Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Turks and Americans: America-phobia on the Rise in Turkish

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

  • ANKARA: Turks and Americans: America-phobia on the Rise in Turkish

    Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
    Dec 10 2004

    Turks and Americans: America-phobia on the Rise in Turkish Capital

    As the freezing winter days arrive, here in the capital Ankara,
    relations are getting even colder. After `the Fellujah disaster',
    things will not be the same again, at least for some Turks.

    For years America was the friendly face of `the Anglo-Saxon
    Imperialism' compared to Britain. Most of the Turkish people stick to
    their primary education history books which tell stories about the
    Atatürk fighting against the British in Gallipoli, Greeks in Izmir
    and French in the South. Oh, of course don't forget the Russians in
    the East. After all this `historic brain washing', most of the
    Turkish people seem reluctant to use praising words for the British,
    Greeks and French. But Americans were different.

    When Ocalan, leader of the PKK, was backed by Italy, the streets of
    Istanbul soared with protests against Italy. In the case of French,
    it was boycotting the French products when the French Parliement
    accepted a bill based on Armenian allegations. But Americans never
    had a taste of this crowded protest.

    Nowadays, there is an ongoing and silent protest against `American'
    brand.

    Anything American?

    No thanks, remember Fellujah!!!.

    This time it is different, silent, growing.

    In Ankara there are two kind of people, one in Ulus (the old city)
    and the second group of people in Kizilay (modern face of Turkey).
    Ulus is a historic place with a citadel that can be seen from
    everywhere and lots of religious monuments. Not only Muslims but also
    Romans chooses the old city for building religious temples. There are
    remains of ancient Roman Temple just meters away from Haji Bektash
    Veliy Mosque. All this sums up to the lifestyle of the people of
    Ulus, they are more conservative, more religious in some sense more
    articulate.
    Contrast to this, Kizilay hosts more secular, modern and `stateside'
    people. For `Kizilarians' this entire Fellujah thing is a `some kind'
    of war in `somewhere far away'. Maybe this is the result of the media
    filtering of some events, maybe Iraq is really somewhere far away.
    But in Ulus things are a bit different, with a taste for protest.

    When it comes to protesting, world has seen Americans protesting
    French Buggets, Arabs burning Turkish biscuits and Chinese hackers
    attacking American sites. Don't end the list there, because there is
    a recent protest from Turkish Barbers. In Ulus some barbers are
    refusing to cut one of the popular hair cut styles in Turkey:
    `American style'! American style is mostly popular among young
    people. The recipe is quite simple `Sides short, top medium and back
    curved' or something like that. The name American is claimed to be
    used after Turkish soldiers learned this hair cut style from their
    American colleagues in Korea during the Korean War. As a result, this
    hair style marks the years of the Korean War where Turks and
    Americans fight together against `Evil'. The protest seems to tell
    something more than a bunch of hair.

    The barbers said the events in Fellujah and attack to the Muslim holy
    sites made them feel impossible to ignore the events. One of the
    barbers claim: `What you expect us to do? This is our way of earning
    money and this is our way of protesting'. Whether or not this protest
    will result with anything, they just want to protest. Even some of
    them has posters attached to their front doors: `American style will
    not be cut in this shop'. So you can not just enter one of those
    shops and tell them to cut your hair `American style'. Although their
    protest is quite peaceful, their aim may damage Turkish - American
    relations `streetwise'. This peaceful protest started to dominate the
    Ulus and areas nearby. The old city bazaar in the Ankara Citadel is
    also peacefully rejecting American customers. Americans were so used
    to this bazaar, even Ambassador of America Mr. Edelman's relatives
    claimed to do their shopping in this bazaar. Last week there were
    rumors about Mr. Edelman's discomfort about this event, he asked
    Abdullah Gul (Turkish Foreign Minister) to help. The shop-keepers in
    the bazaar says `We don't want their dirty money. It smells blood'.

    These are hard words to swallow for Americans. But maybe there are
    people out there to understand these protests.

    Americans just seem like `eyes wide shut' and ears filled with
    plaster. Even their long time Muslim friends can't stand this. The
    silent protests are just growing in the suburbs, may be Kizilay
    doesn't give a damn about it. But the people in Ulus, fought with
    Americans against Korean, not the people of Kizilay. And the historic
    roots of friendship and cooperation seem to shatter down from the
    streets. This may lead to an unhappy relationship between Americans
    and Turks that could harm both parties.

    All this Fellujah and Iraq event reminds us a wise word: `Friend
    shall speak truth even if it can bitter you'. The man on the street
    is starting to speak bitter, but the other guy just dismisses.

    Until when?

    Baris SANLI, Anlyst at USAK/ISRO
Working...
X