http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/JC27Ak01.html

Mar 27, 2008

KEBABBLE 
Turkey seeks a more modern Islam
By Fazile Zahir 


"We are not here as Turkish Muslims to put ourselves in the service of Islam, 
but to put Islam in the service of life." 
- Fethullah Gulen, Turkish Islamic scholar and writer 

FETHIYE, Turkey - The level of surprise with which the world's media greeted 
the news that Turkey's highest religious authority, the Diyanet, has instructed 
a commission of scholars to re-evaluate the Hadith (oral traditions relating to 
the words and deeds of the Prophet Mohammad) with respect to modern society, 
seems all out of proportion to the actual exercise the Ankara school is 
conducting. 

The Western media are of course keen to promote moderate versions of Islam, but 
the tradition of ijtihad (legal interpretation) is nothing new to Turkish 
religious thinkers. In 2006, the Diyanet had already started a process to 
filter the Hadith to delete misogynistic statements. 

This new project is an even more ambitious attempt to carry out a fundamental 
revision of the Hadith and has taken the theologically radical step of ignoring 
later conservative texts in favor of earlier more liberal ones and by being 
prepared to evaluate the sayings of the Prophet within a historical framework. 

The Turkish state has come to see the Hadith as having a negative influence on 
a society that is in a hurry to modernize and some scholars are convinced that 
it obscures the original values of Islam. 

Turkish Islam has always had a very different face and practice to Arab or 
African Islam for many reasons. Ottoman expansion forced Muslims to embrace and 
co-exist with Christian and other groups. This tradition of diversity allowed 
for the inclusive societal model, the millet system, a type of religious 
federalism. The empire was a melting pot, incorporating various ethnic and 
religious groups including Kurds, Croats, Asiatic tribes, Buddhists, 
Christians, Bektashi/Alevi and others. Through years of interaction, relations 
have softened between groups and Muslim ideals continually evolved. 

Turkish modernization began at least a century before Kemalism. In the 19th 
century, the Ottomans produced a new secular civil law, a constitution, a 
parliament in 1876, and Western-style schools and universities for both sexes. 
They also encouraged sophisticated intellectual debate. In 1895, Descartes' 
Discourse on Method was translated into Turkish under the auspices of the 
sultan. 

Many other Western classics, as well as the political debates of the day in 
Europe, became part of Ottoman intellectual life. All this was embraced not 
just by the secular young Turks, but also by more open-minded Islamists. 
Fethullah Gulen, a modern-day key reformist and Sufi thinker extends tolerance 
toward secularists and non-believers in Turkey and sees this approach as a way 
to revive the multi-culturalism of the Ottoman Empire. 

Prior to Islam, Turks were shamanistic and it was these pagan shamans who 
became the first proletyzing foot soldiers of Islam among the nomadic Turkish 
tribes, they were the Sufi order. Even at these early times, Turkish Muslims 
accepted and embraced the pre-Islamic traditions and combined them with their 
own in a form of Sufi mysticism. 

Turkey's Sufism has a non-literal and inclusive reading of religion and the 
Turkish understanding of Islam is very much punctuated by the tolerance of 
mystical poet Jalaladdin Rumi, love of Sufi poet Yunus Emre and reasonability 
of the Ottoman "saint" Haci Bektasi Veli. The main premise of this Turkish 
Islam is moderation, Sufi tradition is based on the philosophy that all 
creatures should be loved as God's physical reflection and objects of the 
Creator's own love. 

There is no place for enemies or "others" in this system. Gulen, Turkey's 
best-known and most modern Sufi philosopher, rejects the idea that a clash 
between the "East" and "West" is necessary, desirable or inevitable and 
frequently emphasizes that there should be freedom of worship and thought in 
Turkey. 

Religious scholars in Turkey are largely a different breed to their 
counterparts in other Muslim countries. Rather than being ulema (priests) or 
practical men like engineers and medical doctors as they are in Egypt and 
Pakistan, they are mostly writers, poets, academics and artists who are 
open-minded and keen to discuss new ideas. These writers are not didactic in 
their writings but rather narrative in style and eclectic in terms of their 
sources. As early as 1951, an American scholar of religion W C Smith made the 
following comment: "Whereas the Arab dream is of restoration, the modern Turks 
consciously talk of novelty." 

Others attribute Turkish moderation with the important role of the 25% of Alevi 
Muslims who practice a religion that is confessional and based on adoration, 
but which does not seek to conquer. It is a fusion form of Islam that considers 
a person's relationship with God to be relevant to the private sphere and which 
believes that women are equal to men. The tolerant approach of these people 
often referred to as "Islamic protestants", allows them to maintain both a 
Kemalist tradition and a progressive religious spirit alive within the Turkish 
population. 

Others see the growth of prosperity encouraging a relaxation of the religious 
laws. 

Economic stability and security give one the luxury of picking and choosing 
while defining a personal identity. Turkey has recently experienced previously 
unknown economic growth for 20 quarters consecutively. Islamic social movements 
represent the "coming out" of now wealthy and visible conservative business men 
anxious to combine their private religion with the roles they now have in the 
public sphere. They are keen for their values to be reflected in Turkey's new 
secular constitution and have been active in pushing forward human rights and 
freedom of expression in the headscarf debate that has gripped Turkey for the 
past six months. 

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Justice and Development Party are 
now confidently in control of Turkey. Until this last election their power had 
previously been predicated on their "giving up" or "delaying" their "Islamic" 
demands on society in return for being allowed to govern. Now, with the huge 
electoral endorsement of 2007, they are moving forward with a program to allow 
Turkey more freedom of religious expression. 

The recent headscarf debate has been resolved in a typically Turkish way, the 
government changed the law so university students can attend wearing a scarf - 
but their teachers still can't. Even then only 30% of universities adhered to 
it and the rest carried on doing their own thing. Chaos did not ensue, there 
was some confusion and then the stoical Turkish people just get on with the new 
status quo, adapting as they always do to religious evolution without hardly 
creating a ripple in society. Turkey has the incredible capacity to do nothing 
less than recreate Islam, changing it from a religion whose rules must be 
obeyed, to one designed to serve the needs of people in a modern secular 
democracy. 

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

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

Kirim email ke