http://www.aawsat.com/english/news.asp?section=1&id=22695


In Quiet Revolution, Turkey Eases Headscarf Ban


17/10/2010

ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Freshman Busra Gungor won't have to wear a wig to cover 
her Islamic headscarf, as many pious relatives and friends did to avoid getting 
kicked off campus.

In a landmark decision, Turkey's Higher Education Board earlier this month 
ordered Istanbul University, one of the country's biggest, to stop teachers 
from expelling from classrooms female students who do not comply with a ban on 
the headscarf.

It was the latest twist in a long political and legal tussle in Turkey between 
those who see the garment as a symbol of their Muslim faith and those who view 
it as a challenge to the country's secular constitution.

"I was ready to wear the wig, just like my cousin did," said Gungor, a 
18-year-old student wearing a pastel-colored headscarf. "This is about my 
freedom. I don't see why my headscarf should be seen as a threat to anybody."

The debate is not unique to Turkey -- France and Kosovo, for example, ban 
headscarves in public schools, and parts of Germany bar teachers from wearing 
them.

But it goes to the heart of national identity in this country of 75 million 
Muslims whose modern state was founded as a radical secular republic after 
World War One.

Disputes over the headscarf and other public symbols of Islam are part of a 
wider debate over how to reconcile modernity and tradition as Turkey tries to 
achieve its decades-old ambition to join the European Union.

Together with the courts, Turkey's army -- which has a long history of 
intervening in politics and has ousted four elected governments -- has long 
seen itself as a bulwark against any roll back toward Islamization. Easing 
Turkey's secular laws would have been unthinkable a few years ago.

But reforms aimed at bringing Turkey closer to the EU have clipped the 
generals' power. In a sign of how influence and attitudes are shifting, the 
latest change on headscarves happened with more of a whimper than a bang.

"This is the same fight Turkey has had for 80 years over the secular-pious 
issue," writer Mehmet Ali Birand commented in an article entitled "Let them 
dress the way they want."

"The world has changed. Turkey has changed. Let's close those old books and 
look into the future," Birand said.

NEW CLASS

A bid by the ruling AK party to lift the headscarf ban three years ago sparked 
a major political crisis and almost led to the party being closed by the 
Constitutional Court for anti-secular activities.

But the rise of a new class of observant Muslims to form the backbone of the 
AKP, which has its roots in political Islam and has held power since 2002, is 
challenging old notions.

Opponents of the headscarf ban -- in place since a 1982 military coup -- say it 
is a violation of individual freedoms and incompatible with a modern democracy. 
Supporters say the prohibition is necessary precisely to defend Turkey's 
democratic values.

"Turkey needs to find a new relationship between state and religion," Ergun 
Ozbudun, an constitutional expert, said at a recent lunch with EU ambassadors 
and journalists.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, who comfortably won a referendum last month on 
government-sponsored constitutional reforms, has declared plans for a brand new 
basic law.

Seen as clear favorite in 2011 elections, the AKP is widely expected to try 
again to remove the headscarf ban. Among reforms approved in last month's 
referendum were an overhaul of the Constitutional Court, traditionally 
dominated by secularist judges. 

TURNING TIDE 

Until the decision by the Higher Education Board, girls from religiously 
conservative families say they had to wear hats or wigs to conceal their 
headscarves in order to attend classes. Others decided to stay at home. 

As the tide turns, some secularists fear growing social conservatism and 
"neighborhood pressure" will force them to change their lifestyle and adopt the 
headscarf. 

"I don't think we will feel pressure to cover here in Istanbul, but I believe 
there could be a risk in most universities in Anatolian cities," said 
18-year-old Begum Yildiz, a female student smoking a cigarette outside the 
university's entrance. 

Another student who did not give her name was less sanguine: "I don't want the 
ban to be lifted. I know many girls whose families force them to wear the 
headscarf and they take it off at college. University has been a place for them 
to feel free." 

Pinar Gedik, a student of Arabic who wears a pink headscarf, said the ban was 
still being enforced in some faculties. 

"I can attend classes with my headscarf now, but it's still banned in many 
departments. The pressure is still there." 

Although symbols of Islam are now more common in the public sphere, 
sensibilities are still raw. The talk of the town these days is whether 
generals and secularist politicians will attend a October 29 reception at the 
presidential palace on National Day. 

President Abdullah Gul, whose wife wears a headscarf as does Erdogan's, 
traditionally hosts two separate receptions for guests with covered and 
uncovered wives. This year he plans to hold one ball. 

Muharrem Ince, a senior MP from the secularist Republican People's Party, has 
said his party will boycott the ceremony. 

"The president is changing the tradition of double receptions. This is because 
the AKP want to impose the headscarf not only at universities but from top to 
bottom," he said.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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