Pinar Tremblay
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly
told the world and his people that the words “Islam” and “terrorism”
should not be used together, because Muslims cannot be terrorists. Indeed, Erdogan has insisted that students who attend Turkey's religious imam hatip high schools would never become terrorists.
Yet the man Erdogan accuses of masterminding the July 15 coup attempt
is none other than the president's former close friend and ally,
Fethullah Gulen, a Sunni imam. This has made the situation rather
uncomfortable for the president and the Justice and Development Party
(AKP) government. Acknowledging that Muslims might deliberately hurt and
even murder other Muslims is not easy in general for the majority of
Turks, so what can be done to address this uncomfortable reality?
The easiest solution would be to resuscitate an answer that Turks have used in the past — that is, declare the enemy to be non-Muslim and foreign. In this case, the Armenian has once again emerged as the imagined culprit, invoked to help Turks assuage their troubled conscience.
Thus, several pro-government figures have concocted allegations to
christen Gulen an Armenian. Such accusations were voiced prior to July
15, but have since been embellished. For example, on June 6, the pro-AKP
Ottoman Clubs
(Osmanli Ocaklari) proclaimed Gulen an Armenian, citing branches in his
family tree and his background. Others claimed that the so-called
Fethullah Gulen Terror Organization, a term Ankara uses to refer to
Gulen followers, was influential in the German parliament's June 2 decision to recognize the Armenian genocide.
At a pro-democracy rally held July 19, Kocaeli Buyuksehir Mayor Ibrahim Karaosmanoglu
told attendees, “The fact that they [Gulenists] have infiltrated
several key positions in the bureaucracy is a shame for us. They cannot
be [trusted to be] teachers. They cannot be anything. … They hide
themselves so well, they can even trade their honor to reach a key
position.”
Indeed, various figures, including professed historian Kadir Misiroglu,
have alleged that Gulen's father is Armenian and his mother is Jewish.
Misiroglu also claims that Gulen belongs to a community in which Jews
have (somehow) become Armenians. Ultranationalist figures have also
contributed their share of such allegations.
In addition, numerous newspaper opinion pieces continue to warn
dubiously against the Gulen movement. For example, Yeni Soz columnist Can Kemal Ozer
wrote, “Gulen's mother is a Jew, and [his] father an Armenian. He is
the devil, who was brought up to seek revenge upon our people. He is not
a Muslim, but a member of the Vatican Council.” Another columnist made
mention of a few terror organizations, including the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), and argued that they are “Armenian establishments.”
As these articles and others began circulating on social media, a few
lone voices struggled to stand up against such hate speech. One
anonymous person tweeted, “[To claim] Gulen as Armenian is not a nuance
or observation. It is the foundation of a process known as elimination and extermination.”
While watching the largest rally in Turkish history at Yenikapi,
Istanbul, on Aug. 8, several observers tweeted about the deep-rooted
xenophobia oozing from the rhetoric of the country's political leaders.
One tweet, with a photo of religious leaders attending the Yenikapi
rally, observed, “It is as if we have invited these men [in the photo]
to offend them.”
Nationalist Action Party leader Devlet Bahceli referred to those deemed
to be the (non-Muslim) enemy and a threat to Turkey as “Byzantine
seeds.” Prime Minister Binali Yildirim resorted to “crusaders' army,”
and Erdogan described them as a “flock of infidels.”
The worrisome part is not only that Turkish leaders freely utter such
hateful rhetoric, but that it has become normal in contemporary Turkey
to do so. As abhorrent phrases filled the air, millions cheered in
Yenikapi, and only a handful even realized the offense.
Amid this feverishness, one must, however, ask, how could Armenians be
culprits in the crimes for which an Islamist group, the Gulenists, has
been accused?
Murat Bebiroglu,
a senior editor of the Armenian online publication HyeTert, told
Al-Monitor, “Starting in 1878, the image of the Armenian community in
Anatolia switched from a nation of trust to a nation of [a slur]. That
is, if you want to belittle someone, you call them Armenian. If you want
to badmouth someone, call them Armenian.
He said, “In a society where 99% [of the population] is said to be
Muslim, it is seen as better to target your anger at 40,000-50,000
people rather than a larger group. Remember, when the PKK leader was
caught, he was declared Armenian, [and] whenever PKK terror spikes,
different papers start Armenian bashing. Whenever the going gets tough,
Armenians become the easy and readily available target.”
Bebiroglu, a member of the dwindling Armenian community in Turkey,
clings to black humor. He said, “In a sense, we were relieved when we
heard several commentators also claim that Gulen is Jewish, not just
Armenian. Could there be a worse image in the eyes of Turkish society
than being not only Armenian, but also Jewish? The sad part is these
allegations are accepted by a significant portion of society and fuel
further hatred against the minorities.”
So a sobering question remains: If you are not a Muslim, can you
still be a Turk? The answer seems to be that in the view of some, anyone
who is not a Muslim is a potential threat to society.
Turkey has recently suffered from simultaneous attacks at the hands
of the PKK and the Islamic State and allegedly the Gulenists, the latter
two of which are openly Islamic entities. Pro-government pundits are
spinning their wheels to find ways to undermine support for these
groups. They still lack the means, however, to explain how strains of
Islam can threaten society, so they take the easy way out by fanning the
flames of xenophobia. In the short term, Armenophobia becomes a
valuable accomplice.
Without accepting full responsibility for its role in the expansion
of the Gulenist movement in Turkey, and without acknowledging the
organization's Islamic outreach at home and abroad, can the Turkish
government truly take on the Gulenists?
As convoluted as allegations that Gulen is Armenian might be, they
are also quite scary when combined with the suggestion that the state
and society will be wiped clean of all Gulenists. Turkish policymakers
should surely recall from history the failures when states have tried to
ensure domestic security by demonizing segments of society. The hateful
rhetoric invoking Armenians — or any group unrelated to the Gulenists —
will inevitably become the most difficult obstacle in the battle
against curbing the Gulenists' strength.
"Al-Monitor," August 12, 2016 (www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2016/08/turkey-is-fethullah-gulen-armenian.html#ixzz4HQMEoj5q)
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