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New Book About Kemalism, Today's Turkey And Minorities

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  • New Book About Kemalism, Today's Turkey And Minorities

    NEW BOOK ABOUT KEMALISM, TODAY'S TURKEY AND MINORITIES

    Azg Daily
    April 22 2010
    Armenia

    R. Galustanian from Berlin presents an extract from Perry Anderson's
    (Professor of History and Sociology at UCLA) "After Ataturk. Turqs,
    their State and Europe" book, where, according to Galustanian, the
    British Marxist reveals the mystery of Turkish super -chauvinism.

    What is Kemalism for Anderson? A cultural revolution without a social,
    therefore a vertical (Monohierarcic) matter. But above all, profoundly
    dishonest structure: The Turkish secularism was true even in the
    moments of feverish heat never secular. The state-controlled schools
    and mosques. Religion became a state matter, and remained in spite
    of suppression of constitutive part of the nation. The AKP is thus
    an heir of Kemalism, and not their adversary. It is postkemalistic
    not antikemalistic. The Turkish secularism was not really secular,
    and - one might add - the Turkish Islamism is not really Islamic, at
    least not like the arabic. Nationalist as far as it will go, however,
    are both Kemalists and Islamists.

    Non-Muslim minorities have in the history over and over again
    experienced the Islamic Turkish super-nationalism. Not only the
    Armenians during the First World War, but also in 1955 the Greek
    inhabitants of Istanbul. The genocide issue is especially important
    for Anderson in his settlement with the Kemalist ideology. For him
    there is no doubt that these were in the mass killing of Armenians an
    extermination, to the systematic, state-organized murder of a people.

    He even sees many similarities with the Holocaust and is upset about
    the fact that so many hold to the uniqueness of the Jewish genocide.

    The good reason for his anger is that the latter is subject of a
    monumental, reverent, quasi-religious culture of memory and the former
    is only "a whisper in the corner, which brooks no diplomat of the EU".

    The bad reasons for this imbalance is that the Western allies Israel
    and Turkey demanded such an interpretation of history.
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