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ANKARA: Perincek Vs Switzerland Is Post-Colonialism Vs Post 9/11-Ism

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  • ANKARA: Perincek Vs Switzerland Is Post-Colonialism Vs Post 9/11-Ism

    PERINCEK VS SWITZERLAND IS POST-COLONIALISM VS POST-9/11-ISM

    Daily Sabah, Turkey
    Dec 10 2014

    Tal Buenos

    Freedom of expression has already won the day in Perincek versus
    Switzerland thanks to the decision of the European Court of Human
    Rights (ECtHR) to reverse the Swiss criminalization of Dogu Perincek's
    expressed view of the past and in particular his characterization of
    the events of 1915 and 1916. Article 10 of the European Convention
    on Human Rights was held high.Being that the characterization of the
    events has been a political matter, involving both historical and
    legal aspects, Perincek did not abuse rights, but rather exercised the
    freedom to express himself on an accusation regarding which Turks,
    Muslims and Turkish Muslims in Western societies cannot be expected
    to remain silent.

    The honorable judges of the ECHR articulated that the idea of there
    being a "general consensus" in Western societies - especially in the
    Western academic community - about the characterization of the events
    is vague and has no legal merit. However, while it was clearly stated
    that this idea of a general consensus does not equate to established
    facts and did not present a pressing social need to convict Perincek,
    an actual pressing social need was not mentioned at all: The fact that
    Perincek's freedom of expression was denied in Switzerland reflects
    a prejudice against a non-Western historiography.

    This prejudice conveys an air of hostility that has a negative
    effect on the civic integration of citizens of non-Western heritage
    in Western societies. There is a failure among the leadership of
    these Western liberal states to recognize that the biased view of
    history that is taught in schools and controls the language used
    by the media must be addressed in keeping with the changing social
    makeup of these societies. It is important to ask why Perincek was
    convicted in the first place. What aspects of historiography have
    not been reconciled between those who colonized and those who were
    affected by the colonizing efforts? How has this split been covered up?

    In the Armenian case, which was put under a rare legal examination in
    the Perincek case, the split is monumental. In certain Western states,
    the desire to suppress shameful aspects of the colonial period, and
    the political purpose served by controlling the discourse on genocide
    and putting pressure on Turkey, has led to an institutionalized
    campaign to disseminate a narrative according to which the Ottoman
    state intended to cause Armenian suffering during World War I.

    Conversely, a study of the events that is not affected by imperialist
    bias, shows that Armenians had been used by the British as colonialist
    pawns since the 1870s, which explains both the change of attitude
    among Ottoman Armenians after centuries of coexistence with Muslims
    and the catastrophe that took place during World War I when the
    Armenian leadership was incentivized to assist the Entente in the
    mission to destroy the Ottoman Empire. It also explains why the
    current administrations of the Western governments that set up the
    Armenians for this easily anticipated tragedy are still in denial of
    doing so via the promotion of a convenient narrative that feeds on
    anti-Turkish and anti-Muslim prejudice.

    Post-colonialism provided a good measure of faith in the ability to
    harmonize historiographical views. Starting from the 1970s, before
    the advent of genocide as a field in academia, the colonialist
    experience began to be analyzed to a greater extent in Western
    academia. It was understood that the language used by imperialists to
    describe historical events was informed by colonizing perspectives and
    interests that were presented as universal and objective. Furthermore,
    scholars began to demonstrate how the treatment of the colonized and
    semi-colonized was justified through the belief that the race and
    culture of the colonizer was superior. The field of post-colonialist
    study established a clear distinction between the modern-day Western
    sensibility and the old Western consciousness of the imperialist
    conqueror. The physical arrival of the "otherized" on Western
    university campuses played a major role in developing a new and
    exciting brand of academic inquiry and Western reflexivity.

    In congruence with the rise in number of non-Western immigrants in
    Western societies and the rise in the popularity of post-colonialism,
    multiculturalism became increasingly accepted as a state policy
    toward civic integration. Multiculturalism is based on the view that
    cultural diversity in Western societies is a fact, and it supports
    recognizing and respecting the heritage of the formerly colonized
    and semi-colonized peoples who are now citizens with equal rights in
    Western states. "Post-9/11-ism," however, seems to be descriptive
    of the current era. It has halted the historiographical progress
    that was introduced through post-colonialism. The shocking events of
    9/11 politicized the discussion on multiculturalism, and popularized
    pre-post-colonialist generalizations for Muslims as unchangeable
    "others" who cannot meet the standards of Western liberalism. Consider
    that statements such as "in the aftermath of 9/11," "in response
    to 9/11," and "in the wake of 9/11," with which many articles and
    speeches begin their narrative nowadays, have supplanted "in light
    of post-colonialism."

    For instance, even among Westerners who criticized the U.S.-led
    invasion of Iraq in 2003, the criticism was done within a post-9/11
    frame of discourse. Most critics in the U.S. did not say that this was
    imperialist behavior, but rather that it was not the right reaction to
    9/11. The post-colonialist sensitivity in recognition of a long history
    of aggressive Western domination has been replaced by a terror-centric
    narrative in which the West is depicted as a victim of exploitation
    and attacks. According to this frame of thinking, if the West appears
    to be actively aggressive in its attitude toward formerly colonized
    peoples and countries, it is only because it is reacting after having
    been tolerant and passive for too long. In other words, colonialism
    has reached a dialectical height in the form of "de-post-colonialism."

    In "post-9/11-ism," single acts of aggression by a Muslim are
    magnified and manipulated into fitting within a narrative of
    international terrorism and acts of Muslim firmness are interpreted
    as aggression. Also in "post-9/11-ism," every Turkish appeal for
    historiographical fairness concerning the Ottoman Empire, which is
    viewed in British historiography as a prototypical Muslim entity
    that was run by an inferior race of uncivilized brutes, is readily
    rejected because of prejudice.

    David Cameron, in his first speech as prime minister of the U.K. at a
    security conference in Munich in February 2011, ceremoniously turned
    a post-colonialist question of Muslim integration in Western societies
    into a matter of national security. He related - in post-9/11 fashion
    - the existence of "Islamist extremism" to multiculturalism. Cameron
    stated that "the doctrine of state multiculturalism" had "encouraged
    different cultures to live separate lives." This, he claimed was done
    instead of giving people "a clear sense of shared national identity
    that is open to everyone." By making it seem as if the problem is
    that Muslims abuse the "passive tolerance" of Western societies,
    Cameron failed to recognize that British national identity is not
    shareable as long as the anti-Muslim aspect of British historiography
    is not addressed in a post-colonialist discourse.

    It must be recognized that James Bryce, who masterminded both Armenian
    rebellion and Armenian victimhood during World War I, is the same
    person who already in 1878 announced the Ottoman Empire's death and
    described the territory for an independent Armenian state on Ottoman
    land. It must be recognized that this same Bryce, who held various
    prestigious positions in the British government, stated in the Romans
    Lecture in 1902 at Oxford that there are "cases in which the exclusion
    of the Backward race seems justified, in the interests of humanity
    at large," and asked to "[c]onceive what a difference it might make
    if Islam were within two centuries to disappear from the earth!"

    It must be recognized as a problem that William E. Gladstone, the
    four-time British prime minister and a staple in Britain's modern
    history, whose mastery of the Bulgarian agitation in 1876 inspired
    Bryce's raising of the Armenian question, stated: "... from the black
    day when they [Turks] first entered Europe, the one great anti-human
    specimen of humanity." What really makes this a problem is that British
    historiography still characterizes Gladstone as having had a foreign
    policy that was guided by moral fortitude, and this still serves as the
    basis for a false anti-Turkish narrative on the Armenian issue. Why not
    begin to solve this problem by recognizing that the false premise of
    the anti-Ottoman, anti-Muslim and anti-Turkish claims to this day is
    rooted in the outdated British portrayal of "the White Man's Burden"
    as genuine morality?

    Without the restoration of a post-colonialist mindset, this problem
    will linger. As the Grand Chamber is about to present a final and
    decisive judgment on the Perincek case following the Swiss referral,
    there is a chance that the honorable judges might identify that the
    case is significantly reflective of a national identity crisis for
    people of non-Western heritage within certain states of the EU. They
    might find that the crisis is to be explained by "post-9/11-ism" and
    the historiographical bias that directed Swiss injustice in this case.

    * M.A. in Theological Studies from Harvard Divinity School, and is
    currently a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at the University
    of Utah

    http://www.dailysabah.com/opinion/2014/12/10/perincek-vs-switzerland-is-postcolonialism-vs-post911ism

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