A Faltering Erdogan Falls Back On Islamism For
Brownie Points
Saeed Naqvi
Saint Sophia
museum in Istanbul being reverted into a mosque has brought back, like a powerful
refrain, that couplet of Mir Taqi Mir which has been an emotional crutch for me
on such occasions. For instance, when I visited the great Cordoba mosque built
in Southern Spain, in 786 AD and which was converted in 1236 into a live
Church.
Mir said:
“Mut ranja kar
kisi ko, ke apne to aeteqaad,
Jee dhaaye ke
jo kaaba banaya to kya kiya?”
(Never hurt a
human being. It is not worth building even the House of God or Kaaba, if the
project breaks human hearts.)
Mir’s
contemporary, Mirza Rafi Sauda, inverts Mir’s image:
“Kaaba agar
che dhaya to kya jaae ghum hai Sheikh;
Yeh qasr e dil
naheen ke banaya na jaa e ga.”
(Destruction
of Kaaba is not as catastrophic as the breaking of the heart, which is
irreparable)
From the
Bosporus, the Istanbul skyline is exactly like its picture postcards, a skilful
contrast of domes and minarets, slim as thermometers. The brooding Ayasofya
Museum stands apart. The greatest Byzantine Cathedral, built at the edge of
Europe in 537 was designed to dominate the panorama of the Marmara Sea and the
Asian mainland beyond.
The first Arab
probe of Sindh by Mohammad bin Qasim was in 711Ad, exactly the date when Tariq
Ibne Ziad crossed over from Morocco to set up station at what he called Jabal
al Tariq or the Rock of Tariq which the British renamed Gibraltar in 1704 after
the famous Spanish-British naval engagements including the “Spanish Armada”.
Before the
Iberian Peninsula turned into a cauldron of intra-European conflict, an 800
years of Muslim rule was somewhat unevenly spread across Spain. To flavour this
phase of history, one has to read Maria Rosa Menocal’s masterly, Ornament of
the World: How Muslims, Jews and Christians created a Culture of Tolerance in Medieval
Spain. The title itself tells the story. It is astonishing that in the past three
decades of gruelling Islamophobia, not one of our liberals had the width of
vision to recall phases in history when robust multiculturalism thrived under
Muslim rule. After Reconquista in 1492 by the Christians, the Inquisition was
much harsher on the Jews who found refuge in Morocco and later in the Ottoman
Empire.
The glory of
the greatest Eastern Orthodox Cathedral came under partial eclipse when the
Roman Catholic Church occupied it for six decades. But it was Sultan Mehmet’s
establishment of the Ottoman Empire in 1453 which caused the Cathedral to face
a predictable total eclipse. It was transformed into a mosque.
From the
debris of the Ottoman Empire after the First World War, Mustafa Kemal Pasha
“Ataturk” resurrected what is modern Turkey. He was determined to take his
country from “backwardness” into “modernism”. In other words he turned his back
on “Muslim traditionalism” and dreamt of a secular Turkey, custom made for
Europe. He replaced the Arabian alphabet with Roman script for the Turkish
language. He banned the Fez cap, brought the practice of Islam under a
department of Religious affairs attached to the Prime Minister, and so on.
Little wonder the texture of life in Istanbul and Ankara was more European than
Islamic, rather like North Tehran under the Shah of Iran. But what was the
ingredient that made Turkey’s secularism comparatively more durable? It was the
Turkish army which became the guarantor of the Republic’s secularism. Ataturk
divined, and quite rightly too, that Sophia mosque would be an eyesore for Europe,
in perpetuity. With one executive order in 1934, it was reinvented as a museum
of Byzantine history.
It was western
callousness which, in the ultimate analyses, made Turkey’s secular edifice
vulnerable. Western, mostly American, Israeli hostility to Arab Socialism
(Egypt), Ba’athism (Iraq, Syria), Libya’s cradle-to-grave welfare system
(details for the Afghan tumult are only slightly different) which promoted
Islamic extremism on an unspeakable scale.
Details for
Turkey’s upheaval need to be explained. With the breakup of former Yugoslavia,
Serbian and Croatian nationalisms turned upon Bosnian Muslims with vicious
brutality. Srebrenica is only one chapter in that bleak and shoddy history.
Briefings by the UN military commander, Gen. Sir Michael Rose, were laden with
more gruesome detail by the day particularly the four year long siege of
Sarajevo. Balkans, the turf for continuous conflict throughout history between
the Ottoman and the Austro-Hungarian Empires, became a wide open killing field
when Belgrade could not hold Yugoslavia together. The helplessness of the
Bosnian Muslims was unbelievable. Europe’s reason for not intervening rang
hollow. Its intervention, it was argued, would cause individual European
countries to take sides in a conflict in which World War II adversaries, Serbia
and Croatia were fighting each other over the spoils of Bosnia.
Europe being
sucked into the Bosnian war carried the risk of under mining the very purpose
for which EU was being forged – to avoid conflict between member states. This
was sophistry, said Salman Rushdie. Reverse the religious affiliations of the
combatants, and European troops would be in Bosnia within a day.
Mornings
evenings and afternoons, the Turks watched the brutalization of Bosnia and
Sarajevo, both an evocative part of Turkish historical memory. A powerful anti-West,
Islamist party, Refah or Welfare took shape and spread like prairie fire. Necmettin
Erbakan, founder of Refah, became Prime Minister. Citing the secular
Constitution, the Army summarily dethroned the “Islamist” Prime Minister.
Erbakan’s
protégés, Abdullah Gul and Tayyip Erdogan, dismantled “Refah” and reappeared in
a secular garb as leaders of AK or Justice and Development Party. As evidence
of their secular credentials, they kept alive their application for membership
of the EU, European callousness notwithstanding. In fact, French President
Giscard d’Estaing virtually slapped Turkey across its face. “European
civilization is Christian civilization.”
After his
mishandling of Syria, misreading of Europe, the US and Russia, his popularity
in serious question, Erdogan has fallen back on the oldest trick in the
politician’s book – religious extremism. “Look”, he will address Islamists,
“like Mehmet, the conqueror, I have restored for your supplications a great
mosque.”
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Fascinating article replete with links to eons gine by. Somehow Erdogan is going to have to contort himself to explain how he is sending Uighur refugees back to China where they will be terrorised.
ReplyDeleteLord what fools we mortals be!
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