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Turkey

Turkey. Focus on Minorities. History of Middle East. Heritage from Ottoman Empire. In a holdover from the Ottoman system of millets , Turks traditionally have tended to consider all Sunni Muslims as Turks and to regard non-Sunni speakers of Turkish as non-Turks.

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Turkey

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  1. Turkey Focus on Minorities

  2. History of Middle East

  3. Heritage from Ottoman Empire In a holdover from the Ottoman system of millets, Turks traditionally have tended to consider all Sunni Muslims as Turks and to regard non-Sunni speakers of Turkish as non-Turks.

  4. After Ottoman Empire and New Republic Since the founding of the Republic of Turkey, the government has sought to diminish the significance of ethnic, linguistic, and religious distinctions.

  5. Turkey 2006 Progress Report Turkey’s approach to minority rights remainsunchanged. According to the Turkish authorities, under the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne, minorities in Turkey consist exclusively of non-Muslim religious communities. The minorities associated in practice by the authorities with the Treaty of Lausanne are Jews, Armenian Christians and Greek Orthodox Christians. However, there are other communities in Turkey which, in the light of the relevant international and European standards, could qualify as minorities. (Euroean Commission, Turkey 2006 Progress Report)

  6. General View • Extensive ethnic and religious diversity. • The twolargest minority groups: • Alevis (a religious minority) and • Kurds (some ofwho are Alevis) • About 47 different ethnic groups. • 1923 Treaty of Lausanne • Citizens ‘of Turkey’ (in Turkish Turkiyeli – of Turkey) or Turks.

  7. Alevis are minorities because… • Different outwardly from Sunni Muslims • They do not fast inRamadan, but do during the Ten Days of Muharram (the Shi’Icommemorationof Imam Husayn’s martyrdom). • They do not prostrate themselves during prayer. • They do not have mosques. • They do not have obligatory formal almsgiving,although they have a strong principle of mutualassistance.

  8. Alevis • An estimated 7-million Alevis, • Aspects of bothShi’a and Sunni Islam and the traditions of other religions found inAnatolia as well. • Men and womenworshipping together through oratory, poetry, and dance in Cem houses which has not legal status. • Alevism as a heterodox Muslim sect by Gov. • Some Alevis and radicalSunnis maintainAlevis are not Muslims.

  9. Alevis

  10. Problems of Alevis • Permission to build a Cem house. • The Diyanet issued a letter toauthorities stating that Cem houses violateIslamic principles and Turkish law. • Alevi doctrines or beliefs in religiousinstruction classes in public schools. • No allocation specific funds for Alevi activities or religious leadership by the Diyanet.

  11. Demands of Alevis • Inclusion of the Alevi faith in school textbooks. • Financial support from the government for the construction ofAlevi places of worship. • The allocation of funds for the community from thestate budget…

  12. Kurds • The largest ethnic minority in Turkey (15 million). • South-easternand eastern Turkey, although a large number have migrated to cities in westernTurkey. • About half of all Kurds worldwide live in Turkey. Most of the rest live in adjacent regions of Iran, Iraq, and Syria. Turkey's censuses do not list Kurds as a separate ethnic group. • No legal barriers to ethnic Kurds’ participation in political and economic affairs but…

  13. The Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), the best known and most radical of the Kurdish movements, launched a guerilla campaign in 1984 for an ethnic homeland in the predominantly Kurdish southeast. Thousands died and hundreds of thousands became refugees in the conflict between the PKK and the army in the 1980s and 1990s.

  14. Kurdish people

  15. Kurds (language) • Pose a threat to Turkish national unity. • An active Kurdish separatist movement in southeastern Turkey since 1984. • Language suppression. • In Turkey, two major Kurdish dialects are spoken: Kermanji, and Zaza

  16. Kurdish Language • Prohibition of use of Kurdish in all government institutions, including the courts and schools. • During the 1960s and again in the mid-1970s, Kurdish intellectuals attempted to start Kurdish-language journals and newspapers. None of these publications survived for more than a few issues • Broadcasting (both radio and TV) in non-Turkish languages, including Kurdishdialects, began on 7 June 2004 on the state-owned national broadcaster TRT. • Private language courses in Kurdish opened across Turkey in 2004, including inVan, Batman and Sanliurfa. • Illegal to carry out political campaigning in any language other than Turkish.

  17. Problems of Kurds • Government has tried to destroy their Kurdish identity and that they suffer economic disadvantage and human rights violations. • Thousands died and hundreds of thousands became refugees in the conflict between the PKK and the army in the 1980s and 1990s.

  18. Armenians • Most Armenians living in Turkey are concentrated in and around Istanbul. • The Armenians support their own newspapers and schools. • Two daily newspapers in Armenian language and one weekly newspaper in Turkish.

  19. Greeks • There are fewer than 2,500 Greek Orthodox Christians in Turkey. • The World Directory of Minorities (1997) states that “There are probably 3,000 ageing Greek Christians, mainly in Istanbul, the residue of 80,000 still there in 1963. Formal expulsions police harassment and a climate of fear and popular animosity have since then reduced the community to its present number.”

  20. Jews • The Jewish minority is neither ethnically nor linguistically homogeneous. • Most of its members are Sephardic Jews whose ancestors were expelled from Spain by the Roman Catholic Inquisition in 1492. • They speak Ladino, a variant of fifteenth-century Spanish with borrowings from several other languages. • Specail attention not to have problem with the state. • Following the establishment of Israel in 1948, an estimated 30,000 Jews immigrated to the new state. By 1965 the Jewish minority had been reduced to an estimated 44,000, most of whom lived in Istanbul, where many Jewish men operated shops and other small businesses. • A weekly newspaper called Shalom in Hebrew.

  21. Arabs • In 1995 Turkey's ethnic Arab population was estimated at 800,000 to 1 million. • The Arabs are heavily concentrated along the Syrian border, especially in Hatay Province, which France, having at that time had mandatory power in Syria, ceded to Turkey in 1939. • Arabs then constituted about two-thirds of the population of Hatay (known to the Arabs as Alexandretta), and the province has remained predominantly Arab.

  22. People from the Caucasus • Three small but distinct ethnic groups (aside from the more numerous Armenians) have their origins in the Caucasus Mountains: • The Circassians • The Georgians (including the Abkhaz) • The Laz. Approximately

  23. International Conventions • Turkey has not signed the Council of Europe Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities or the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages.

  24. Turkey’s policy There is no policy except • “We DON’T recognize…” • “We DON’T do…” • “We DON’T practise…”

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