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ROME: The Past Is Distancing Ankara From Europe

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  • ROME: The Past Is Distancing Ankara From Europe

    THE PAST IS DISTANCING ANKARA FROM EUROPE
    by Vittorio Emanuele Parsi

    La Stampa
    March 6 2010
    Italia

    It was easy to predict that the Turkish Government would come up with
    an extremely tough response to a vote taken by the US Congress' Foreign
    Affairs Committee urging Turkey to acknowledge that the slaughter of
    hundreds of thousands of Armenians in the course of World War I was
    full fledged genocide, similar in every way to the Sho'ah that the
    Nazi regime was to perpetrate a few decades later. But how come the
    authorities in Ankara still adopt such an inflexible stance almost 100
    years after those tragic events which, what is more, were perpetrated
    by an institutional player (the Ottoman Empire) that is not the same
    as today's Turkish Republic? The answer is that the Armenian people's
    genocide is the most embarrassing thread linking the collapse of the
    Ottoman Empire with the birth of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk's Republic.

    The genocide reflected a plan to "Turanize" ("Turkify" - La Stampa
    editor's note) the empire, replacing people's previous and now obsolete
    loyalty to the sultan with a new and vigorous loyalty to a national
    Turkish homeland which had yet to be built, to be "invented," as was
    the case with other countries that took shape in the course of the
    century. The plan intersected and partly rerouted the last desperate
    attempt to reform the empire made by young Turks from the mid-19th
    century on.

    The reforming movement's nationalistic slide finally prevailed after
    the Balkan wars of 1912 and 1913, and it was fuelled by the massacres
    and enforced expulsions of the Muslim populace in the European
    provinces that the empire had owned until that moment - massacres
    perpetrated by Greeks, Serbs, and Bulgarians. The Turks responded
    to those atrocities, which had not spared the Jews in Thessaloniki
    either, with the first expulsions and massacres of Armenians and
    Greeks in Anatolia.

    Ethnic cleansing rose to new heights in World War I, reaching a peak
    with the events of 1915. This cleansing operation was as ethnic and
    it was religious, and it was explicitly and lucidly pursued by the
    empire's new leadership class, a large part of which was to then
    transfer to the new Republic established by Mustafa Kemal after the
    victorious war against Greece and against the other occupying powers.

    Even Kemal Ataturk himself, a renowned "nonconfessional," actually felt
    that equating the concept of "a real Turk" with "a Sunnite Muslim"
    served his cause perfectly. In fact, it is no mere coincidence that
    he was hostile to all other religious faiths (including other branches
    of Islam), or that he accorded Sunni Islam special treatment with the
    Ministry of Religion, in accordance with a vision of the relationship
    between "church and state" that bore a far greater resemblance to
    King Henry VIII's English model than it did to the French republican
    model with which it is often mistakenly compared.

    In defending the Republic's origins from an embarrassing original sin,
    Ankara's new overlords have shown that, albeit from a far more "pious"
    standpoint, they continue to feel that Turkey's national identity is de
    facto inseparable from its Islamic and Sunnite identity. In so doing,
    they are taking another step that distances Turkey from the European
    haven which they still formally claim to want to reach.
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