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    Middle East
     May 8, 2008
KEBABBLE
Tequila and Turkish nationalism
By Fazile Zahir

FETHIYE, Turkey - All over Turkey, on April 23, proud parents gazed adoringly as their children leapt, sang and danced in celebration of National Sovereignty Day and National Children's Day. The public holiday for the whole country was established by the country's founding father, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, as a reminder to boys and girls that they are the future of the new republic.

It was a remarkable gesture by a man who had no children himself but adopted eight and reflected the love and deep esteem he had for children. Most kids are hugely grateful because not only do they get a day off school but adults must to be nice to

 

them and presents are par for the course.

In most towns, the city council and schools organize a day of festivities. It is usual that older children are corralled into a rudimentary marching band and blow and bang their way along main boulevards with ample enthusiasm if not musical talent. The nursery classes get to wear fancy dress and all age groups wave flags, perform folk dances and join in athletic displays at local sports stadiums. Children are also chosen to replace the state's highest political personages for the day and even the president and prime minister literally give up their seats to a younger charge.

Parliament is convened with child "MPs" and they hold a special session to discuss children's issues. The child premier and president are then mandated to sign off on executive orders on what are mainly educational and environmental policies.

For most parents it is an annual opportunity to revel in the accomplishments of their child's school and in the adorable behavior of the little ones. For others, however, the day is much more disquieting.

The date itself is telling: April 23, 1920, was the day that the Grand National Assembly met in Ankara as Ataturk's forces were still fighting the Allied invasion in their efforts to establish an independent country. The date marked the establishment (at least in the minds of the Turkish forces) of the independence and sovereignty of their state. To simultaneously dedicate this momentous day to the nation's youth was how Ataturk chose to hand down his mandate that their future role was the continued protection of this sovereignty.

"The most important thing is to teach our children and youths to maintain Turkish liberty and their own will and struggle with the enemies who attack our national traditions," Ataturk said in 1922. Every year this message is hammered home in an unsubtle manner. For any parent, perhaps Armenian or Kurdish, with doubts about the manner in which the nation was forged, the validity of its current boundaries and even of the jingoistic effect on their children's ethnically Turkish classmates, the florid celebration of Turkish nationalism may be unwelcome.

The army marks the day by reminding citizens that it is Children's Day and National Sovereignty Day. This year they produced three posters, the first shows Ataturk on the background of a Turkish flag with the slogan "The common ground of both independence and equality is the sovereignty of the state" (their emphasis) and has a small child inserted almost as an afterthought into the bottom right corner of the poster.

The second is less patriotic and has a picture of children and the globe and simply wishes all children everywhere a happy holiday. But the third returns to the theme of Ataturk's legacy and features a picture of the great man in parliament with some children hugging each other with the strapline "Happy Sovereignty and Children's Day to Turkey's modern and enlightened children".

One can only assume that the choice of the words "modern and enlightened" is not intended to encompass those young daughters of the nation who choose to cover their heads.

The indoctrination of nationalism is not just limited to Children's Day. Every Turkish school child must every day repeat an oath of fealty to the Turkish state, normally en masse in a playground before a statue of Ataturk. Ziya Selcuk, university professor and former head of the government's Training and Education Board says, "In newly founded nation states like ours education is an effective political lever to train and transform people ... but in recent decades this concept, which needs to be loosened, continues."

Batuhan Aydagul, deputy coordinator of the Education Reform Initiative elaborates, "There's still some emphasis on militarism, the importance of being martyred, the importance of going to war, dying in war and so on." It is a common concern amongst pro-reform teachers that children are not encouraged to give opinions opposed to established ideas and the idea of criticizing Ataturk risks attracting the attention of public prosecutors.

In its latest progress report, the European Union also criticized education materials, citing the negative portrayal of minorities such as Armenians, and said further work was needed to remove discriminatory language from textbooks. Turkey is still involved in a long process to join the EU.

But there are innocent motives as well in Children's Day and for the past 25 years Turkey has been working hard to globalize the event. Large numbers of foreign children are sent to participate in the celebrations. They stay with host families, giving each side the chance to learn about other cultures, and the visitors join in the special kids parliamentary session giving it a unique international flavor.

Two of this year's international participants raised eyebrows in their formal meeting with the Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The child from Palestine, Riyad Jabarin, was the first. He invited the whole Turkish parliament to come to Mecca and pray for peace for Palestinian children and the press was quick to note that Erdogan chatted to him in Arabic. The other was the Mexican participant who presented Turkey's teetotaller premier with a big bottle of tequila.

The United Nations Children's Fund, moved by the example of global brotherhood, has also designated April 23 as International Children's Day. In Turkey, neither celebration, Sovereignty or Children's Day, is likely to be ignored or dropped any time soon, but perhaps future generations can look forward to a time when they are not so tightly intertwined.

Fazile Zahir is of Turkish descent, born and brought up in London. She moved to live in Turkey in 2005 and has been writing full time since then.

(Copyright 2008 Fazile Zahir.)


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