A Decade After 9/11: Turkey Redefines Political Islam

A Decade After 9/11: Turkey Redefines Political Islam

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In 1995, the city of Gaziantep, on the southeastern edge of Turkey’s Anatolian plain, was under siege. Its crumbling medieval center was swamped with refugees from a civil war between insurgent Kurds and the Turkish Army that eventually left 40,000 dead and 3,000,000 people homeless. Along the borderlands with Syria and Iraq, smoke rose from rural Kurdish villages obliterated by F-15 strikes.

A New Look at Shariah Law
Frank Viviano

A central tenet of Islam is the conviction that the Koran, the Muslim book of revelation, is God’s final and direct word to humankind, as related to the Prophet Mohammed in 610 A.D. in what is now Saudi Arabia.

But the Koran is not the sole compendium of Islamic values. It is in an epochal project involving a second Islamic text, known as the “Hadith,” that Turkey’s bold reform movement may pave its most fruitful ground.

The Hadith is a digest of the conversations and deeds of Mohammed after the revelations of the Koran. It is the chief source of rules that inform Muslim life, including customs, social mores, dress codes and an estimated 90 percent of Shariah law.


For the past nine years, 80 eminent historians and theologians commissioned by Turkey’s Department of Religious Affairs have been working on a 21st-century revision of the Hadith. It is scheduled for publication by the end of 2011.


“We want to bring out the positive side of Islam — that promotes personal honor, human rights, justice, morality, women's rights, respect for the other,” Professor Mehmet Gormez, vice-president of religious affairs and senior Hadith lecturer at Ankara University, recently told The Times of London.


The revision would eliminate such medieval aphorisms as, "the best of women are those who are like sheep," and “Your prayer will be invalid if a donkey, black dog or a woman passes in front of you."


Instead, it will emphasize other passages, often of pointed significance to the contemporary scene. "Religion is very easy and whoever overburdens himself in his religion will not be able to continue in that way. So you should not be extremists,” Mohammed cautions his followers in a key Hadith.


"God does not judge you according to your bodies and appearances,” the Prophet says, in a conversation that seems aimed straight across the centuries at controversies over matters of dress and sexuality in Saudi Arabia, Iran and Afghanistan. “He looks into your hearts and observes your deeds."


Turkey’s religious authorities have also subsidized advanced theological training for 450 women, appointing them as senior imams (“vaizes”) empowered to explain the “original spirit of Islam” in rural communities.


“A revolution is taking place here,” according to Taha Akyol, a Turkish political commentator.


Nationwide, the economy was mired in triple-digit inflation and soaring joblessness, with a GDP of less than $116 billion, under $2,000 per person. Turkey in the 1990s epitomized a devastating crisis among Muslim-majority nations - a desperate spiral of poverty, violence and authoritarian rule.


Today, a decade after the September 11 terrorist attacks that turned much of the Islamic world into a chaotic battleground, Turkey has emerged as Islam’s most prominent icon of hope.


In 2011, it boasts the world’s 15th largest GDP, measuring $1.2 trillion - nearly $15,000 per person and rising by $125 billion annually. The Turkish economy now ranks ahead of such highly-developed nations as Australia and the Netherlands, and oil-giant Saudi Arabia. With a current growth rate of 11 percent, outstripping China’s and defying the effects of a global recession, it could surpass G-8 member Canada in the next few years.


More than 99 percent of Turkey’s 74 million citizens are Muslim.


Gaziantep, when I returned there on another assignment in 2010, had transformed itself into a city of manicured parks, architecturally stunning museums, carefully restored 10th century neighborhoods and 21st century shopping malls. High-rise residential suburbs had sprung from empty fields where army tanks were once marshaled. On a per capita basis, this city of 1.3 million is now the number one exporter and importer in the country.

The chief architect of Turkey’s miracle is the Justice and Development Party - popularly known by its Turkish initials, “AK” - an Islamic political group that took power in a landslide 2002 election.


Over the following decade, under Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the new government dramatically reformed the bureaucracy-ridden Turkish economy, setting off an unprecedented boom in business starts, jobs and exports. Ten years ago, notes Bloomberg analyst Ben Holland, Turkey struggled under a debt load that dwarfed Greece's on the eve of the global financial crisis in 2009. By 2010 Turkey's debt was down to 46 percent of GDP, compared with 143 percent percent for Greece.


Turkey in 2011 is the thriving proof that a Muslim majority, democracy and economic modernization are compatible - the new model that, in the eyes of many, political Islam has been waiting for.


The Old Model: Saudi Arabia


In 2003, thanks to the sponsorship of a Saudi official, I was able to participate in the haj, the pilgrimage to the Arabian Peninsula that is an obligation for Muslims but normally closed to others. Although I wasn’t permitted to enter Mecca, the epicenter of Islamic faith, I joined a vast throng silently marching to the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina, the site of Mohammed’s tomb and Islam’s second most important shrine.


During shared evening meals at another Medina mosque, I spoke with pilgrims from China, Algeria, Egypt, Nigeria, Malaysia, Indonesia and Uzbekistan - and also from France and Holland, home today to two of Western Europe’s largest Muslim communities.


The sense of peace and inner reflection, of profound tolerance and solidarity among far-flung people from every walk of life, was deeply moving. “This is what we see in our religion,” a young man from western China’s Yunnan Province said, “not suicide bombers or planes flying into sky-scrapers.”


Yet it was impossible to ignore the fact that Chinese and Uzbek women on the haj -- few of whom wear more than a light scarf in their own countries, and then only during prayers -- were obliged to cover themselves in the head-to-toe black abaya, required of all women by Saudi law, including millions of Christians, Hindus and Buddhists who work as domestics in the country.


None of those non-Muslims are allowed to honor their own religious beliefs while in Saudi Arabia, a country that bans the establishment of churches or temples.


It was also impossible to ignore the Mutaween, the 5,000-strong religious police force formally known as the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice. The Mutaween stalk supermarkets, shopping malls, schools and apartment complexes in search of any breach of Wahabbism, the sternly fundamentalist brand of Islam favored by the ruling Saud family.


They can arrest and jail a woman with a single strand of hair exposed, along with unmarried couples - Saudi or foreign - who socialize in public, residents who are discovered with a bottle of beer or a Bible in their apartment, or anyone who observes “infidel superstitions” such as sending St. Valentine’s Day cards.

Indescribably wealthy as the source of the planet’s largest oil reserves, and respected as the home and protector of Islam’s most important holy sites, Saudi Arabia wields weight far beyond its own size (population 28 million) in an international community of believers that numbers 1.6 billion. One result is that political Islam -- whether in the violent form practiced by Al Qaeda or the state theocracy of Iran - widely echoes the Saudi model of hectoring authoritarianism.


But in socio-economic terms, it is difficult to view Saudi Arabia as a functional model at all. Its resources are so vast and its distortions so extreme that virtually no country beyond the hyper-affluent oil states can really emulate it.


Saudi citizenship means free education, health care and housing - but often a life without gainful employment. According to the Saudi Labor Ministry, imported temporary workers account for a staggering 90 to 95 percent of private-sector jobs. It’s not much exaggeration to say that the only Saudis who actually work are those with the connections to acquire high administrative posts in the bureaucracy, or in enormous state enterprises tightly controlled by the Sauds and their retainers.


Ranks of young men on the streets of Riyadh, the capital, are visibly lost to boredom, in a land where movie theaters, clubs and mixed-gender socializing are illegal -- and much of modern culture is only virtual, observed on the Internet or via satellite television broadcasts from uninhibited Beirut and Cairo. Frustrated and without clear purpose, they recall the kind of young man that the teenaged Osama bin Laden is said to have been, or the 15 Saudis among the 19 hijackers on September 11, 2001.


The establishment of an elected parliament with formal powers has been under discussion in Riyadh for two generations, but remains a vague distant goal.


As for women - who have played frontline roles in the mass protests of Iran in 2009 and the Arab Spring of 2011 - they are forbidden by law to drive in Saudi Arabia, and may not even be passengers in a car unless accompanied by a male member of their family.


The contrast with Turkey could not be more striking.


Faith Without Repression


At the outset of the Erdogan era, many secular-minded Turks warned that the AK party would eventually transform their country into another Saudi Arabia. But 10 years later, Istanbul reminds no one of Riyadh or the Mutaween.


The city’s main commercial thoroughfare, Istiklal Avenue, is a two-mile-long corridor of seething artistic and intellectual ferment, its surrounding streets and squares ringed with avant-garde theaters and cinemas, restaurants and nightclubs, art galleries and bookshops. By 2010, when the European Union named Istanbul the “European Capital of Culture” - despite the fact that Turkey is not an EU member-state - the district’s attractions were drawing up to 3 million people per day.


The dynamic street life of Istanbul, as well as Gaziantep and smaller urban centers across the country, shatters the notion that a Muslim nation must be repressive and uncompromising.


On the foreign policy front, the AK government has come closer than any government in the nation’s history to ending the Turks’ historic enmities with their Armenian, Greek and Arab neighbors.


In southeastern Anatolia, the expression of Kurdish culture has been legalized for the first time since the fall of the Ottoman Empire, permitting school courses, radio and TV broadcasts and books in the Kurdish language. After the bloody carnage of the civil war, tensions remain, and separatists from the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) still launch periodic assaults that bring targeted police or army reprisals.


But in the sprawling new suburbs of cities like Diyarbakir, the Kurds’ de facto cultural capital, “most young people prefer to speak Turkish these days, because they regard it as the language of modern life and opportunity,” says a 35-year-old Kurdish woman who once led militant protests.


Last month, in a gesture that remains unthinkable almost anywhere else in the Muslim bloc, Prime Minister Erdogan announced that Ankara will return or offer compensation for churches, synagogues, schools, hospitals and cemeteries that were confiscated by the state over the past 75 years.


“Times that a citizen of ours would be oppressed due to religion, ethnic origin or different way of life are over,” he said, speaking before representatives of more than 150 Christian and Jewish organizations.


Step-by-careful-step, the Erdogan administration - which won every national election after 2002 by huge margins, most recently last June - has broken the long reign of the Turkish Army as behind-the-scenes political powerbroker, in a world where dictatorial regimes rule most Muslim-majority states.


In the name of democracy, rather than religion, the expression of selected Muslim customs has been legalized, notably the right of devout women to wear light headscarves in public institutions if they choose. But today few observers speak of a hidden plan to impose theocracy.


The number of women in Turkey’s parliament increased by more than 50 percent in the 2011 national elections, to 78 seats.


“Secularism, one of the main principles of our republic, is a precondition for social peace as much as it is a liberating model for different lifestyles," AK second-in-command Abdullah Gul insisted in his inauguration speech as president of Turkey in 2007.


Justice and Development, he says, is no different than the Christian Democratic parties that ruled Italy and Germany for most of the half century after World War Two. If religious values supply part of the AK identity, its outlook is resolutely centrist and modern.


Quietly, just months after September 11, it embarked on a controversial revision of the principal sources for Shariah law, the code that defines and regulates daily behavior for believers. The deliberate aim, say the project’s insiders, is to reconcile Islamic doctrine and Shariah law with the modern world. The final draft, due by the end of 2011, will be closely read by Muslims everywhere.


To the Wahabbist hardliners of Riyadh, the reforms proposed by Ankara look like heresy. But their fellow citizens overwhelmingly disagree. In 2002, according to a survey of Islamic world attitudes conducted annually by pollster James Zogby, a scant 20 percent of Saudis had a favorable view of Turkey. In 2011 the favorable rating reached 98 percent.


 

Comments

 

Anonymous

Posted Sep 3 2011


The author's over optimistic view of Turkey ignoring the continous oppression of minorities in Turkey.

Erdogan's goverment may be on paper tried to decieve the world that Turkey if giving the cultural right to Kurds ! but the reality show us the different face of the Ak policy.

The Turkish prisons are full of the kurdish actvisit and politicians who is only crime is to demand kurdish rights in Turkey which make a fifth of the Turkey population.

There are still cases in their facist courts demanding to jail kurdish actvists for more than 20 years just for being sympathetic to the freedom fighters.

Only last week the Turkish police killed a peaceful democratically elected councilor Yildirim Ayhan.

In the last months the Turkish army raged an illegal bombardment of North Iraq(Kurdistan region) and killed 7 civillians with hundreds of villagers leaving their villages.

The author is right in the success of the economic boom of Turkey under Erdogan but the human rights in Turkey is far from the rosey picture that the author failed to mention

Anonymous

Posted Sep 3 2011

You lie.

Anonymous

Posted Sep 4 2011

This article feels like a puff piece for AKP. As an American who has spent every summer in the Southeast since 2004, I can say that Kurdish culture is still highly restricted and it is a flat out lie to say that Kurdish is taught in school. Yes there is now a Kurdish course in Mardin, but a child is not allowed to study Kurdish until going through the entire Turkish educational system and only then in mostly private courses. There are over 2000 Kurdish politicians, NGO leaders, journalists, and activists in prison, accused of "terrorism", but mainly they are guilty of "thought crimes" or "making terrorist propaganda" for things they have said in public. The AKP is still trying to assimilate the few minorities left in Turkey. They are building mosques at a rapid pace, while schools remain overcrowded and underfunded. It is not legal to speak Kurdish in any government office, and a politician who uses a few words of Kurdish in parliament or during an election campaign can literally go to prison. There has been an increase in violence and a culture of lynching against Kurds and other minorities that is openly encouraged by Erdogan and his gang. It's a sad and alarming situation.

Anonymous

Posted Sep 4 2011

This article feels like a puff piece for AKP. As an American who has spent every summer in the Southeast since 2004, I can say that Kurdish culture is still highly restricted and it is a flat out lie to say that Kurdish is taught in school. Yes there is now a Kurdish course in Mardin, but a child is not allowed to study Kurdish until going through the entire Turkish educational system and only then in mostly private courses. There are over 2000 Kurdish politicians, NGO leaders, journalists, and activists in prison, accused of "terrorism", but mainly they are guilty of "thought crimes" or "making terrorist propaganda" for things they have said in public. The AKP is still trying to assimilate the few minorities left in Turkey. They are building mosques at a rapid pace, while schools remain overcrowded and underfunded. It is not legal to speak Kurdish in any government office, and a politician who uses a few words of Kurdish in parliament or during an election campaign can literally go to prison. There has been an increase in violence and a culture of lynching against Kurds and other minorities that is openly encouraged by Erdogan and his gang. It's a sad and alarming situation.

Anonymous

Posted Sep 5 2011

Well written article by a writer who is known to be very critical of Turkey in the past vis a vis the human rights and the minorities. Therefore, claims that he is painting an over blown, rosy picture now ring hollow. Good job Mr. Viviano!

Anonymous

Posted Sep 12 2011

The comments submitted in by Kurds or Kurdish sympathizers overstate the fact that Kurds are being oppressed. I agree that the Turkish state has neglected not only Kurds, but its very own citizens up until the AKP party take over back in the 2000. I agree, that there are unfortunately ongoing human/animal/environmental rights’ abuse in my country. I agree that Turkish democracy is far from being perfect, just like any democracy in the world. It is not very inferior to or superior to the kind of democracy in say, the United States or the U.K. The world has seen how America cut down on its citizens rights in the face of terrorism. We have just witnessed how Britain has responded to the looters in the aftermath of street demonstrations: they tracked them down one by one and put them in jail. In Germany, the police shot dead a Turkishman who threw Molotov cocktail at them. To say the least, every state in the world reacts violently to violence. You don’t throw roses at those who throw stones at you. Israel is supposedly a democracy. Look at the way they respond to street protestors. They drive tanks and bulldozers at them. Sad, but true.
That being said, let’s take a look at what the Kurdish “freedom fighters” in their words, and terrorists in mine do in my country: They are lazy. So the scavenge on the state assets by stealing electricity and water illegally into their homes. The state opens schools for them, they burn them down. The state sends teachers to educate them, they kill them. The state builds infrastructure for them, like roads, canals, dams, sewage systems, etc, etc, and they blow them up. The state sends them cash, they embezzle it instead of spending it for the good of the public. However, they enjoy every right granted to any Turkish citizen in the country: they can become lawyers, doctors, officers, businessman, and parliamentarians. (On a side note, the Kurdish parliamentarians elected by their voters have refused to take oath and join the parliament to this date.) What is it exactly that they want but can’t get? Can they become anything they want in Turkey? Yes. Can they move anywhere and live anywhere in Turkey? Yes. Can they express themselves in art, politics, and on any legitimate platform they want? Yes. Can they elect their own local and municipal governors and parliamentarians? Yes. Having had all these freedoms and rights, what in the name of civilization have they given Turkey in return? A huge NOTHING, but terror and destruction. Not to mention a very very bad impression of Turkey abroad as well. In Germany and England and Sweden, most Kurds are falsely known as Turks, and they are mostly on government welfare, being the scavengers they are. Consequently, the Germans and the British mistakenly think they are Turks.
When the state responds to them in kind, they cry foul. What should the Turkish government do when they set ablaze the schools and offices? Stand by and watch? What should the police do when they assault them with rocket launchers, grenades, and AK-47s? Turn around and run away? Give away part of Turkish land to them? They won’t see this happening ever in their wildest dreams. We may have lost 40,000 people to these bloodsuckers, but we will not give up even if it means giving up 40 million. Because we are on the right and just ground here. They are not the victims they claim to be. Has Britain yielded to the IRA? Has Spain given up part of its territory to the Basq? Has India given up to Tamils? Where in the world does any government bow down to terrorists?
In conclusion, I have an advice to our Kurdish fellows: Your bloody path will lead to nothing but misery for you. Instead, learn how live like civilized people in the world.

Anonymous

Posted Sep 12 2011

This is a most interesting and inspiring article. Among other things, it is a testament to the importance of democracy as a driving force for economic, cultural, scientific, and artistic creativity. Other Muslim countries, especially in the neighbouring Arab countries and Iran and Central Asia, should not only support the people of Turkey for adopting this enlightened approach to development, but also try to emulate the successful Turkish Model. In this respect, instead of trying to undermine this remarkable and admirable transformational experiment in Turkey, the Kurdish segments of Turkey's population, together with the Kurdish people of Iraq, should encourage this dynamic transformation that is taking place in Turkey. Tribalism, including narrow nationalism and sectarianism, proved to be a source of division, barbarity, and perpetual conflic in the Middle East. Hopefully, the success of Turkey will eventually lead to the establishment of a Middle Eastern Union, along the line of the European Union, which will bring peace, stability, and prosperity to the entire region. Like the people of Europe, the people of the Middle need to embark on a process of paradigm change - away from confrontation and conflict and towards more cooperation and integration. The people of Turkey should be given credit for initiating and strengthening this process which will eventually strengthen the forces of democracy and human rights in the region and weaken the forces of despotism and tribalism which have produced more foreign intervention, hatred, division, misery, and loss of human rights. It is about time that the people of the Middle East (who belong to the same cultural zone)begin to realize that their prosperity and wellbeing will be determined to a large extent by their ability to cooperate and integrate, rather than by using, or rather abusing, their resources and creative talents to perpetuate division and artificial boundaries. Turkey's success is vital for the success of the democratic and cooperative transformation of the entire Middle Eastern region and, with it, the entire world of Islam.

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