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  • ANKARA: Controversial video gives Turkey goose bumps

    17.09.2007
    Turkish Press Review

    Source: http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/yazarDetay.do?ha berno=122252

    FATMA DISLI

    Controversial video gives Turkey goose bumps

    The broadcast of the video for a song whose lyrics praise the killer
    and masterminds of the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink -- who was shot dead earlier this year by ultra-nationalists for
    allegedly insulting Turkishness -- is sending shockwaves across
    Turkey. The most terrifying thing about the incident was that the
    singer, Ýsmail Türüt, who is from the Black Sea region that Dink's
    killer also comes from, said he was very happy to sing such a song.
    Actually this is not the first incident showing Dink's killers being
    hailed as heroes, as some police officers posed for souvenir photos
    with Dink's alleged killer immediately after his arrest at the police
    office, which caused much controversy and mirrored the disturbed
    mentality reigning in some parts of Turkey.

    "Is this Darfur?" asks Sabah columnist Ergun Babahan, who laments the
    racist mentality exhibited by some in Turkey that led to the
    composition of such a song. Discussing ways to rid society of such an
    attitude, he rules out the abolition of the notorious Article 301 of
    the Turkish Penal Code (TCK) -- which makes it a crime to insult
    Turkishness and has caused the prosecution of many intellectuals
    including Dink -- or even a constitutional change as a solution. "No
    matter if you write the most democratic constitution and modernize
    your penal code, it is not easy to establish a democratic social
    structure as long as the masses think and behave differently. Is it
    possible to maintain a healthy social order as people who do not
    refrain from praising an abhorrent murder, are still respected by some
    circles of the society and as long as they continue to appear on
    television screens and make programs? Change laws thousands of times,
    but that will mean nothing as long as an understanding that regards it
    as heroism to fight thought with weapons is not condemned," he
    explains. Babahan defines the problem in Turkey as one of people's
    refusing to live alongside other identities and thoughts. "Anybody who
    does not make an effort to achieve this harms the future of this
    country. Because as long as such a defective mentality reigns in
    Turkey, our differences will continue to be a source of enmity rather
    than richness," he argues.

    Another Sabah columnist, Erdal Þafak, complains about the deep silence
    among people in Turkey in the face of incidents like the emergence of
    such a video. He refers to similar events in the past which went
    unnoticed, such as the threat made by the leader of a youth
    organization in front of Agos daily, Dink's paper, to kill Dink before
    his murder; articles published after Dink's murder saying "Turkey has
    lost one of its enemies"; and Dink's killer's white cap becoming
    popular in the wake of the release of the closed-circuit footage taken
    within moments of the killing. This quiet, this deep silence reminds
    one of the paintings of Hieronymus Bosch in the Middle Ages,
    particularly "Ecce Homo," he notes. "The silence and indifference of
    the public is depicted in those paintings while Jesus is being taken
    to execution," he explains, as he laments a similar attitude among the
    public about the Dink murder and the unfortunate events following it,
    like the recent song case.

    Vatan's Güngör Mengi thinks differently from Þafak about the public's
    reaction to the controversial video, saying that the public's reaction
    was so huge that the video was ultimately removed from YouTube. What
    concerns him most about the incident is the number of young people who
    could be inspired by it. "Why does the order in Turkey not protect our
    children? Why? Because our culture and laws do not force adults to act
    responsibly," he asserts.
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