Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey's Lessons For Israel

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey's Lessons For Israel

    TURKEY'S LESSONS FOR ISRAEL

    Canadian Jewish News, Canada
    June 6 2007

    Recently my e-mail has been deluged with articles about Turkey
    and the intense confrontation going on there between Islamists and
    secularists, as well as between the elected government of an Islamic
    party and the secular army generals. I love the country I lived in
    for two years. You can't easily figure it out because it is a living,
    breathing organism with a vigour that amazes me.

    Briefly, the argument put forward against Prime Minister Recep
    Erdogan's government is that he will lead Turkey into an age of
    religious fundamentalism by manipulating the existing political
    system and shutting it down. He, so the argument goes, has an agenda
    similar to that of Saudi Arabia, and Hamas: the implementation of a
    state based not on western secular principles created by the Ataturk
    revolution, but on sharia law, which would mean, among other things,
    the re-enslavement of women behind the veil, the rise of a mullah-led
    coterie within the government, and a slide backward to an intolerance
    of non-Muslim minorities.

    More dangerously, he is accused of imperilling the entente between
    Turkey and Israel, and cozying up to people from Hamas and to
    the anti-Semite and Holocaust denier, Iranian President Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad. Turkey and Israel have a strong economic and military
    partnership, and this relationship has shown that a Jewish state can
    live and do business with a Muslim country.

    On the other hand, say Erdogan's supporters, any attempt to undo the
    election of the current parliament and prime minister is the real step
    backward. (Note: his Islamist party got 35 per cent of the popular
    vote, but has 65 per cent of the seats in parliament.)

    Army coups in Turkey are always a possibility and have in the past
    occurred when the generals felt the country had strayed too far
    from Ataturk's secularist vision. The generals once had one prime
    minister hanged, his party disbanded and its leaders imprisoned. That,
    supporters say, was a step away from democracy, and a similar move
    by the army today would be truly destabilizing.

    They also point out that the secular left is very anti-American and
    often anti-Israel, and many leftists are against joining the European
    Union, a membership that the Islamist governing party has supported.

    Each side is partly right. The EU membership would, it seems, be a
    boon to Turkey, and an army coup is hardly a democratic move.

    And while the wearing of head scarves has increased (not to mention
    the wearing of full regalia, including veils, at least in villages),
    many observers note that recent million-person marches clamouring
    for the country to remain true to its secular ideals have included
    scarf-wearing women.

    So what's the truth about Turkey? It's still a work in progress.

    Its women, secular and religious, have come a long way. Its middle
    class is strong, which is vital for any country that wants a
    sustainable democracy. It's also rich in natural and human resources.

    It has some history to sort out, most glaringly the need to come to
    terms with the Armenian genocide and with its Kurdish population.

    Yet, what other Muslim country can we think of that has come so far
    into the western world?

    But why am I even writing about a situation that is seemingly so far
    away from us?

    Because it is precisely such a nuanced approach that we must apply
    to Israel.

    It too has its religious right, its fundamentalists, its resolute
    secularists, its traditionalists and its own anti-Zionists (religious
    and secular). It is also no stranger to radicals, such as those
    behind the hateful assassination of prime minister Yitzchak Rabin. It
    has its seemingly endless struggle with the Palestinians. It has its
    tension between civil and military authority, although no general has
    needed to stage a coup - they just run for office. It has byzantine
    corruption, nasty inequality for women (not to mention tolerance for
    sexual harassment), and yet it boasts a vibrant civil society.

    Israel is not a dream palace, but a real place, where all these
    currents jostle for influence. People get up in the morning, brush
    their teeth and go to work. Like Turkey, Israel deserves our considered
    appraisal, not doomsday scenarios or unqualified praise.

    She - and we - will survive.

    http://www.cjnews.com/viewarticle.asp?id =11937
Working...
X