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ANKARA: When 'neo-Ottomanism' helps

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  • ANKARA: When 'neo-Ottomanism' helps

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    March 28 2015

    When `neo-Ottomanism' helps

    MUSTAFA AKYOL
    Saturday,March 28 2015


    Last Thursday, the northwestern Turkish city of Edirne, just miles
    from the Greek and Bulgarian borders, was the stage for a historic
    event: The reopening ceremony of the newly renovated Great Synagogue,
    which had been dormant and rusting for almost half a century. Some 250
    Jews, mostly from Istanbul, attended the morning service conducted by
    Davud Azuz, who had also led the last service at the synagogue in
    1969. Mr. Azuz, one of few remaining members of the Edirne-based
    Jewish community, thanked the Turkish government for restoring the
    Jewish temple.

    Meanwhile, Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç, who was at the event,
    praised the Jews' loyalty to the Ottoman State during the latter's
    toughest times. `I remember the Jewish citizens who died defending
    their city for their Muslim Turkish neighbors,' he said, `with the
    same gratitude as our martyrs.'

    Now, this is an example of the `Ottomanism' of the Justice and
    Development Party (AKP) government that people like me have supported
    and promoted over the past 13 years. The idea is that, unlike
    Republican Turkey, which is exclusively Turkish, the Ottoman Empire
    was a multi-ethnic and multi-religious mosaic. Thus it embraced
    non-Turkish groups, such as Kurds, Armenians or Jews, before the
    advent of the nationalism that would mark the Republican era. Thus, a
    post-nationalist Turkey would be somewhat `neo-Ottoman,' rediscovering
    the diversity that it tried to erase for almost a century.

    The Great Synagogue of Edirne is a perfect symbol of this vision. It
    was built in 1905 by the order of none other than Sultan-Caliph
    Abdülhamid II to replace 13 separate synagogues destroyed by a fire
    that devastated the city. Designed by French architect France Depre,
    it was a breathtakingly beautiful building, as it today again is. It
    reminds us that the widespread anti-Semitism in the current Muslim
    world was simply non-existent in the Ottoman Empire, or the superpower
    of Islamdom for some five centuries. In fact, at that time
    anti-Semitism was a shame of Christian Europe, whereas Ottoman lands
    offered the Jews the safest havens on Earth.

    This heritage is what Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç probably
    referred to when he said, during the opening the opening ceremony,
    `Thank God, there is no anti-Semitism in Turkey.' Yet, with all due
    respect to Arınç, I would replace the word `is' in that sentence with
    `was.' In other words, there was indeed no anti-Semitism in the
    Ottoman Empire. But things began to change in Republican Turkey, as
    both Turkish nationalists and Islamists began to import the
    anti-Semitic literature from alien sources, such as Europe, Russia and
    the Middle East.

    Admittedly, this influx of anti-Semitism happened mostly in reaction
    to Israel's constant occupation of Palestinian lands and its
    subjugation of the Palestinian people. (Despite the common Israeli
    propaganda, Israel's own actions often fuel anti-Semitism, rather than
    anti-Semitism fuelling reaction to Israel.) Yet still it was wrong,
    unacceptable and shameful.

    What is most tragic is that the very actor which we put our hopes for
    building a truly `neo-Ottoman' (i.e., pluralist) Turkey, the AKP, has
    devolved into anti-Semitism in the past few years. AKP propaganda,
    carried out by its apparatchiks in the media and social media, has
    taken a clearly anti-Semitic tone, with conspiracy theories about
    `Zionist spies,' who are none other than President Recep Tayyip
    ErdoÄ?an's political opponents. If the AKP wants to go down in history
    as a truly `neo-Ottoman' movement, it should backtrack from this
    hate-mongering, and stick with the spirit that re-allowed the
    restoration of Edirne's Great Synagogue.


    March/28/2015
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/when-neo-ottomanism-helps.aspx?PageID=238&NID=80278&NewsCatID=411

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