International criticism of Turkey’s repressive and often
brutal policies towards its Kurdish and non-Turk minorities has just
become a criminal offence under new anti-terrorism legislation. On
February 13, Faith Tas of the Aram Publishing House will face charges of
‘incitement to violence’ for printing American Interventionsim,
a Noam Chomsky lecture-cum-essay criticizing Turkey’s razing of Kurdish
villages and outlawing of the Kurdish language.
According to The Independent’s Robert Fisk, "Noam Chomsky,
one of America's greatest philosophers and linguists, has become the
target of Turkey's chief of ‘terrorism prosecution’" for stating that "the
Kurds have been miserably oppressed throughout the whole history of the
modern Turkish state ... In 1984, the Turkish government launched a major
war in the south-east against the Kurdish population ... The end result
was pretty awesome: tens of thousands of people killed, two to three
million refugees, massive ethnic cleansing with some 3,500 villages
destroyed" (The Independent, January 24, 2002).
The same week that charges were brought against Tas,
Turkish "authorities imprisoned 17 students as a crackdown continued
against Kurds demanding the right to study their own language" (Amberin
Zaman, Los Angeles Times, January 23, 2002)
One Kurdish-speaking student told the Los Angeles Times
that he "was stripped naked and beaten by security forces until I signed a
confession saying that I had been acting under orders from the PKK." All
for speaking Kurdish.
Turkey’s repression follows fast on the heels of the
bemusing, if not entirely saddening, cultural row which broke out with
Saudi Arabia last week. At first glance, it appears that the crux of the
matter is a centuries-old fortress built by the Ottoman Turks overlooking
Mecca.
Turkish officials lambasted Saudi clerical authorities for
the alleged demolishing of the al-Ajyad castle on Bulbul mountain
overlooking Mecca’s holiest shrines. The fort, built in 1780, was part and
parcel of the Ottoman infiltration of Arabia, North Africa, and parts of
Europe.
"The destruction of the al-Ajyad fort, part of the common
cultural heritage of humanity, is an act equivalent to the destruction of
the Bamiyan Buddha statues in Afghanistan," bemoaned the Turkish Hurriyet
newspaper.
So enraged was Turkish national pride that effigies and
portraits of King Fahd were burned in demonstrations in Turkish cities.
According to the Turkish Anadolu news agency, "The head of the Religious
Affairs Directorate, Mehmet Nuri Yilmaz, said it was impossible to cancel
arrangements made for the hajj next month, but it might be possible to
stop personal pilgrimages during the rest of the year".
The Saudis defended their action by citing the swelling
number of pilgrims year after year and the need for expanding housing and
medical facilities for them. Each year, more than 2 million pilgrims
cluster around Mecca to perform one of the five pillars of Islam, the
Hajj.
"By protesting against the kingdom's decision to demolish
a dilapidated structure to further expand the facilities in the holy city,
Turkey has once again proved its ambivalent approach to anything that has
got to do with Islam and Muslims,'' retorted the English-language Riyadh
Daily.
Nevertheless, Turkish Culture Minister Istemihan Talay
called the Saudi actions a "cultural massacre" and said it was akin to the
"thinking of the Taliban".
This would all be rather reasonable if not for the
undeniable fact that Turkey is perhaps the greatest aggressor and
proponent of genocidal and ethnic cleansing in the Middle East and Central
Asia. However, the post-September global arena has given many former
rogues, zealots and terrorists (see Sharon, India, Iran, Zimbabwe,
Philippines, etc.) the political clout to denounce everyone else as either
military or cultural terrorists.
Yesterday’s demons are today’s papal stewards.
Much of the way Turkey has treated its former territories
(stretching from North Africa and Eastern Europe into Central Asia) can be
construed from Turkey’s Minister of Justice, Mahmud Esad Bozkurt, in 1930:
"The Turk is the only master in his country. Those who are not pure Turks
have one right in this country: The right to be servants, the right to be
slaves".
This ideology served as the stepping stone for Turkish
atrocities throughout the lands they pillaged and plundered. Briefly;
1894 - Sultan Abdul Hamit’s policy of genocide against the
Armenians continued well into the early 1930s despite appeals and
intervention by U.S. President Woodrow Wilson in 1918. Wilson’s
declaration of self-determination for all populations under Turkish
oppression does little for the Armenians. Europe’s first great genocide in
Bitlis, Erzerum, Marsovan, Kharpert, Diyarbekir, Mardin, Adana, Talas-Caesarea,
and Konia goes largely unnoticed to this day. More than 1.5 million
Armenians are slaughtered.
1909 – Arab revolt against Turkish oppression is
suppressed in Yemen. Thousands die.
1915 – A bloody year for Christian Assyrian populations in
Iraq and Iran. Turkish troops raze 70 villages in Urmia (Northwestern
Iran), killing more than 25,000 Assyrian men, women and children.
1917 – Turkish administrators facilitate the starving
deaths of 144,000 Arabs in the Levant. Lebanon and Syria are forced to
give up on aspirations for independence from Turkey.
Which brings us to the Kurdish equation. There are
currently more than 12 million Kurds in Turkey who are not recognized as
belonging to an ethnic minority. Turkish policies simply do not account
for a Kurdish ‘ethnicity’ or culture. Kurds are not allowed to speak their
own language of Kurdish nor are they allowed to operate their own schools.
Cultural icons have been all but erased from Kurdish history; Kurdish
song, dance, and folklore are strictly forbidden. Merely stating that a
person is Kurdish is a capital offence.
Genocidal practices have not changed much for Turkey. The
Kurds today suffer what the Arabs, Armenians, Greeks and Slavs suffered
under Turkottoman brutality. These peoples were not allowed to speak their
own languages. They were forcibly kept out of schools in order to maintain
and intellectual superiority for the ruling Turkish governors. Only Turks
could hold high office and, as the ruling class, were not required to pay
taxes. The occupied peoples were slated for farming and labor and
considered second-class citizens.
Turkey has for the past twenty years pursued full
integration into the E.U. but failed miserably due to its human rights
records.
In 1995, Turkish Deputy Chief of Staff, General Ahmet
Corekci, criticized human rights organizations: "We'll finish terrorism
but we are being held back by democracy and human rights". Israel’s Ariel
Sharon, anyone?
The next time the Turks speak of another’s ‘cultural
massacre’, one ought to remind them to shut up.