Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: EU-Ottoman Comparison

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

  • ANKARA: EU-Ottoman Comparison

    EU-Ottoman Comparison
    by MEHMET KAMIS

    Zaman Online, Turkey
    Dec 9 2004

    Historians say that it is better to evaluate each period from its
    own perspective, but from time to time we should look at history from
    the viewpoint of today. The Ottoman Empire used to resemble today's
    European Union (EU). We could possibly define the Ottoman geography
    as the EU of its era even though it covered a different region. The
    empire stretched from the Balkans through the Middle East to Africa.
    Over 40 countries today fill the vacuum left after the collapse of
    the empire. Albania, Bulgaria, Greece, Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia,
    Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Lebanon, Israel, Palestine, Jordan, Bosnia,
    Serbia, Algeria, Egypt, Tunisia, Romania and Hungary all now seem
    foreign to each other, even though once they sheltered under the same
    roof. If we look at them through the eyes of today, millions of Turks,
    Bosnians, Palestinians, Serbs, Arabs, Greeks, Hungarians, Romanians,
    Bulgarians, Armenians and Jews would have been trading in this region
    as an economic union, without any customs control.


    Had it not been for the mismanagement of imports and British tricks,
    the Ottoman Empire would have survived, and would have prevented
    the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the Balkan wars and the ongoing
    conflict in Iraq. Turkey is now surrounded by countries, which had
    lived in peace as part of the Ottoman Empire, but whose history since
    then has been unhappy and desperate. These countries once again are
    in dire need of a larger roof.

    Again through the eyes of today, it is certain that the Ottomans were
    more liberal than the EU on human rights. The EU has not attained
    Ottoman standards especially with regards to the freedom of thought
    and protection of the rights of subjects, to let them wear their own
    religious and traditional dresses and speak their own languages.

    Today's EU does not protect freedoms as the Ottomans did. The Ottomans
    were very successful in accommodating differences and providing
    freedoms, when compared to the EU, and always had a liberal attitude in
    protecting the identities of various nations and religions. The empire
    never embraced the imperialist ideal that the ruled must resemble
    their rulers, and refrained from imposing a lifestyle on them. The
    EU Turkey demands are more severe and its judgment more negative,
    showing that the EU is afraid of anything that does not resemble
    itself. On the other side, the Ottoman Empire's structure was one in
    which many different ethnic and religious groups were able to live
    together without any problems. My question is this: Which is more
    contemporary and democratic, the Ottoman Empire, which recognized the
    differences, allowed them live together and provided everyone freedom
    on religious and traditional issues without assimilation; or the West,
    that wants to assimilate everything and is afraid of differences?
    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X