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Power of wisdom in Ottoman Palestine

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  • Power of wisdom in Ottoman Palestine

    Power of wisdom in Ottoman Palestine

    Bahrain Tribune, Bahrain
    Nov 22 2004

    The recently-concluded photographic exhibition on Ottoman Palestine
    stood out as a scholarly study, providing a testament to the Ottoman
    society's dynamism and the capacity for change, and bringing to
    the fore important and much-overlooked fascinating aspects of an
    outstanding era, writes gopal kejriwal.

    The Ottomans were able to think because they had wisdom, because they
    had power. There never seemed to be the problem of how to exercise
    power to achieve its responsible role - to do more good - rather than
    its irresponsible and indulgent use, of how to get the authority to
    live for rather than off the public.

    A total of 104 photographs and photocopies of 18 written documents
    vouchsafed the most revolutionary record of lasting peace and freedom
    (you cannot separate peace from freedom because no one can be at peace
    unless he has his freedom) that marked the mighty Ottoman Empire and
    its rule on Palestine for over 400 years - almost uninterrupted. The
    empire's power consisted in its capacity to link its will with the
    purpose of others, to rule and lead by reason, cooperation and trust.

    Small though, the displays at Beit Al Quran provided glimpses into
    the complexities and the psyche of the ruler and the ruled in all
    bitter-sweet aspects.

    The gallery - of freedom, harmony, camaraderie and community spirit
    that co-existed in Palestine between 1850 and 1919 - highlighted the
    irrefutable fact that peace is not an absence of war but is a virtue,
    a state of mind, a disposition for benevolence, confidence and justice.

    This peace - which was achieved through enlightenment and educating
    people to behave more in a noble manner - lived for centuries with
    honours and glories of its own, unattended by the dangers of war.
    It was a gallery of people of individual honour and personal character,
    of independence, of the faces of humanity without mask. There were
    no masters, no dictators, no champions. There was no servitude.

    With the well-preserved black and white photographs of water-carriers,
    Siloam women selling vegetables or melons, philanthropist Shaikh Noury
    offering food to passers-by, gypsies, people in boats in Engaddi/Arnon,
    fishermen clattering their plates like cymbals, pilgrims inching their
    way through the Lion's and the Damascus gates, the celebration of the
    renewal of Jerusalem water pipeline - the gallery was an opportunity
    for one-to-one conversations with the elite and the ordinary -
    for an exchange of thought and not an eloquent exhibition of wit
    or oratory. Every citizen dutifully gave validity to his or her
    convictions, beliefs and philosophy.

    The still moments all over the halls carried in them infinite space,
    and this infinite space was infinitely exhibited - as the everlasting
    joy.

    Hats off to the Turkish embassy for mining the sources intelligently
    and the judicious selection of the photographs from the collection
    of Turkish Consulate General in Jerusalem - to capture the spirits
    of Ottoman Palestine.

    "Of an estimated 15,000 photographs in existence - until the end of
    the Ottoman period in Palestine - the Consulate General has acquired
    copies of 1,500 after years of painstaking search of the archives of
    Orient House, the Arab Studies Society and other local institutions as
    well as private family albums," the Director of Museum at the centre,
    Ashraf Al Ansari, tells me.

    The photographs - faces, landscapes, town scenes, holy places - also
    captured the fabric of the communities, their unity in diversity, the
    social, economic and cultural life, the Ottoman Turkish architectural
    imprint on monuments and structures. The documents, provided by the
    Ottoman Archives Department of the Directorate General of the State
    Archives of the Prime Ministry of the Republic of Turkey, depicted the
    social and administrative aspects of Ottoman governance in Palestine
    - a place which had remained one of the most important districts of
    the empire from 1517 until the end of World War I. The most important
    document was the ferman (ordinance) of Fatih Sultan Mehmet guaranteeing
    religious freedom to all the clergymen from different religions in
    Al Quds in 1457 - and affirming that the empire was one of the most
    tolerant in the world.

    "Unlike the preceding rulers, the Ottomans allowed the majority of
    Muslims and Christian Arabs as well as minorities such as Jews,
    Circassians, Druses, Serbs, Assyrians, Armenians and Turks to
    peacefully coexist - as a natural right - regardless of their religious
    or ethnic backgrounds," Al Ansari says. The population also included
    large groups of foreign missionaries, teachers and fringe groups of
    Christians and Jewish refugees.

    In support of his argument, Al Ansari points to another ordinance
    (issued on August 31, 1565) on keeping of the holy places in Al
    Quds such as Mariam's Tomb and Qadem Isa clean and the prevention of
    improper acts on such sites.

    "Most of the inhabitants, Arabic speaking Christians and Muslims,
    lived in a few hundred villages with self-sufficiency. The elite
    lived in the towns and were different from the subjects in the
    villages. The high priests were often Greek though the congregation
    was Arabian. The landowners were often Turks," Al Ansari says. The
    Arabs formed an important part of the structure of the empire and
    the Ottoman Constitution provided for one form of government of all
    Ottoman territories and people.

    The state never prevented any of the Christian communities from
    exercising their historically acknowledged rights of free passage
    into Jerusalem nor interfered in any way with their religious conduct,
    he says.

    Further evidence that the empire kept to its contract with the
    People of the Book is provided in church documents which reveal the
    systematic building, renovation and upkeep of churches and monasteries
    in Jerusalem and beyond. One fine example is the permission to the
    Armenian Catholic community in Jerusalem in 1887 to build a church
    even though the community comprised just four households of 22 men
    and women.

    No visitor to the exhibition would miss the eclectic social milieu
    and its various moods - a man selling ice-cream in Jerusalem (1917),
    a local Arab pasha in full Ottoman Army insignia (1900) children
    watching through the magic box (1919), an American cavasse (1905) the
    cattle market in the Sultan's pool (1900), a Samaritan with a scroll
    (1901). More, a 1918 photograph of a women's union making handicrafts
    in Ramallah is perhaps the best evidence of women's emancipation as
    they were allowed to earn a living with a condition of not getting
    involved with men. The sorts of employment were embroidery and weaving.

    Education was another priority of the empire which encouraged the
    teaching of both Arabic and English languages by opening Arab Primary
    School, Friends School in Ramallah, and many others.

    Other achievements include the opening of a railway line between
    Jerusalem and Jaffa in 1892, the completion of the first major highway
    joining the two cities in 1867, the inauguration of the town hospital
    in 1891 in the west side of Jerusalem and the first windmill in 1839,
    the renovation of the Citadel near Jaffa, adding a few adjoining
    structures, and the Clock Tower, the magnificent square tower with
    four huge towers at the top of each side that was built in 1909 on top
    of Jaffa Gate as a memorial to the British conquest during World War I.

    In 1863, the local authority ordered the removal of all market
    platforms to create space for pedestrians and in 1885, old tiles
    were replaced in all of the City's alleys and main streets, with the
    provision of side channels for drainage.

    The empire has gone, but the holy territories have retained to date
    some of its remarkable features in the daily socio-cultural life
    in Palestine. The Ottoman concept remains in the memories of the
    Palestinians.

    The exhibition succeeded in its aim - if it was to depict the
    remarkable cultural ebb and flow, which characterised the Ottoman
    period, if it was to find out hints from the Ottoman rule in this
    territory so that they could be feasible examples for the present day,
    if it was to remember the longest stable period of the Palestinian
    history with respect.

    The exhibition stood out as a scholarly study, providing a testament
    to the Ottoman society's dynamism and the capacity for change,
    and bringing to the fore important and much-overlooked fascinating
    aspects of the period.

    A walk through the gallery was like a visit to the Holy Land. At the
    same time, it was a reminder of her spirit as a land of peace and
    the possibility and hope for a better future.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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