Turning
Ataturk’s Turkey Upside Down, Powerful Erdogan Arrives In Delhi
Saeed Naqvi
When Turkish strongman Recep Tayyip Erdogan arrives in New Delhi on April 30, he will find in his host, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, something of a kindred spirit. Both aspire for absolute power.
The April 16 referendum has removed
constraints Erdogan was uncomfortable with. He will now be an executive
President, a position from where he can manipulate whatever checks and balances
may still be theoretically in place.
What Erdogan has achieved is
unparalleled in Turkish history. He is well on the way to completely
overhauling what the founder of the Republic, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk had
diligently put together.
When Mahatma Gandhi held Maulana
Mohammad Ali’s hand in support of the Caliphate (Khilafat Movement) in
Istanbul, the founder of modern Turkey was embarked on exactly the opposite: he
was abolishing the Caliphate. It was an anachronism.
St. Sophia, the great Byzantine Church,
in Constantinople (modern Istanbul) had been transformed into a mosque by the
Ottoman Sultan. Ataturk reversed the decision. Christendom’s most magnificent
Church would, were it to be retained as a Mosque, hurt Europe in perpetuity. It
is today a great Byzantine museum.
Ataturk saw modern Turkey’s future in
Europe. The Fez cap was banned. Turki script gave way to Roman letters. No head
scarf for women except as a statement of fashion. Raki, distilled from aniseed
(same as Ouzo in Greece, Pastisse in France and Arrack in Lebanon) became the
unofficial national drink. It was Ataturk’s favourite.
Ataturk’s inspirational steps towards
Europeanism notwithstanding, Ottoman Turkey’s civic and social backwardness
remained an obstacle in the way of its union with Europe. Diligently the nation
set about improving its infrastructure, environment, laws to make it clubbable
with Europe.
What Turkish leaders had not taken into
account was European prejudice about the “Turk” from medieval times. Its desire
to join the European Union was dodged and spurned. President Valery Giscard
d’Estaing of France was the most blunt: “European civilization is Christian
civilization.” This became something of a muted European chorus.
On the Aegean Sea or Cyprus, Europe
would singly or unitedly thwart any movement in Ankara’s preferred direction.
Even the most Kemalist of all Prime Ministers, Bulent Ecevit, was exasperated.
Ecevit, Modi may like to know, was almost a self taught Indologist. His
translation of Tagore’s Geetanjali is something of a Turkish masterpiece.
The modernism that Ataturk imposed on
Turkey was not as shallow as the one in North Tehran under the Shah and Kabul
during King Amanullah. But it had not radiated out of Istanbul and Ankara. Had
Europe been sensitive enough, the modernism from the top would have taken root
across all of Anatolia – such was the momentum Ataturk had imparted to the
“Turkey-in-Europe” project.
It was western insensitivity to Muslim
societies in general, the rampaging Islamophobia, which began to shake
the secular citadels even in Muslim societies. Turkey under leaders like
Ecevit, Suleyman Demirel, Turgut Ozal, and most certainly Army Generals like
Kenen Everen jealously guarded its secular constitution despite being a Muslim
country, indeed, a deeply Muslim country until the West crossed some Red lines.
The televised occupation of Iraq, the
two Intefadas, the manner in which post 9/11 anti terror wars were fought from
Afghanistan to each and every Muslim country began to affect public opinion
even in a country which retained warm relations with Israel.
An anti western groundswell became
unstoppable in Turkey when brutalities against Muslims in the Bosnian war, the
four year long siege of Sarajevo were brought into every Turkish home live,
mornings and evenings. The West forgot that Bosnia was once an Ottoman
province. Sarajevo came from the word “Sarai”, a resting place.
Little wonder the Refah Party under
Necmettin Erbakan came to power. Erbakan was a diehard though closet Muslim
Brotherhood member. The army dismissed the government – Turkey’s constitution
would not tolerate even a trace of religiosity in public life.
Erbakan’s principal disciples, Tayyip
Erdogan and Abdullah Gul, reinvented the Refah as the Justice and Development
(AK) party, taking great care to abide by the constitution.
Anti westernism was cleverly promoted
without invoking Islam. For instance when Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
sought permission to ferry US troops to Iraq through Turkish territory, Prime
Minister Erdogan tossed the issue to the Parliament which blocked permission.
Israeli high handedness against a Turkish humanitarian ship carrying succor for
Palestinians led to a rupture with Tel Aviv – an outcome hugely popular with
the electorate.
When Greece, the mother of western
civilization, was on its knees, in every sense of the term, every Turkish
indicator placed the country favourably with every member of the European
Union.
By the time of his third election
victory Erdogan had performed the impossible: his popularity exceeded even
Ataturk’s at his height.
The Arab Spring provided the West with a
carrot to dangle before him: he could become the democratic model for the Arab
world. Some Turks began to nurse fanciful dreams. If there could be a
commonwealth group of nations freed from Britain, why can’t there be an Ottoman
grouping? This raised Arab hackles.
During a meal at one of the world’s
fanciest restaurants on the Bosporus, the late Mehmet Birand, one of Turkey’s
most distinguished journalists summed up the situation succinctly:
“We were a docile ally of the West,
swallowing our Turkish pride.” But under Erdogan, “we are a proud dissident
nation in the western alliance.”
The war in Syria brought out into the
open the closet Muslim Brotherhood in Erdogan. He pleaded with Bashar al Assad
to accommodate the Syrian Brothers into the Baath dominated power structure.
Assad’s difficulties whetted appetites in Riyadh, Doha, Jerusalem, Ankara,
Washington, Paris and London. This is the bubbling, overflowing cauldron – the
Syrian Civil war.
The attempted coup last summer by a
section of the army and allegedly backed by the hugely influential, US based
cleric, Fethullah Gulen, brought out the fighter in Erdogan. He was going to
obviate all threats to his rule by ensuring an all powerful Presidential system
for himself. There is symbolism in the fact that this most powerful of leaders,
not concealing his Brotherhood affiliations, has chosen Modi as an early
interlocutor.
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