The Turkish model A hard act to follow
In many ways Turkey’s Islamists seem to have got things right. But it took them a long time to emerge from the country’s army-guided secularism
PALE,
bespectacled and polite, Bekir Berat Ozipek, a young professor at
Istanbul’s Commerce University, is no street-fighter. But he was
excited by the heady atmosphere he experienced on a recent trip to
Egypt. He and two fellow Turkish scholars went to a conference at the
University of Cairo where their ideas on civil-military relations
were keenly gobbled up.
Then
late one night, on the eve of a big protest, they went to Tahrir
Square, the heart of Egypt’s uprising. They loved what they found:
young people directing traffic, exuberant songs and slogans, a joker
imitating ex-President Hosni Mubarak. Then they dived into a
restaurant, where their chat about Egypt’s political system was
joined by youngsters at the next table, as well as the waiter. Mr
Ozipek thought he was living in the era of Voltaire.
A few
days earlier another Turkish-Arab encounter took place. Ahmet
Davutoglu, Turkey’s foreign minister, was winding up a visit to
rebel-controlled Libya when he decided, to his minders’ alarm, to
go to the central square of Benghazi, which like its Cairene
counterpart is called Tahrir, or Liberation. As the crowd chanted
“Erdogan, Turkey, Muslim”, he brought greetings from his prime
minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and told them: “We have a common
future and a history.”
From
North Africa to the Gulf, the region seems to be going through a
Turkish moment. In years past Turkey’s spotty democracy was often
cited to prove a negative: the Turkish case (along with Indonesia’s
and Malaysia’s, also with reservations) showed that Islam did not
pose an insuperable barrier to multiparty democracy. But nothing much
flowed from that observation—until the Arab spring. Turkey is now
being studied by Arabs as a unique phenomenon: a movement of moderate
Islamists, the Justice and Development (AK) party, has overseen an
economic boom, boosted the country’s standing and shown that the
coming to power of pious people need not mean a dramatic rupture in
ties with the West.
Whatever
the flaws of the Turkish experiment, it is clearly true that Turkey
under the AK party presents a more benign picture than many other
versions—real and hypothetical—of Islamist rule. The country has
gained influence in the Middle East by keeping cordial ties with Iran
and standing up for the Palestinians. But there is no suggestion that
it will leave NATO or cut diplomatic links, however strained, with
Israel. Life has been made easier for pious Muslims in ways that
secular Turks dislike; but so far, at least, Turkey is a long way
from any Iranian-style enforcement of female dress, let alone a
clerical class that has the final say in all big decisions.
For
Western observers of the Middle East, an evolution in a Turkish
direction—towards relative political and economic freedom—would
be a happier outcome than many others. So is there any reason why the
Arab countries, having passed through their current upheavals, should
not live happily, and Turkishly, ever after?
In fact,
there are many reasons to be cautious about expecting Arabs to follow
Turks. Turkey’s moderate Islamism did not evolve overnight. Its
emergence, and taming, took a long time; it depended on many
countervailing forces, including an army which was firm in its
defence of a secular constitution, and was strong enough, at least
until recently, to deter any imposition of Islamic rule (see
article).
Both in
Turkey and Egypt veterans of political Islam have seen a mixture of
repression and limited participation in politics—but in Egypt the
repression was harsher and the opportunities to practise democracy
fewer. Albeit with fits and starts, Turkey’s Islamists had already
learned some political lessons when they took power in 2002. And
compared with many other politically active armies, Turkey’s has
played a disinterested role. After taking power in 1980, the army
moved fairly soon to restart multiparty politics and launch a
free-market experiment. It did give a sop to Islam by introducing
religion in schools; but that was a modest concession, made from a
position of strength.
Compared
with its Arab counterparts, Turkey’s secular order has deep roots,
going back to the creation of a republic by Mustafa Kemal in 1923.
Modern Turkey’s defining event—the defeat of a Greek
expeditionary force dispatched with Western backing—was also the
starting-point of a ruthless reform effort whose declared aims
included “fighting religion” and ending the theocratic
backwardness of the Ottomans. For decades afterwards, memory of this
victorious moment was enough to fill secular nationalists with
confidence, and put pious forces on the defensive.
As a
largely devout Muslim nation, Turkey never ceased to produce
charismatic religious leaders, but they had to adapt to the realities
of a secular republic or else face prison or exile. To this day
Turkey’s political and legal system bears the marks of years of
army-guided secularism. Even Turkey’s Islamists remain “children
of the republic”, says Berna Turam, a scholar at Boston’s
Northeastern University.
Guidance
from Fethullah Gulen
These days the religious teacher who wields most influence over the Turks is Fethullah Gulen, who lives in America and forms the apex of a huge conglomerate that includes NGOs, firms, newspapers and college dormitories in Turkey, plus schools across the world. Whatever the ultimate aim of Mr Gulen, his talk is Western-friendly: he mixes the vocabulary of Sufism with language that is broadly pro-business and pro-democracy.
These days the religious teacher who wields most influence over the Turks is Fethullah Gulen, who lives in America and forms the apex of a huge conglomerate that includes NGOs, firms, newspapers and college dormitories in Turkey, plus schools across the world. Whatever the ultimate aim of Mr Gulen, his talk is Western-friendly: he mixes the vocabulary of Sufism with language that is broadly pro-business and pro-democracy.
In
contrast to many Arab Islamists he tries to please Christians and
Jews. Turkish sceptics say the Gulen movement is more fundamentalist,
and less liberal, at its hard core than its benign external face
would suggest. The fate of several journalists who have tried probing
it, and found themselves prosecuted or jailed, lends weight to that
belief. People who criticise the movement can face nasty smear
campaigns.
But
followers of Mr Gulen claim that meetings they held in the 1990s had
a huge influence on Mr Erdogan, persuading him to abandon the idea of
an Islamic state. Mr Gulen made an unusual break with the government
after last year’s killing of nine Turks by Israeli commandos who
swooped on a ship taking supplies to Gaza. He said it was partly the
Turkish side’s fault: the flotilla should not have defied Israel.
Thus, when Mr Erdogan faces pressure from pious mentors, it is not to
be more radical but rather the opposite.
Another
feature of Turkish Islamism is the number of thriving businesses with
ties to the Gulen movement. Among the drivers of Turkey’s
expansion—the country’s GDP per head is three times that of
Egypt, with a similar population—are provincial entrepreneurs. It
is now commonplace to stress the AK party’s roots in the new
Anatolian bourgeoisie, and its appeal to the consumers of the
country’s new-found wealth: people who mix Muslim piety with a
taste for expensive cars. These groups set limits to the AK party’s
ambitions; like most rich folk they favour stability. In the Arab
world there are middle-class Muslims who look with envy at the
confidence of their Turkish counterparts.
Ibrahim
Kalin, an adviser to Mr Erdogan, posits another difference between AK
and political Islam as it emerged in Egypt and Pakistan in the 20th
century. Even when pretending not to, the latter movements always
dreamed of a powerful Islamic government, using the tools of modern
statehood, like universal education, to impose a Muslim order. AK, by
contrast, lives comfortably in a world of “lighter” states, where
other agencies, including NGOs, the private sector and academia can
play a bigger role.
In AK
circles it is common to hear such postmodern talk mixed with
nostalgia for the Ottoman era, when each faith ran its own system of
education and personal law. Ali Bulac, a columnist, argues that
citizens with civil disputes should consider Muslim arbitration: he
says that could be combined with retaining the secular penal code, a
cornerstone of the republic. Muslim democracy
alla turca
is already an unusual creature, and is still mutating.
http://www.economist.com/node/21525408