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This assessment of the Turkish vote from Informed Comment seems pretty
fair-minded to me. Although other factors will intervene, I suspect that the
outcome is a sign that predictions that the voters would reject Erdogan and
the militantly procapitalist and moderately pro-Islam JDP are probably not
headed for the trash can in the next election, as some pollsters and others
have wistfully predicted. 

Turkish "secularism,' which always seemed to me to carry a strong does of
obligatory state-worship, for instance by requiring that womem doff their
head coverings in honor of the secular state while insisting on state
control of Islamic religious institutions.
Fred Feldman




http://www.juancole.com/2010/09/8492.html

Turkey's Constitutional Referendum Extends Range of Liberties
Posted on September 13, 2010 by Juan

The question in the American blogosphere seems to be whether the referendum
on Turkey's constitutional changes was good for democracy or good for the
sharia (the system of Muslim law, analogous to Roman Catholic canon law,
against which the American right wing is now rallying).

First of all, no one in Turkey is talking about implementing medieval Muslim
laws, including the ruling Justice and Development Party- which does want
fewer restrictions on the public role of religion in Turkey. The changes to
the constitution just make it more difficult for the powers that be to
marginalize believers. But to my knowledge, none of the amendments had
anything to say about religion or religious law per se.

Second of all, what are American evangelical Christians and Roman Catholics
who want to ban abortion (even though there is no secular reason to do so)
doing but trying to impose on all Americans their Christian sharia? The
people most against the former seem to be all for the latter.

Turkey has been run for decades as a secular semi-dictatorship in which the
army was the guardian of the country's secular values, imposed from above.
Turkish secularism is on the militant, French model, in which the government
sees itself as an active critic of religious belief and institutions, rather
than on the American model, where the government is supposed to be neutral.
The army achieved this goal by monitoring officer cadets for signs that they
might be religious and then summarily expelling them if they were found to
be. One older Turkish intellectual who had been roped, as a university
administrator, into assisting with such an expulsion, confessed to me his
continued guilt about it. In other words, the Turkish officer corps has been
the opposite of the American air force officers, where you pretty much have
to be an evangelical Christian or you are hazed.

The other institution that has been deployed actively to discriminate
against believing Muslims seeking public roles is the judiciary.

The referendum will make it harder for the army to police itself and keep
out believers, by giving those expelled more rights of appeal. It will also
weaken the autonomy of the judiciary. Admittedly, the latter step could
prove pernicious, and there are legitimate concerns about it. Still, it
should be remembered that the judiciary is largely staffed by judges already
vetted to support the secular elite, and has often exercised its powers in
the past on behalf of that elite.

It is likely, it seems to me, that the outcome of these changes will in fact
be a greater role for believing Muslims in Turkish political and public
life. I can't see what is wrong with that, or how it is contrary to
democracy. The old Kemalist system of secularism imposed from above by an
urban, educated elite, in such a way as to marginalize much of Turkish
society, accomplished good but also created inequities.

Moreover, the constitution that is being amended was imposed by martial law.
Letting the public weigh in on it, California style, restores a democratic
character to at least some of it. Thus, the new constitution will allow much
more in the way of union organizing by labor and restores the right to
collective bargaining to public sector employees (though still not in the
private sector). The generals who made the 1980 coup killed organized labor
and the political left (which, ironically, paved the way for the
Muslim-tinged right, on the analogy of the Christian Democrats in Germany,
to come to power, since discontent had to go somewhere and it could not go
left any more).

So, ironically, it is not impossible that Recep Tayyip Erdogan has just
given a at least some aid and comfort to Turkish leftist and labor
movements, which could begin reviving over the next decade- providing a
counter-weight to Erdogan's own more right-of-center emphases.

And, many of the changes were asked for and endorsed by the European Union
as a prerequisite for EU membership, which still cannot be ruled out for
Turkey (it is a candidate). The EU simply will not admit military
dictatorships or countries that explicitly discriminate based on who people
are.

So, the question was not democracy versus sharia. It was a more inclusive
sort of democracy that might make a legitimate place for believers in
politics and public life, versus a continued soft military dictatorship with
secular-supremacist tendencies.

Aljazeera English has video:




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