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  • The Status Of The Minorities In South East Asia: Why Can't Turkey Be

    THE STATUS OF THE MINORITIES IN SOUTH EAST ASIA: WHY CAN'T TURKEY BE LIKE THE PHILIPPINES?
    BY Aland Mizell

    Kurdish Aspect, CO
    Kurdishaspect.com
    September 19, 2007

    The Philippine nation is a pluralistic society and culture compared
    to other South East Asian countries in the region. The direction
    the Philippines has taken since her colonial days has been toward
    the integration of small, more diverse tribal communities into
    a more developing nation with the nation's desired goal being
    to bring about a cohesive society under the unifying umbrella of
    institutional processes. There are many tribal languages spoken in
    the Philippines , especially among the Muslim minority. For example,
    a member of the Maranao tribe speaks Maranao, and one belonging to
    the Tausog tribe speaks the Tausug tribal language. The Philippine
    government never forced minorities to speak Tagalog, the Philippine
    national language. Of the 175 languages, 171 are living and only
    4 are extinct, making a very diversified and rich linguistic map
    (Ethnologue 2007). The pluralistic nature of the Philippine society is
    very interesting to study in the areas of ethnic, racial, and religious
    relations compared to Turkey, because the Turkish nation is also a
    pluralistic society and culture populated by many ethnic minorities,
    like the Kurds, Armenians, Jews, Central Asians, and those from the
    Balkans; however, the direction the Turkish government has taken is
    not toward integration into a more diverse, tolerant society or a
    more educated and developing nation, but rather the direction the
    Turkish government has taken is to continue to deny differences,
    a denial based on a more racist and nationalistic approach.

    Like the Turkish government, the Philippine government constitutionally
    remains a secular state, but unlike the Turkish government, it neither
    supports nor discriminates against any religious group, institution, or
    people according to the constitutional principles. In the Philippines
    , most people classify themselves along sectarian lines. However,
    religious fanatic groups in the Philippines are trying to divide the
    social structure of the nation instead of trying to unify it into a
    common homeland under the Philippine government. They use the drug of
    religion to combat against governmental efforts. Instead of fighting
    against poverty and illiteracy and of maintaining security and building
    the economy, the fanatics create problems, so that investments do
    not go to the rural areas. As a consequence of the violence, Muslims
    pay the price. Even though in the past the government discriminated
    against minorities, now it has recognized these past mistakes and has
    compensated through a program of reconciliation and autonomy. However,
    the Turkish government has had no reconciliation programs to reconsider
    the taboos against the Kurds. Just recently, the head of the Turkish
    Historical Society, TTK, Professor Halacoglu, argued that the Kurds
    actually are Turkmen and that the Alevi Kurds are Armenian. Indeed,
    this is the history that the Turkish government teaches to young
    generations with misinformation about Kurdish history.

    The history professor lays no claims to having foresight or
    pre-science, and he has studied history just enough to know that he
    does not know enough to risk predicting what the future holds for
    the Kurds.

    He has eyes, though, and so he is in a position to ask readers to
    gaze in a certain direction and determine whether they also see what
    he sees. This kind of professor needs to wear glasses because his
    eyes suffer from myopia, and, therefore, it is entirely possible that
    his claim rests on evidence that either results from not seeing all
    there is to see or from being based on what he thinks he sees. Also,
    a few years ago Bogazici University in Istanbul held an international
    conference, but the TTK pulled its funding and support when it learned
    that a paper on the Kurds and another on the Armenians were to be
    presented. The Turkish government has held this kind of groundless
    history for decades. However, Turkey is preparing to join the world
    class, so I wonder if Turkey will relinquish her narrow ideas based on
    a nationalistic view that denies minorities' right to exist or if it
    will follow the path of Europeans who strongly believe that respect
    for human rights is one of the most fundamental and universal values
    of our world. According to Benita Ferrero-Waldner, the European
    Human Rights Commissioner for External Relations in the European
    Neighborhood Policy, "All of us, in our official capacity have an
    obligation to promote and protect the rights of our fellow members
    of the human family, be that at home or elsewhere in the world" (2005).

    By contrast to Turkey with its land mass being contiguous, the
    territorial setting of the Philippines is comprised of more than seven
    thousands islands, a reality that creates problems because of isolation
    and communication gaps. Yet, in spite of these natural difficulties
    arising out of its being an archipelago, the Philippines government
    is committed to overcoming these complexities and to narrowing the
    gaps. However, it is true to say that the Philippine government in
    the past has neglected the southern part of country, or consistently
    has used assimilation and discrimination policies against the Muslim
    minorities in that region. Proselytizing the indigenous tribes with
    their religions based primarily on animism, Islam was introduced to
    Mindanao and the Sulu Islands in the 15th century, and affected not
    only the religious order but the political and social system as well,
    establishing sultanates and bringing the barangays or kinship groups
    under the control of powerful datus or chieftains.. After this period
    of Islamic proselytism, Muslims in the southern Philippines consider
    themselves native since they preceded the Spaniard colonization that
    began with the arrival of Ferdinand Magellan in 1521. Today, however,
    the Philippine government has admitted that the government's past
    policy was wrong and unjust. The government has given a large degree
    of freedom in the area ranging from education to autonomous self-rule.

    It has created a special Muslim curriculum, Muslim institutions,
    and scholarship programs exclusively for the Muslim minorities. For
    example, Mindanao State University (MSU) is located in Marawi City ,
    where the majority of the population is Muslim. The tuition is very
    inexpensive compared to other universities in the region.

    When I interviewed, Dr. Tamano, a prominent Muslim, who is highly
    educated and enjoys a high profile, he was Secretary of the
    Autonomous Region in the Muslim Mindanao, Muslim advisor to the
    regional Department of Education, and acting Vice- President of
    Mindanao State University (2007). He also ran for governor but lost
    because of election fraud. He is now Chancellor of Mindanao State
    University. I asked him, "What is the Moro question?" If Muslims have
    their own autonomous region, their self rule, education, language,
    and culture, what do Muslims want? Why are they still fighting for? He
    told me that when the Spaniards came for three Gs--GOD, Glory and Gold.

    "They tried to take our land from us and to force us to believe their
    God. That's why Muslims resisted them until today. That was a just war,
    and that's why we won." He explained the difference now, "But today
    we are fighting the wrong war, because the government now recognizes
    her past mistake and has given us all opportunities to catch up with
    the rest of society, in terms of education and economics." Muslims
    have a higher illiteracy rate than the Catholic Christians.

    There is such a disparity between the Catholic majority and the Muslim
    minority in terms of poverty.

    He continued, "That is what Muslim leaders in the Philippines should
    be fighting for. They are supposed to unify to eliminate poverty,
    narrow the educational gaps, and create peace so that people can have
    jobs, but sometimes Muslims fight among themselves, especially when
    an election comes. Some of the leaders want the Muslim candidates to
    use religion as a scapegoat to gain political power for themselves."

    Also, a lack of Muslim leadership among the Muslim minority
    perpetuates the problems. He told me to look at his university as a
    good example. The government has given every opportunity for Muslims
    to be educated and to have skills as well as good jobs. He referred
    to education as "the right education," one that teaches Islam but an
    Islam that is compatible with science. In his view, Muslims should
    learn science and skills as well as their religion.

    Also, I visited the Mayor of Davao City, Mayor Rodrigo Duterte, who
    is well known for making the city safe and free from the corruption of
    drug-dealing. He has a zero tolerance against drugs and other illegal
    activity. Today there is only one city in the Mindanao region that is
    safe, and it is Davao . When I asked him, "How did you do that?" Mayor
    Duterte told me that the Philippine government policy had been wrong
    in the past. He did not have any intention to follow the wrong policy
    of the government. The mayor said that the state is not a moral agent;
    people are, and as such, they can impose moral principles on powerful
    institutions. He said that he talked to everybody especially the
    rebels and implemented equal representation in his administration. He
    explained that he gave an equal voice and an equal role to every tribe
    to make sure each person was represented fairly and equally, and then
    he said he told them that there would be no more assassinations,
    kidnappings, or killings. That is why the city is safer today than
    before his coming to office. Mayor Duterte does not believe that using
    the military is a good solution to ethnic and religious conflict in
    his country. He believes we are all human beings, and as such, we all
    have rights inherent to that status. We all have dignity and worth
    that exist prior to law. That is a system in which words can change
    the whole structure of government, and words can prove stronger than
    numerous military divisions. That is why today Davao City is the safest
    city in the Philippines ; it is because of a good and strong mayor.

    Good administration and politics emphasize rights, the superiority
    of law, duty, and the placement of responsible people in difficult
    jobs. According to the mayor, government means justice and public
    order. One cannot speak where those two do not exist. For Duterte, laws
    should be effective all the time, everywhere, and for everybody. This
    unity of feeling, thought, and culture are essential to the development
    of a strong nation because disintegration of moral unity causes that
    same nation to weaken.

    Like more recently in the Philippines , in the 1960s America called
    for national integration to solve the problem of racism, and it
    implemented new policies to overcome the attitudes and practices
    that discriminated against the Blacks. Since it is hard to change
    what happened in the past, a society has to start at the present,
    so Turkey can change her attitude toward ethnic discrimination. To
    begin, the current leaders must realize Turkey's guilt, get rid of
    their arrogance, seed humility, and exchange love, humility, kindness,
    and forgiveness for hate to make the present more comfortable and
    the future more hopeful. Peace will begin in the Kurdish region when
    oppression, cruelty, injustice and hunger end.

    However, today the Turkish government lags behind the Philippine
    government in terms of its treatment of the minorities. An inquirer
    must ask why the law enforcement that serve in the Kurdish region are
    not Kurdish or at least speak Kurdish. Why are there no educational
    institutions that study Kurdology or that establish Kurdish
    institutes? Why can the Turkish government not create some kind of
    program like affirmative action that will allow for a narrowing of the
    educational gap between Kurdish minorities and the Turkish majority
    because illiteracy rates among the Kurds is higher than among the
    Turks. Why can the Turkish government not give some incentives to
    encourage economic progress? Kurds should be more organized and should
    educate themselves to realize that they would be better off if they
    made education a priority because education is mightier than the sword.

    The Kurdish culture and history should be allowed to exist in the
    open and also preserved, such as Kurdish names, and the Kurdish
    language. Why can the Turkish government not put forth some effort
    to foster civic engagement about the Kurdish question? Why can the
    Kurdish question not be discussed in the academic community? Why
    can the Turkish government not have some kind of scholarship program
    exclusively for the Kurdish minority to give them incentives to go
    to school? Why can the Kurds not have the same kind of autonomy that
    the Muslim minorities do in the Philippines ? The problem of the Kurds
    being subjected to objective analysis is that it necessarily requires
    assessment of the government's adopted measures to effectively solve
    such problems. If the government denies the existence of the ethnic
    group, how can any kind of governmental analysis occur? Good government
    produces opportunities for each generation to have a developed faith,
    innovative technology and science, and a cultivated consciousness
    about their identity and their cultural values. If, by contrast,
    the people see the government as tyrannical or oppressive, then the
    nation has lost its purpose to serve the common good.

    Further, in Turkey the government program still uses a military
    solution to achieve their policy of integration rather than an academic
    one. For a long time the integration policy was always interpreted as
    assimilation or acculturation, which means that the Turkish government
    tries to reconcile diverse cultures with one culture and to deny the
    minorities' culture.

    By contrast, in the Philippines the varied Muslim tribes have their
    own language, dances, crafts, and customs. Yet, when Ferdinand Magellan
    came to the Philippines in early 1521, he conquered the archipelago by
    sword and cross, and for long time the Spaniards fought with Muslims in
    a bloody struggle and war. However, later on, the governor as well as
    Catholic and other denominations' missionaries organized a politico
    -a military for the minorities' group, so that they would be able
    to control the minorities' affairs and supervise them. Dr. Tamano
    points out that the Spanish were successful in Luzon and Visayas,
    so the Spanish began to assimilate non-Christians into an already
    growing Christian society. In Dr. Tamano's view, the Spaniards
    made the integration policy successful in the north because the
    Spaniard considered that if the number of Filipinos converted to
    Christianity could be measured, the numbers would show a fully
    successful integration.

    However, in the southern regions like Sulu and Maguindanao, the
    Sultanates of the Muslims resisted the Spaniard forces and the problem
    of assimilating these non-Catholic and Catholics failed to bring
    them to work together to bring about peace. If a traveler crosses
    the region, he or she will see how that policy has affected people's
    life conditions there. Now the Philippine government recognizes these
    differences and has implemented policies to recognize the ethnic and
    religious differences.

    Like Magellan, the Turkish government first under the Ataturk
    regime and then subsequent ones used force and denial as part of its
    assimilation policy. "Kurds are mountain Turks." Turkey was effective
    with this assimilation, but they were not successful in the south;
    however, later on, the Turkish regime's generals and Agah or Sheik
    organized a politico -the military for the minorities' group, so
    that they could control the minorities' affairs and supervised them
    through corrupt religious groups. The Agha in the south and in the
    eastern part of Turkey accomplished a successful integration policy
    because if the number of the Kurds who denied their identity or who
    believed that they were mountain Turks could be considered a criterion
    of national integration, then we could say that the Turkish government
    proved successful in her integration or assimilation policy. It is
    fair to say that the Turkish regime's integration policy in the east
    was successful, but that it failed in the south.

    Last week, the mayor of the Diyarbakir challenged the Islamic Justice
    and Development Party (AP), saying that Diyarbakir is our [the Kurds']
    "stronghold," and we are ready to fight. However, Mayor Osman Baydemir
    used this word as a illustration to mean that we will not give up
    our culture, we will not bow down to injustice, we will not let the
    military burn our villages, we live here, and we will fight you not in
    the sense of taking up arms but a civilized way.. In the recent case,
    however, a member of the Fetullahci group, Fetullah Gulen's closest
    assistant wrote in the Zaman newspaper criticizing Baydemir's comments
    by saying that Mayor Baydemir cannot challenge the Prime Minister and
    that Baydemir is creating terror. But Huseyin Gulerce and his followers
    put the blinders on when the Democratic Social Party (DPT) leader
    Ahmet Turk criticized Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government by saying,
    "There is no mention about the Kurdish problem during the parliamentary
    talks over the new government plan." However, Erdogan replied to Ahmet,
    "You first outlaw the Kurdish Worker Party [PKK} in the region."

    Gulerce and his followers failed to see what kind of language the
    Prime Minister was using. What kind of leadership is it that wants
    to punish a majority of people because a minority of the people
    supports the PKK? If the Prime Minister were a mature enough leader,
    he would never point out differences of thought and opinion to produce
    conflict. It is true that no one should refuse to tolerate views that
    separate people into camps and destroy the community and society,
    but neither should they go out of their way to use them to enflame
    opposition. If the Prime Minister and others who think like him
    believe in tolerance, then why do they oppose every idea that seem
    contradictory to theirs and scare them off instead of seeking ways
    to benefit from their opinions and ideas, of trying to understand
    them and to build a bridge, and of beginning a dialogue with them? In
    other words, why do they not try to learn how to listen to what the
    Kurds say they really want and what they really mean? Otherwise,
    those who are kept at a distance and are led into dissatisfaction
    because they think that the government is biased will unit the masses
    and will resist the Turkish government. It is important that the Prime
    Minister and his government learn how to benefit from other people's
    knowledge and views because that knowledge will help them understand
    how to approach the Kurdish problem.

    Also, Erdogan still believes that there is no Kurdish problem and
    that there has never been one. By answering Baydemir, Erdogan was
    saying that people should produce projects not words. I wonder what
    Erdogan has been doing in southeastern Turkey . How many families
    have been compensated because the military forced them to leave their
    villages? How many families whose village has been burned have homes
    being rebuilt? How many new schools and new roads are being built
    in southeastern Turkey ? How many job has he created? How much has
    he reduced the size of the military instead of increasing it, as he
    actually has?

    A just government implies that there is a policy for everything:
    a policy for renewing a nation's joy until the whole nation feel
    the joys and likewise feels the sorrow and pain of others in the
    same nation. Instead, now there is a new campaign that goes against
    Kurds, saying that Kurds are betrayers and have taken the side of
    the Christians like those in America . But, the government has never
    realized that Americans are the ones who freed the Kurds, not their
    fellow Muslim brothers. Also, it has failed to understand that those
    who have been oppressing the Kurds for centuries are neither Christians
    nor Americans, but they are their fellow Muslim brothers. Iran ,
    for example, for a long time has oppressed the Kurds and is killing
    them even today; it is not a Christian nation but rather a Muslim
    nation. Turkey has oppressed, killed, tortured, raped, and burned
    houses and villages, not a Christian nation but a Muslim one. Syria
    committed genocide against the Kurds; it is not a Christen nation
    but a Muslim nation. Iraq 's Saddam gassed Kurds not as a Christian
    nation but a Muslim one. Those who study politics and see politics
    as a propaganda struggle for power are mistaken. Politics is like an
    art of management based on diverse perspectives of the contemporary
    world and on a future that will seek the people's satisfaction and
    justice. Erdogan and some others should never forget that power
    and dominance are transitory, while justice, equality, and truth
    are eternal. Even if they do not exist in Turkish politics today,
    some day they will. Therefore, especially those who claim to be
    Muslims should align themselves and their policies with equality and
    justice; and treat everybody the same regardless of their religion,
    skin color, race, ethnicity, or gender. The Prime Minister and Huseyin
    Gulerce should never forget when they were discriminated against by
    the military and the Secularists, or when they were not welcome in
    the presidential palace or at a meeting. How did they feel in their
    own country? That is exactly how the Kurds feel now. If religion is
    truly interpreted, it can promote democracy, understanding of others,
    human rights, equality, as well as justice, and those values can be
    guaranteed via religion. Because religion should teach that all people
    are created equal, it should not discriminate based on race, color,
    age, or nationality. Religion should declare that power lies in truth;
    religion should teach that justice and rule of law are essential;
    religion should teach freedom of belief, open ideas, and the right
    to life, personal name, and personal property. Everyone should be
    able to speak her or his language and maintain culture that God-gave
    to them; no one should take that away, and their rights should be
    violated. Religion is a relationship between men and God. It results
    in a commitment between God and the individual as he or she submits
    to His divine system in which all creatures obey Him. To abuse it
    is very sad in that today many people try to use religion to gain
    power and as a method of controlling another person's life. If a
    government is virtuous and the state is chosen because of their humble
    ideas and justice, then that government will be strong and peace as
    well as reconciliation are possible, but if the government is run
    by officials who still have prejudice in their hearts and minds,
    not justice and equality, and thus they lack those high qualities,
    sooner or later it will collapse. Erdogan and others should remember
    that extreme harshness causes unexpected explosions that are waiting
    for the spark to ignite them. As long as his government protects people
    from cruelty and defends them from injustice and oppression, it will be
    a successful government; however, if Erdogan's government does not do
    so, then he will cause more hatred, more prejudice, and more turmoil.

    The majority of Muslims in the southern Philippines (the Moros),
    like the Kurds, are not rebellious and do not want to fight or
    be rebellious against their government. Even though a majority of
    the Moros sympathize with the Moros' struggle against, oppression,
    injustice, and cruelty that the rebels represent, most Muslims like
    the Kurds wish for nothing more than to live in peace, pursue their
    livelihood, have a family, raise their kids, live in dignity, and
    die in a bed. The Kurds seek above all their survival as a Kurdish
    people. They are now convinced that their survival demands freedom from
    the domination of Turks in those matters which most impinge on their
    identity and selfhood as Kurds; those are such matters as education,
    community organizations, non-government organizations (NGO's), family ,
    law and order, an end to military rule, and economic resources. This
    is the kind of experience that has been telling us that there can
    be no real freedom for Kurds until there is fundamental change in
    the structures of their relationship to the Turkish government. This
    change must give them power, that is affective reserved powers, to
    order their affairs in their regions. However, those objectives should
    be accomplished by Turkish political systems using all of the legal
    constitutional means available, including publication of their ideas;
    organizing pressure groups and lobbies, and participating in government
    efforts to find the right, just solution to the Kurdish problem.

    The number of Moros, like the Kurds, have acted on their belief
    that the only way to respond to the government's wrong policy is
    to fight even though they are a comparably small entity. However,
    some Kurdish leaders like Baydemir, a moderate, have often eloquently
    articulated the legitimate and understandable grievances the Kurdish
    people put forth and voice sound recommendations for the government,
    but presently the government and the people are not ready yet to
    discuss openly the Kurdish question.

    Mayor Baydemir speaks on behalf of his people pleading for
    understanding and justice. Former Senator Mamintal Tamano and
    former dean, Cesar Majul of the Institute of Islamic Studies at the
    University of Philippines systems, have sets of recommendations for
    the Philippine government to implement. Some of the recommendations
    are being implemented by the government: 1) a moratorium on new
    settlers should be imposed, 2) law enforcement agents in the Moros
    areas should be Muslims, 3) more educational institutions should be
    established, 4) governments should encourage economic progress, 5)
    Muslim Filipinos should be better Muslims, 6) important elements
    of Islamic law should be allowed for Muslims, and 7) the national
    government should enable greater Moros' participation.

    These are the major recommendations that two moderate Filipino Muslims
    have put together for the government, and many of those recommendations
    have already been granted and implemented.

    Now more Moros have been appointed to national services. A code of
    Philippine Muslims' personal law has been promulgated. Muslim holidays
    have legal status in the Moros region. The government has set up a Bank
    of the Philippines, Amana Bank, to capitalize on the Moro requirements
    for economic development. The Minister of Educational Culture has
    been making a conscious effort to meet the educational needs and
    religious feeling of the Muslims. Moreover, the Philippine government
    granted autonomy to the Muslims making them internally independent
    and externally dependent on the Manila government. According to Dr.

    Tamano, The Autonomous Region of Muslims Mindano (ARMM) was created
    in August 1989 and inaugurated in 1990 under the President, Corazon
    Aquino at the Cotabato City . This led to the Moro National Front
    laying down their arms and converting to the Philippine national
    army. The question is why can't Turkey be like the Philippines ?

    References

    Duterte, Rodrigo. Mayor, Davao City . Personal Interview. 10 July 2007.

    Ethnologue.com

    http://www.ethnologue.com/s how_country.asp?name=PH

    Ferrero-Waldner, European Commissioner for External Relations and
    European Neighbourhood Policy.

    "Promotion of Human Rights and Democratisation in the European Union's
    External Relations." European Commission for External Relations. (10
    December 2005).

    http://ec.europa.eu/external_relations/hum an_rights/intro/index.htm

    Gulerce, Huseyin. " Diyarbakýr 'ýn mesajý doðru okunmalý ." Zaman.

    http://www.zaman.com.tr/webapp-tr/yazar.do ?yazino=584759

    Tamano, Salipado S.

    Acting Vice President, Office of the Vice President for Planning and
    Development, the Philippines-Australia Basic Education Assistance
    for Mindanao, RELC XII Compound ARMS Complex, ORC Cotabato City,
    Muslim Education Advisor, The Autonomous Region in Muslim

    Mindanao, Cotabato City , Regional Secretary Regional Department of
    Education, Culture and Sports.

    Personal Interview. 7 March 2007.

    --Boundary_(ID_IThV/Gbbldtm/6s5YhB3zg)--
    From: Baghdasarian
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