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A Nation in Denial

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  • A Nation in Denial

    National Post, Canada
    A Nation in Denial
    by Robert Fulford
    Saturday, Feb. 3, 2007
    http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/story.html ?id=3D389d82ff-786e-43ab-a997-8732fea34a34

    When Orhan Pamuk won the Nobel Prize for literature in October, not
    everyone in Turkey was pleased. A lawyer who had helped bring charges
    of "insulting Turkishness" against Pamuk in 2005 claimed the author
    won the Nobel not forhis books but because he had taken the side of
    those who believe that in 1915 a Turkish campaign of genocide killed
    more than a million Armenians. "As a Turkish citizen I am ashamed," he
    said -- not ashamed of the genocide but of Pamuk. A nationalist poet
    said that people who know literature would neverplace Pamuk first
    among prominent Turkish writers. Last, maybe.

    Pamuk's enemies reflect what Turks (even the prime minister) call "the
    Deep State," a shadowy network of judges, police, army officers,
    bureaucrats and crime bosses, all of whom claim to defend Turkey's
    honour. They argue, withthe hysterical ferocity of people who no
    longer believe their own lies, that the genocide story was invented by
    Turkey's enemies.

    The Deep State's opinions may eventually be drowned by more convincing
    arguments; but for now it's too powerful to be ignored. Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a relatively moderate leader, wants to make
    Turkey respectable enough for full membership in the European
    Union. While worrying about rebellious Kurds and Islamic radicals
    (Turkey is 99.8% Muslim), Erdogan apparently decided that unfairly
    prosecuting a few writers wasn't too high a price for appeasing his
    county's irascible nationalists. How could he know the size of Pamuk's
    foreign reputation? How could he have anticipated, disaster of
    disasters, the Nobel?

    The Deep State stands behind Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code,
    created to maintain public ignorance by making criticism of Turkey a
    crime. Article 301 was the basis of charges, eventually dismissed,
    against Pamuk. It was also behind the charge of insulting Turkishness
    brought in 2005 against Hrant Dink, a journalist who belonged to
    Turkey's small Armenian minority. He was convicted but given a
    six-months suspended sentence. In nationalist eyes, that certified him
    as an enemy.

    Apparently as a result, he was shot to death on Jan. 19. As he lay on
    the sidewalk, the murderer ran away, shouting, "I have killed an
    Armenian!" Police see a conspiracy. They have arrested seven men,
    including the alleged shooter -- who, after his arrest, was allowed to
    pose for pictures with a Turkish flag.

    A persistent critic of Turkish law, Dink disliked the national
    anthem's line, "smile upon my heroic race," and criticized the
    schools for requiring children, whatever their ethnicity, to swear:
    "I am Turkish, I am righteous." And he discussed the genocide.

    In 1996, Dink founded a Turkish- Armenian weekly, AGOS, to create
    understanding between the two communities. He achieved a small
    circulation,just 6,000 subscribers, but made a large reputation. While
    Armenian in background, he supported Turkey's application for full
    status in the EU and believed in its future as a democracy.

    A crowd of 100,000 attended his funeral in Istanbul. At The Hague
    1,000 people gathered in front of the Dutch Parliament while
    parliamentarians from three major parties condemned Turkish
    nationalism. In Brussels on Thursday the European Parliament observed
    a minute's silence for Dink. In Washington, Senator Joseph Biden
    introduced a resolution that praised Dink's virtues and called his
    death "an outrage and a tragedy."

    His death has become yet another stumble on Turkey's path to the
    EU. Pamuk was threatened by one of Dink's murderers, so he's accepted
    state protection.

    He also cancelled a planned visit to Germany while going ahead with a
    visit to the United States. He said he was avoiding Germany for
    security reasons but he may have been showing the Turks that their
    policies are harming their future. Germany, by a long way Turkey's
    most important trading partner, will certainly influence EU
    decisions. This week German papers were saying that(as Die Zeit put
    it) "a dam has broken" and Turkish policy must change.

    The Dink assassination was only the latest in a long series of
    appalling events that have disclosed a troubled, confused, and
    insecure nation. Turkey has no record of political stability in recent
    decades. Since the middle of the 20th century, government has been
    changed four times by military coup. Once the centre of great power,
    Turkey may never have entirely recovered from the dissolution of the
    Ottoman Empire in the 1920s. History has left Turks with incoherent
    national memories of pride and shame. Their long, painful rise toward
    modernity demonstrates why a peaceful and prosperous future requires a
    reasonably honest understanding of the past.

    [email protected]
    © National Post 2007
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