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ANKARA: The Islamization Of Turkey (Through Nudist Hotels, Gay Bars,

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  • ANKARA: The Islamization Of Turkey (Through Nudist Hotels, Gay Bars,

    THE ISLAMIZATION OF TURKEY (THROUGH NUDIST HOTELS, GAY BARS, ETC)

    Hurriyet
    May 4 2010
    Turkey

    One of the interesting stories I recently read in this paper was about
    Turkey's first "nudist hotel," opened in Marmaris, a beautiful town
    on the Aegean coast. Here was a place where "nudist tourists will be
    able to work on their full-body tan" on their "private naturist beach."

    This would be, the story added, "a small revolution in Turkey's
    conservative society."

    If you look for such "small revolutions" in this conservative country,
    you can find other ones. Gay bars and lesbian clubs, for example,
    have boomed in big cities in recent years. A new and fancy one was
    launched in Istanbul just a few weeks ago.

    My secular liberal friend Orhan Kemal Cengiz, who pointed out to
    these things to me over lunch a few days ago, also said that he,
    as a fine diner, has a better time on the Ankara-Istanbul trains
    now. "They started to serve alcohol on the fast train," he said,
    quite approvingly. "I am thankful to the 'Islamist' AK Party for that."

    Openness and diversity

    Another small revolution, or perhaps a mid-size one, was the May Day
    demonstrations that freely took place in Istanbul's Taksim Square on
    Saturday. After being banned from Taksim for more than 30 years, not
    just labor unions but Marxists of all types opened their red flags
    and sang their marches in the county's most popular spot. "Godless
    communists," in other words, had their biggest show in decades.

    Now, if I wanted to argue that Turkey is rapidly becoming a more
    "corrupt" and "godless" society, I could cherry-pick all such examples
    and draw a convincing picture. (And you could be alarmed or thrilled,
    depending on your worldview.) But this would be a misleading picture,
    for I would be consciously choosing the facts that fit into my agenda,
    and overlooking the ones that don't.

    Unfortunately, that is precisely what some of my hyper-secularist
    colleagues have been doing for quite a while. Their endless rantings
    about the "Islamization" of Turkey under the Justice and Development
    Party, or AKP, government is based on a compiling of carefully selected
    facts: We have more veiled women on our streets. Getting a license
    to sell alcohol is harder in some AKP-run municipalities. Or Islamic
    communities are more active in public life than ever. Hence, the
    reasoning goes, we are being Islamized. (And, perhaps, we need a little
    hand from our enthusiastic generals to "save our secular republic.")

    What I think instead is that all these seemingly contradictory things -
    more veils and more gay bars - are happening at the same time and
    for the very same reason: Thanks to capitalism, urbanization and
    globalization, Turkey is becoming a more open and diverse society. Or,
    perhaps, the diversity it always had is getting more visible. The
    reason why we have more veiled women on the streets is that the
    religious conservatives have become more urban, self-confident and
    active. (In the past, such women mostly lived in rural areas and often
    sat at home, and my hyper-secularist colleagues did not notice that
    they exist.)

    Openness and diversity are visible on many other fronts. Kurds, who
    are not "mountain Turks" anymore, are demanding (and at least partly
    achieving) civil liberties that they could not have imagined in the
    '80s. Turkish Armenians, members of a community that has kept its
    head down since the beginning of the Turkish Republic (for reasons
    you can imagine), now have public intellectuals who influence our
    national discussions. What exactly happened to their forefathers in
    1915 is being discussed freely on television for the first time.

    All this change not just empowers previously suppressed groups, but
    also transforms them. The case of the Islamic conservatives is the most
    interesting one. If you read only the secularist Turkish press, you
    will only get complaints about their ascendance. But if you also read
    the Islamist press, as I do, you will also see complaints about their
    modernization. The more old-fashioned voices in that camp routinely
    criticize the "Westoxification" that young Muslims are going through,
    and the "consumerism" that AKP policies have dragged them into.

    What modernization does

    What is simply happening is that Turkey is becoming truly modernized.

    And if you ask what this means, I would agree with social scientist
    Peter Berger: "Modernization does not secularize," as the secularists
    hope and the Islamists fear. "It rather pluralizes."

    So, here is my bet for Turkey in 10 years' time: It will be an even
    more diverse country, a bit like America. Like the latter's Bible
    Belt, it probably will have some conservative inland regions with
    dry zones, but also ultra-liberal coasts with even more nightclubs,
    nudist beaches and God knows what else. In the Southeast, Kurdish
    culture and language will be more visible, perhaps giving the sense
    of an unofficial "Kurdistan region." The Islamic conservative camp
    will be more multicolored in itself, while the godless communists,
    who might perhaps go a little more "green" than just "red," will
    continue to prove their resilience.

    It will be, in other words, an even more interesting country. Just
    wait and see.
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