women.

    It also remains to be seen if the lifting of what was never a formal
    ban will encourage the AKP to field more women candidates in the
    upcoming local elections. Several of the party's founding members were
    women who, until now, could only be active in the background. Will
    they play a more visible role in the future?

    Another important sign of change, in a very different area, was evident
    this weekend at Bogazici University, where the Hrant Dink Foundation
    was hosting a conference on Islamized Armenians. One doesn't have to
    go back very far in time to remember the outcry that followed the
    announcement in 2005 that the same university was planning to hold
    a conference on the Ottoman Armenians. At the time, Cemil Cicek,
    who is currently speaker of Parliament, accused the organizers of
    "stabbing Turkey in the back." The gathering had to be canceled and
    it was eventually held, weeks later, at Istanbul Bilgi University --
    an important threshold was crossed.

    This time, no such controversy has erupted and the packed audience
    showed that interest in that dark period of Turkey's history has
    grown considerably. The Armenian issue used to be mentioned mainly
    when a foreign nation chose to recognize the genocide, triggering
    a diplomatic spat with Turkey. In recent years, books like "My
    Grandmother: A Memoir," written by the Dink family lawyer Fethiye
    Cetin, who revealed her grandmother's long-hidden Armenian identity,
    have turned the spotlight on personal stories.

    In her introductory speech at the conference, Ayse Gul Altinay
    mentioned that up to 200,000 Armenians may have survived the massacres
    and integrated into Muslim Turkish, Kurdish or Arab society. This
    means that today, three, or even four generations later, aside from
    the members of the recognized Armenian minority in Turkey, millions
    of people in this country have ancestors of Armenian origin, whether
    they are aware of it or not. Now that the wall of silence has been
    breached, more individual stories of tragedy, death and survival will
    no doubt emerge, further broadening the space for debate.

    Confronting the past, making it personal, will perhaps enable Turkey
    to make peace with itself and reclaim its cultural diversity. If
    progress in the Kurdish peace process is still slow, a degree of
    distance allows us to spot green shoots of progress and an evolution
    of public perceptions on this front too, even if they remain very
    patchy and in need of careful nurturing.

    NICOLE POPE (Cihan/Today's Zaman) CIHAN

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