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Ayaan Hirsi Ali Reflects On Secularism And Islam In Turkey

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  • Ayaan Hirsi Ali Reflects On Secularism And Islam In Turkey

    AYAAN HIRSI ALI REFLECTS ON SECULARISM AND ISLAM IN TURKEY

    http://www.hairenik.com/armenianweekly/com 08040703.htm
    Volume 73, No. 31, August 4, 2007

    WATERTOWN, Mass. (A.W.)--In the Summer 2007 issue (Vol. 24, No. 3)
    of the New Perspectives Quarterly, Somali immigrant, feminist and
    former Dutch legislator Ayaan Hirsi Ali has an article titled "Don't
    Disarm Secularism," analyzing the current clash between secularism
    and Islam in Turkey.

    Hirsi Ali, who recently published her memoir Infidel, criticizes
    the leaders of the AK Party in Turkey for wanting "to run state
    affairs on Islamic principles." She notes, "The proponents of Islam
    in government such as Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Abdullah Gul and their
    Justice and Development Party have been remarkably successful. They
    have understood and exploited the fact that you can use democratic
    means to erode democracy."

    According to Hirsi Ali, the Islamists will benefit if Turkey joins the
    European Union, as the military will no longer be able to interfere
    in the country's political affairs. "[T]he army and the court in
    Turkey--besides defending the country and the constitution--are also,
    and maybe even more importantly, designed to protect Turkish democracy
    from Islam," she says.

    In her concluding paragraphs, Hirsi Ali presents her concept of
    "true secularism" in Turkey: "Bringing back true secularism to Turkey
    does not mean just any secularism. It means secularism that protects
    individual freedoms and rights, not the ultra-nationalist kind that
    breeds an environment in which Hitler's Mein Kampf is a bestseller,
    the Armenian genocide is denied and minorities are persecuted. Hrant
    Dink, the Armenian editor, was murdered by such a nationalist."

    Benhabib Responds

    Asked about Hirsi Ali's article, Seyla Benhabib, professor of
    political science and philosophy at Yale University, told Daniele
    Castellani Perelli ("Mosque and State," Dissent Magazine, Fall 2007)
    that "Miss Hirsi Ali's language is a language of confrontation that
    basically presents a homogeneous, orthodox Islam as closed to reform
    and transformation. And it is a language that presents a unified,
    uncritical and un-reflectively positive view of liberal democracies--as
    if they didn't have their own problems and reasons to be criticized."

    Benhabib says the AK party is "carrying out an incredible experiment
    and it is unusual for some one who is a democratic socialist like
    myself to be supporting, and watching very carefully, a party like
    them. But we are all watching carefully because they also represent
    a kind of pluralism in civil society, which is absolutely essential
    for Turkey."

    Talking about the Turkish military, Benhabib charged, "The Turkish
    army has been involved in Turkish politics for the last half century
    and anybody who considers themselves a liberal democrat and who wants
    the return of the army to power cannot know the history of repression
    caused by the army in Turkey."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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