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ANKARA: What Is Turkey's Importance All About?

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  • ANKARA: What Is Turkey's Importance All About?

    WHAT IS TURKEY'S IMPORTANCE ALL ABOUT?
    Barin Kayaoglu

    Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
    Nov 27 2006

    News agencies recently reported that former German Chancellor Helmut
    Schmidt delivered a lecture at Florence last week, arguing that in
    contrast to popular thinking, Turkey was not a bridge between Europe
    and the Muslim world and that it was in fact disliked in the Arab
    world. The heyday of the address allegedly came when Schmidt said
    that "it is suffice to remember how Arabs suffered under Ottoman
    rule." Because of the Ottoman past, incorporating Turkey would be
    counter-productive to the European Union, Moreover, he continued,
    Turkey's EU membership was not in European interests and was indeed
    pushed by the United States. [1]

    It is important to attend to such questions, especially when they
    come from senior statesmen. Let us embark on a mind-quest to figure
    out just exactly what Turkey's "importance" is all about. What do we
    really mean by Turkey being a "bridge" or a "model country" to the
    Muslim world? Is Turkey really a viable answer to the problems of
    the world today? If so, what are those lessons?

    Modernizing the state and the socio-economy of the land was one of
    the greatest hardships that challenged the Ottoman Empire. Renowned
    historian İlber Ortayli calls the 19th century the "Empire's
    Longest Century." Ottoman reforms, even though always intended to
    modernize the armed forces first, extended to other aspects of the
    Empire's life: a secular legal system, a new education system, female
    emancipation, the advent of a lively press and intelligentsia all came
    about during the 19th century. It was during the 19th century that the
    power of the sultan was legally curbed through a constitution. This
    was extremely significant, one should bear in mind, because the
    Ottoman sultan held the title of caliph, the nominal successor of
    the Prophet Mohammed. What really happened with the Ottoman example
    was the limitations imposed to the authority of an Islamic absolute
    monarch who was believed to hold divine right.

    For those who study political science or European history, there is
    nothing new here. But it was a historic precedent for a Muslim empire
    to witness the rise of a parliamentary and constitutional system.

    Ottoman constitutionalism, for sure, was not trouble-free. Sultan
    Abdulhamid II suspended the constitution and kept the parliament shut
    for over thirty years from 1877 until 1908.

    Another very important element of the Ottoman experience was what
    has been dubbed Pax Ottomana (Ottoman peace). As can be inferred
    from the name, this system involved the peaceful co-existence of
    different nations under Ottoman imperial rule. The central government
    did not interfere with the intra-ethnic workings of its constituent
    communities and sustained a multi-cultural social order until the
    very end. Pax Ottomana ultimately collapsed, with tragic consequences:
    present-day Middle East and Balkans, as well as the mutual headaches
    between Turks and Armenians are but a few of these.

    The peace and tranquility that the Ottomans delivered to the Balkans
    and the Middle East remain to be resuscitated.

    The Ottomans had the greatest misfortune of being on the losing side
    at the end of World War I. Faced with an ominous partition, Turkey
    managed to negotiate a more fair peace treaty with the Allies thanks
    to its successful conclusion of its War of Independence in 1922 under
    the leadership of its founding father, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

    Volumes have been written on Ataturk's legacy. There are but two very
    important points to bear in mind about that legacy: democracy and
    secularism. One of the virtues of Ataturk - and there were many of
    them - was that he was a great visionary. He restructured the Turkish
    political system in such a way that despite all of the challenges,
    it has been able to remain both democratic and secular and adapt
    to changing global dynamics. Secularism, the separation of church -
    well, in Turkey's case mosque - and state, has been the core element
    through which Turkish society has been able to safely practice its
    myriad religious aspirations. For their part, Turkish statesmen have
    had an easier time in running the state as secularism freed their
    hands from addressing religious concerns and allowed them to operate
    pragmatically in the realm of politics. In other words, secularism
    has empowered Turkey.

    Democracy has also been a blessing for Turkey. Since the establishment
    of the Republic in 1923, Turkey has always claimed to be a democracy
    of some sort. This claim was realized in the late 1940s with the
    advent of multi-party politics and an extension of the boundaries of
    freedom of expression. Those years were marked by incessant political
    turmoil and economic instability but today Turkish people elect
    their representatives and despite all the problems that trouble the
    country, such as poverty and the inadequacy of public services, they
    remain hopeful. In spite all of its deficiencies, Turkey sustains
    a vibrant civil society and press which exert a remarkable degree
    of influence over the state. Democracy, just like secularism, has
    empowered Turkish people.

    One should aviod the trapdoor of self-righteousness, however. The setup
    of the Directorate of Religious Affairs (Diyanet İşleri
    Başkanligi - which does not sponsor non-Sunni Muslim places
    of worship) and the remaining obstacles to free speech (such as the
    hideous article 301 of the penal code) are still formidable setbacks
    for Turkey. The solution to these problems are not intractable,
    nevertheless. The inclusion of other major religious parties in
    the country -the leaders of Alawite foundations, Greek and Armenian
    Orthodox patriarchs, and the Chief Rabbi - would not only enrich the
    intellectual aura of divinity schools and the Directorate itself,
    but also grant tremendous legitimacy to the state's supervisory role
    over religion. As for freedom of expression, it has been stated time
    and again in this column to view free speech not as a danger, but as
    one of Turkey's most important allies. Anybody who wishes to disagree
    with anything - with the caveat that they do not espouse violence -
    should have their say. That is the best and luckily the only option
    before Turkey.[2]

    Notwithstanding these nuisances, any objective commentator must
    appreciate the democratic and secular character of Turkey. Turkey
    is the only country that combines the elements of being Muslim,
    democratic, and secular. This is a unique thing in the world today.

    No other Muslim country has managed to combine these three
    characteristics yet.

    The question is, then, as to what can be done in a turbulent world.

    Many people would agree that there is a significant democratic
    deficit in Muslim countries today. We cannot afford to ignore this
    problem that has global ramifications. Lack of proper governance in
    distant parts of the world affects each and every member of the global
    community. The answer to that problem is to empower Muslims around the
    world. The only way to do that is to follow Turkey's example. Islam is
    not inherently in conflict with modernization. The problem is not with
    Islam but with how Muslims interpret it. We ought to realize that not
    only are secularism and democracy not in contradiction with Islam,
    but they in fact augment it. Turkey is the case in point. For the
    past 80 years, and even before that, religious tension has not been
    a major issue in Turkey. Turkish people enjoy both the pleasantries
    of mundane life while practicing their religions freely.

    Perhaps the statement by Prime Minister Mr. Tayyip Erdogan's former
    senior advisor sums all of what has been said so far. About a year
    ago, Mr. Omer Celik stated that secularism was the greatest power
    ("nuclear" power, as he put it) which Turkey had in comparison with the
    Middle East. The Republic's secular and democratic characteristics,
    according to Celik, were proof that Turkey's political ideals were
    compatible with those of Europe.[3]

    Turkey is at a critical juncture in its accession negotiations
    with the EU. Those who follow this column already know that I have
    lost my enthusiasm for Turkey's EU membership. But it would be too
    foolish to deny the fact that there is still a historic opportunity
    before the EU and the West. By faithfully negotiating with a Muslim
    country that has been a part of Europe for centuries (bear in mind
    that the Ottoman Empire was a European power even more than a Middle
    Eastern one), the EU and the West have it within their grasp to turn
    to other Muslim countries around the world and convincingly make the
    case that there are genuine benefits by joining the global community
    through democratization and secularization. This appeal will not be
    easy and that Turkey will probably not join the EU. Nevertheless,
    by accepting Turkey as a legitimate partner, European countries can
    counter most of the criticisms that they are Islamophobic. Following
    Turkey's example, Muslim countries will finally ease their suspicions
    in their dealings with the West.

    Turkey is the best asset that Europe can hope to incorporate in
    the brave new millenium. The European Union with Turkey would serve
    European interests more than Turkish interests in the long run. The
    decision to walk that bridge is for Europeans like Helmut Schmidt
    to decide.

    +++

    24 November 2006

    Barin Kayaoglu is a Ph.D. student in history at the University of
    Virginia in Charlottesville, Virginia and a regular contributor to
    the Journal of Turkish Weekly.

    E-mail: [email protected]

    [1] "Schmidt: Turkiye Kopru degil" (Schmidt: Turkey is not
    a bridge), ntvmsnbc.com, November 18, 2006; available from
    http://www.ntvmsnbc.com/news/391283.asp.

    [2] Barin Kayaoglu, "Turkey's Allies are Common Sense and Freedom of
    Expression," Journal of Turkish Weekly, October 25, 2006; available
    from http://www.turkishweekly.net/comments.php?id=2339.

    [3] "Laiklik Turkiye'nin elinde nukleer guc gibi" (Secularism is
    like nuclear power for Turkey), Sabah, October 13, 2005; available
    from http://www.sabah.com.tr/2005/10/13/siy102.html.
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