This is in response to H.D.S. Greenway 's article of Boston Globe
"Secularism, democracy, and Turkey's crumbling
dream"
Hellenic
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June 23, 2008
In his June 17 op-ed "Secularism,
democracy, and Turkey's crumbling dream" H.D.S Greenway refers to Mustafa Kemal and the
"invading Greeks". This is
pure Turkish propaganda, the Greeks invaded nothing. The Greeks liberated parts
of Asia Minor
which were still being inhabited by
Greeks after 3,000 years. During the final years of the Ottoman Empire, Turkish rulers ordered the mass killings and deportations of the
Greeks, Armenians, and Assyrians of Asia Minor. This is attested to by
documents and eyewitness accounts emanating from American diplomats,
missionaries, and others. Mustafa Kemal was himself a notorious racist and
murderer whose armies presided over the mass slaughter of Greek Orthodox and
Armenian Christians in the City of Smyrna in September 1922.
Among the victims of Mustafa Kemal, was
Greek Orthodox Archbishop Chrysostom of Smyrna who remains unknown in the West but is beloved by
Greek Orthodox Christians for his superhuman efforts to protect his flock from
the armies of Mustafa Kemal. The example of Chrysostom, in contrast to Kemal,
is an example of love. The Archbishop in emulation of the example of Christ
offered himself as a sacrifice on behalf of his flock. American Consul General
to Smyrna George Horton and others urged the Archbishop to save himelf but he
insisted on sharing the fate that would befall his flock, and was subsequently
hacked to death by Islamic fanatics who made up the ranks of Mustafa Kemal's
supporters. The fact that Western journalists offer praise for Kemal rather
than the Archbishop and his flock who were his victims is an obscenity kept
alive by the power of the Turkish lobby which is working on behalf of Turkey, a brutal military dictatorship. In our own day, his
holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, has been the victim of five
terrorist attacks in Constantinople.
Turkish extremists, fully encouraged by
the rhethoric emanating from the Turkish government and military against the
Ecumenical Patriarchate have found the atmosphere in Turkey conducive for their attacks against Christians.
Nearly one year ago, retired military
officers emanating from the institution more loyal to Mustafa Kemal than any
other attempted to assasinate his holiness Bartholomew I and the Patriarch of
the Armenian Apostolic Church. The attempted killings of these two prelates
symbolizes the Genocide of these communities earlier in the century by Mustafa
Kemal and his forerunners in the Young Turk government.
Theodore G. Karakostas TKarakosta@aol.com
Member of HEC Executive Committee
www.greece.org
www.greece.org/genocide
Secularism,
democracy, and Turkey's crumbling dream
By H.D.S. Greenway
June 17, 2008
HE WAS born just before the last great
crumbling of the Ottoman Empire in an Ottoman province that is now Greece. He came to fame as an inspired military leader who
out-maneuvered and out-fought the French, the British, and their dominion
armies from Australia and New Zealand, who were clinging to the beaches of the Dardanelles in their ill-fated attempt to knock Turkey out of the first World War.
more stories like thisAnd when the
empire was gone, and the allies tried to carve up Turkey itself with the 1920
treaty of Sevres, Mustafa Kemal rallied his demoralized countrymen, pushed out
the invading Greeks, and faced down the British and French to secure the
boundaries of Turkey as they stand today.
Having prevailed over the West, Kemal
then set about on one of the most absolute social transformations of a country
in history in order to be like the West. The ancient, flowing script was
abandoned in favor of a Latinized alphabet - cutting Turks off from centuries
of eastern literature. He lifted what he considered the dead hand of Islam from
the body politic. Turkey would become a European-style, secular state with laws and regulations
drawn from various European legal systems and constitutions. He would
henceforth be known as Atatürk, the father of all Turks.
This was not done by referendum.
Traditionalists resisted. But it was done almost overnight, leap-frogging the centuries
that Europe had spent settling the balance between what was to be
relegated to Caesar and what was God's.
Kemalism, as it came to be known, became
the official doctrine, and over the years if anyone tried to stray, the army
was there to protect Atatürk's ideals. Religion was to be allowed, but it was
to be personal, as in Europe, and not interfere with the state.
Over the years, Atatürk's heirs have
become rigid and unwilling to compromise. Even though Turkey has a working
democracy, the Kamalist establishment has not entirely trusted democracy, and
the army always stood ready as the guardian of the state to turf out any
government it feels is straying too far from the path that Atatürk blazed.
Stephen Kinzer, in his book
"Crescent and Star, Turkey Between Two Worlds," wrote that if
"isiklal" (freedom) was his favorite Turkish word, "devlet"
was his least favorite. Devlet means state in the dictionary, but it goes far
beyond that. It is an "omnipotent entity that stands above every citizen
and every institution," Kinzer wrote.
"It is a self-perpetuating elite -
the generals, police chiefs, prosecutors, judges, political bosses, and press
barons who decide what devlet demands. . . . This elite has written many laws
to help it do what it perceives as its duty, and when necessary it acts outside
the law."
Today, democracy in Turkey is imperiled by devlet. Recently, the constitutional
court struck down the Turkish Parliament's decision to allow girls to wear
headscarves in state universities. Parliament is controlled by an
Islamic-leaning government, under Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is committed to
maintaining a secular state. Ironically, his government is more democratic than
the devlet will allow. Partly because of headscarves, there is another case
before the courts that would shut down his political party, and ban its leaders
from politics for endangering Kemalist principles.
No issue alarms the traditionalist
Kemalists as does the headscarf. As in France, it seems to hit at the very heart of what the secular
state is all about. If devlet decides it cannot bear headscarves, so be it. The
US Supreme Court is not adverse to overturning the will of Congress when it
deems necessary.
But that being said, if a moderate
religious party that has been democratically elected is forcibly disbanded, if
there is no recourse to the ballot box, then what hope is there for moderate
Islam? To ban Erdogan and his party would be to force dissent away from
political discourse and into the mosque, as is the case in less democratic
Muslim countries.
Erdogan has presided over a reformist
government bent on joining the European Union, which would have been Atatürk's
desire. If Erdogan and his party are banned it would be devlet at its very
worst, and, ironically, the end of Atatürk's European dream.
H.D.S. Greenway's column appears regularly in the Globe.
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