Civil Society And Islam In Turkey

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    Civil Society and Islam in Turkey

    Sinem Grbey

    [email protected]

    Columbia University

    Spring 2006

    Graduate Student Conference

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    Introduction:

    Civil society has become once more an attractive field of study among political

    theorists. The revival of the concept of civil society in the aftermath of the collapse of the

    Soviet Union placed it in opposition to the demonic state. Moreover, civil society is often

    idealized not only as a necessary sphere, but also as a sufficient phenomenon in itself in

    the process of democratization. While, on the one hand, the necessity of the concept in

    democratization is indisputable, the possible abuses of civil society should be kept in

    mind before fetishizing it in the first place. As Norton claims: Societies do not take two

    tablets of civil society and wake up the next morning undergoing democratization.

    1

    Even if civil society is often in opposition to state power and political society, the

    key role of the state in putting into effect what has been achieved in civil society and in

    protecting basic rights and liberties of individual members cannot be ignored. Without

    the power of the state, civil society has the potential to degenerate into a sphere of civil

    warfare over ethnic, religious, and class-based issues. It is important to stress that civil

    society cannot be a substitute for government.2 While untamed state power stands in the

    way of a democratic society, limited state power issine qua non for a democratic order.

    In the Turkish context, where the state traditionally has held unrestrained power at

    the expense of society, the condition of civil society and its relation to democracy and

    Islam raise important questions. In this paper, I will delve into the dynamics which stirred

    up the development of civil society in Turkey and scrutinize the tendency to

    conceptualize civil society and state as two autonomous spheres disconnected from each

    1 Augustus R. Norton, Introduction, Civil Society in the Middle East (Vol.2), ed. Augustus RichardNorton (E. J. Brill: Leiden, 1996) 6.2 Augustus R. Norton, The Future of Civil Society in the Middle East, The Middle East Journal 47.2.1993: 215

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    other. The concept of civil society in Turkey is taken for granted and has been praised

    due to its opposition to the state. This paper will question this unconditional celebration.

    In this attempt, the top-down modernization project and the paradoxical attitude of the

    state utilizing Islam both as a tool to build national identity and as the ultimate threat to

    the secular establishment will be scrutinized. Although civil society opened the channels

    to contest the authority of state institutions, the lack of a mediating sphere between the

    state and society coupled with the absence of a weak collective identity stands in the way

    of the consolidation of democracy in Turkey.

    I will argue that the project to create an ethnically and religiously homogeneoussociety imposed by the Kemalist elites and later by the military through three coup dtats

    stimulated a backlash and led to the reclaiming of marginalized identities in a much more

    pronounced way. Historically the Turkish state has consolidated its absolute power by

    controlling politicians and governments and has always been suspicious towards civil

    societys influence over democratic decision-making. Moreover, the states explicit

    attempt to cut the connections between civil and political societies both through

    constitutional arrangements and military interventions whenever civil society gained

    influence aroused distaste on the part of the civil society against the state. As a result,

    while the emergence of civil society against the strong statist discourse has been

    celebrated as the ultimate step in the consolidation of democracy in Turkey, the necessary

    connection between civil society and the state through political society has been ignored.

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    Civil Society in Theory:

    Today, the term civil society still continues to embody anti-state connotations.

    There is a tendency, especially in Turkey, to confuse nongovernmental aspects of the

    concept with anti-statism. During the anti-communist opposition in Eastern Europe in the

    1980s, civil society as a slogan emphasized its autonomy from the state.3 The revival of

    the concept in such a context formulated civil society and state as mutually exclusive

    phenomena. Jean Cohen and Andrew Arato in their groundbreaking workCivil Society

    and Political Theory propose a three-part model which differentiates between civil

    society, the state, and the economy.

    4

    In their formulation, civil society is defined as thesphere of social interaction between economy and state, composed above all of the

    intimate sphere (especially the family), the sphere of associations (especially voluntary

    associations), social movements, and forms of public communication.5

    On the other hand, in this tripartite model the sphere of civil society does not

    comprise all social life outside of the state and the economy. Cohen also distinguishes

    political and economic societies from civil society in the sense that political society

    encapsulates political parties, parliaments, and political organizations and mediates

    between the state and civil society; and economic society is composed of the

    organizations of production, distribution, firms, cooperatives, and institutions of

    bargaining such as unions and councils and has the mediating role between civil society

    and the economy. What distinguishes the actors of political and economic societies is that

    3 Aye Kadolu, Civil Society, Islam and Democracy in Turkey, The Muslim World 95. 2005: 24.4 Jean Cohen and Andrew Arato, Civil Society and Political Theory (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1992).5 Cohen and Arato ix.

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    they are after state power and economic production respectively.6 On the other hand, the

    political role of the actors in civil society is limited to the politics of identity, influence,

    inclusion, and reform.7

    However, while some movements may use the very tools of civil society in

    organizing themselves, their ultimate aim is to seize state power and destroy the very

    channels to which they owe their existence, seeking in the process to suppress plurality in

    society. As Cohen and Arato argue:

    these fundamentalist projects lead to the breakdown of societal steering and productivity and the suppression of social plurality, all of which are then

    reconstituted by the forces of order only by dramatically authoritarian means.Such an outcome leads to the collapse of the forms of self-organization that inmany cases were the major carriers of the revolutionary process: revolutionarysocieties, councils, movements.8

    Cohen and Arato point out to the self-limitation aspect of civil society which most

    theorists discussing this issue neglect. As I have suggested before, in this formulation, the

    actors in civil society only aim to influence democratic will-formation and not to seize

    political or economic power.9 Their role is limited to the extent that they can influence

    existing forms of democracy. The movements flourishing in civil society bring the

    discussion of new issues into the public sphere. They work for the expansion of rights,

    for the defense of the autonomy of civil society and for its further democratization.10 And

    they cannot try to replace the institutions of representative democracy. 11 As Norton

    6 Jean Cohen, Interpreting the Notion of Civil Society, Toward a Global Civil Society, ed. MichaelWalzer (Oxford, UK: Berghahn Books, 1995) 37.7 Cohen 39.8 Cohen and Arato 16.9 Jurgen Habermas, Between Facts and Norms (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1996) 371.10 Cohen and Arato 19.11 Ibid 19-20.

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    argues, Civility may be learned in the school of civil society, but the lesson soon may be

    forgotten without an enforcing authority.12

    Following the three-part model of Cohen and Arato, Habermas points to the

    limited scope of action of civil society:

    Civil society can directly transform itself, and it can have at most an indirecteffect on the self-transformation of the political system; generally, it has aninfluence only on the personnel and programming of this system. But in no waydoes it occupy the position of a macrosubject supposed to bring society as a wholeunder control and simultaneously act for it.13

    In this structure, the connection of civil society to political society is essential. While

    civil society must be eager to inform and influence political society, the latter must beopen to the influence of the former. In other words, as much as civil society should

    respect the decision making power of political society, the latter should do so by being

    open to the information and feedback that it gets from the former. It is under this mutual

    relationship that civil society fulfills its role in the process of democratization.

    In the following sections, I will look at how these delicate relationships developed in

    Turkey in the shadow of state-secularism.

    Civil Society, Islam and Democracy in Turkey:

    According to Ernest Gellner among the major world civilizations and religions

    Islam is unique in terms of its immunity to secularization.14 Moreover, he claims that

    Islam exemplifies a social order which seems to lack much capacity to provide political

    countervailing institutions or associations, which is atomized without much individualism,

    and which operates effectively without intellectual pluralism.15 First of all, the absurd

    12 Augustus R. Norton, The Future of Civil Society in the Middle East, 215.13 Habermas 372.14 Ernest Gellner, Conditions of Liberty: Civil Society and Its Rivals (NY: Penguin Books, 1994)15.15 Ibid 29.

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    referral to Islam as a unified whole is an inaccurate assumption. Secondly, Gellners

    assumption that secularization is a necessary condition for the development of civil

    society does not reflect the realities in Turkey. In fact, later on Gellner pointed out that

    Turkey was an exception to his rule by saying Islam is unique among world religions,

    and Turkey is unique within the Muslim world 16. Yet, even if he stresses the inner

    contradictions of the Turkish modernization project, his discussion on Turkey fails to

    explain what secularism means in the Turkish context and how if affects the development

    of civil society. In Turkey secularization has been one of the major projects of the

    Republican elite in an attempt to elevate the society to the level of contemporarycivilization. Secularization in the form of a project (laicism) paved the way to a

    dialectical choreography that negated itself by generating its own rival says Aye

    Kadolu.17 A revisit to the Ottoman-Turkish history will make clear that it is not Islam,

    but secularization in the form of a project imposed from above that is the rival of civil

    society in its attempts to silence any type of religious voice in society.

    Civil Society in the Ottoman Empire:

    The Turkish Republic inherited a strong bureaucratic state from the Ottoman

    Empire. As Mardin points out, the Ottoman state explicitly sought to prevent the

    formation of economically and politically powerful groups that could function

    independently from the central government.18 The Ottomans were convinced that the

    only way to maintain an ethnically, religiously and linguistically heterogeneous empire

    16 Ernest Gellner, The Turkish Option in Comparative Perspective, Rethinking Modernity and NationalIdentity in Turkey, ed. Sibel Bozdoan and Reat Kasaba (Seattle: Washington University Press, 1997)233.17 Aye Kadolu, Civil Society, Islam and Democracy in Turkey, The Muslim World 95. 2005: 25.18erif Mardin, Power, Civil Society and Culture in the Ottoman Empire, Contemporary Studies inSociety and History 11.3 1969: 259, 264; see also Ahmet Evin, Communitarian Structures and SocialChange, Modern Turkey: Continuity and Change, ed. Ahmet Evin (Opladen: Leske and Budrich, 1984)12, 16.

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    was through empowering the state apparatus and repressing groups that could potentially

    challenge their power. The Ottoman preoccupation with concentrating power in the hands

    of the ruling elite in order to maintain several distinct groups together under a single state,

    coupled with lack of intermediate bodies, led to the emergence of a center-periphery

    cleavage along cultural lines19. This wide gap between the center and the periphery has

    obstructed communication among various groups, leading to a disparity in the outlook,

    attitude and values among the ruling elite, local notables and ordinary subjects.20 As a

    consequence of the isolation of the ruling elite from the rest of the population, the elite

    came to see the ordinary subjects as unsophisticated and to perceive themselves superiorto them21 which, in turn, ingrained the idea of top-down modernization into Ottoman-

    Turkish political culture. The modernization project of the Turkish Republic has been

    carried out in the same spirit where the masses have been regarded as passive recipients

    who could be molded according to the ideals of the enlightened elite. As Heper suggests,

    the Ottoman desire for a strong state that would regulate the polity and society from

    above left a particular imprint on democracy in Turkey.22

    Civil Society and Democracy in the early Republic:

    The decline of the Ottoman Empire from the nineteenth century onwards and its

    collapse in the following century deepened the Republican elites perception of the need

    to empower the state in order to maintain territorial unity of the country. In this context,

    the Turkish state consolidated its power by representing itself as the carrier of highest

    ethical values and appointed itself to the role of civilizing the irrational masses. Through

    19 Metin Heper, The Ottoman legacy and Turkish politics, Journal of International Affairs, 54 (Fall 2000):66.20 Evin, 12.21 Heper, The Ottoman legacy and Turkish politics 67.22 Ibid, 71.

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    neutral stateAfter Atatrk passed away, however, the state elites on the wholeabandoned the belief in the potential of the people to develop and become morerational. Thus, they converted the Atatrkian approach to politicsinto anideologyNot unexpectedly, secularism became the backbone of the officialideology in question.25

    The fundamental ideal behind the Kemalist project, as stated in the 1982 Constitution, is

    to attain the standards of contemporary civilization.26 The elites were convinced that

    every element in society which could stand as an obstacle to the holy ideal should be

    wiped out immediately in an authoritarian manner. Islam became the main target as it

    began to be associated with the ills that brought the Ottoman Empires demise. As Islam

    became the scapegoat, a series of radical secular reforms were implemented

    27

    , andsecularism became the fundamental principle of the official state ideology. On the other

    hand, while radical reforms have been adopted to terminate the role of Islam in society,

    secularism in the Turkish context does not necessarily mean the separation of religion

    from politics. In fact, the paradoxical attitude of the state to utilize Islam both as a tool to

    achieve national integration and as a threat to the secular establishment resulted in a

    pathology that still haunts Turkey today.

    Secularism in the Turkish Context:

    During the independence movement, the military/bureaucratic elite utilized Islam

    as the supra-identity in order to mobilize different Muslim ethnic groups within the

    suggested national boundaries. In fact, the Treaty of Lausanne emphasized the common

    religious identity of different ethnic groups living within the boundaries of the new

    25 Metin Heper, The State, Religion and Pluralism: The Turkish Case in Comparative Perspective, BritishJournal of Middle Eastern Studies, 18. 1 (1991): 49.26 Turkey, The Constitutional Court of the Republic of Turkey, The Constitution of the Republic of Turkey,Feb. 2006 < http://www.anayasa.gov.tr/engconst/const.htm>.27 The abolition of the Caliphate, Islamic Law and religious schools (medrese), the adoption Swiss CivilCode in 1924, the banning of monasteries (tekke), Islamic brotherhoods (tarikat) in 1925.

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    Republic, and recognized only the non-Muslims as a minority. The utilization of Islam as

    the basis of national identity continued in the post-independence period as well. In an

    attempt to define the boundaries of true Islam, the Presidency of Religious Affairs, a

    public institution directly attached to the Office of the Prime Minister, was founded in

    1924 after the abolition of Sharia on the grounds that religion and religious services

    should be kept out of politics28. The duties of the Presidency of Religious Affairs are to

    execute the works concerning the beliefs, worship, and ethics of Islam, enlighten the

    public about their religion, and administer the sacred worshipping places, and, moreover,

    the Presidency of Religious Affairs aims to provide national unity and solidarity by being above all kinds of political thought, and introduce the sublime principles of our

    religion (Islam) to our citizens, and provide them with true knowledge about the religion

    of Islam, and increase their devotion to religious and ethical values.29 In the Turkish

    context, in contrast to what elites claim, secularism does not mean the separation of

    religion from politics, but rather the control of Islam through institutional means. The

    state this time appoints itself to the role of interpreting and disseminating true Islam and

    punishing those who deviate from the state religion. As Davison portrays it, the secular

    reforms did not remove Islam from the state, rather they created a new structure of

    control and oversight between the state and Islam in which the republics founders sought

    to use the powers of state to interpret, oversee, and administer (including financially)

    religious doctrine and practice.30 The paradoxical attitude of the state towards religion,

    using it as a tool to achieve national integrity and at the same time declaring it as the

    28 Turkey, The Presidency of Religious Affairs, Preceding, Feb. 2006.29 The Presidency of Religous Affairs (Italics mine)30 Andrew Davison, Turkey, a Secular State? The Challenge of Description, The South AtlanticQuarterly 102:2/3. 2003: 338.

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    fundamental threat to the democratic establishment, rendered the relationship between

    Islam and civil society complex.

    Civil Society in the Shadow of Military Interventions:

    As a consequence of the states distrust towards the masses, who could potentially

    resist the modernization project, voluntary associations remained under the strict control

    of the state during the single-party rule of the Republican Peoples Party (1923-1950) 31.

    The transition to the multi-party era in 1950 not only marked Turkeys first experience

    with democracy32 but also the emergence of the military in the political arena to protect

    Kemalist principles through armed interventions almost in every ten years.

    33

    After adecade of democratic experimentation the military was convinced that the civilian

    government was not doing its job in protecting Kemalist principles. The rationale behind

    the 1960 coup dtat was to foster rights and freedoms which according to the military

    had been curtailed by the elected government which appealed to Islamic identity. The

    army overthrew the Democratic Party and executed its leaders. The 1961 constitution,

    following the military coup in 1960, was designed to guarantee free speech and free

    association. However, the alliance between the intelligentsia and the armed forces did not

    last more than a decade. The 1970s were years of extreme political instability. Political

    violence rose to incredible measures; there was almost no group and organization left

    31 Ergun zbudun, Contemporary Turkish Politics: Challenges to Democratic Consolidation (Boulder, CO:Lynne Rienner, 2000) 129.32 Actually three attempts to move Turkey to multi-party politics have taken place during the period

    between 1923 and 1950. The first attempt made by the Progressive Republican Party (TpCF) can beconsidered as a genuine opposition movement. It was suppressed by the Republican Peoples Party (CHP)

    because it was perceived as a threat to the secular foundation. The second attempt was sponsored byAtatrk in order to disprove the existing perception that Turkey was a dictatorship. As a result RepublicanFree Party (SCF) was founded, which was again considered as a threat to the supremacy of the RPP andwas enforced to abolish itself by the ruling elite. Finally, in 1946 the Democrat Party was founded by theexpelled members of the RPP. Even if the DP participated in the 1946 elections, the votes have been castopenly and counted secretly. Therefore, it will not be a mistake to argue the democratic period in Turkey

    based on fair elections started in 1950.33 The military intervened in Turkish politics three times: 1960-61, 1971-3, 1980-83.

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    undivided by ideological opposition, and economic problems were building up every day.

    The inability of the government to put an end to this situation of crisis and violence

    together with open attacks on national integrity and secularism, two vital areas for

    the military, served as major impetuses for the intervention of the Turkish military into

    politics on September 12th 1980 to once again establish the Kemalist ideology and

    strengthen state-centric politics. The military leaders who were preoccupied with the idea

    that Kemalist establishment was under serious attacks found the solution in history. They

    have tried to combine different and deeply conflicting discourses that Atatrk employed

    at different times. The outcome was what is called the Turkish-Islamic synthesis. Themilitary and bureaucratic elite were always preoccupied with delineating the acceptable

    boundaries of what it is to be a Turk, but now they also had to re-impose what it meant

    to be a Muslim as well. It was an issue they had been disregarding for a period. Thus,

    they have institutionalized further the states control over religion through compulsory

    religious education. Article 24 of the 1982 Constitution states: Education and instruction

    in religion and ethics shall be conducted under state supervision and control. Instruction

    in religious culture and moral education shall be compulsory in the curricula of primary

    and secondary schools34.

    While the 1960 coup was carried out to protect civil society from the repression of

    the state, the motivation behind the 1980 coup was to re-strengthen the state against civil

    society. In this attempt, the 1982 Constitution, written under the tutelage of the military,

    was designed to reduce citizen participation in politics. As zbudun claims, in this period

    political activity was reserved for political parties. The explicit aim was to repress a

    pluralistic democracy in which trade unions, voluntary associations, and public

    34 Article 24 of The Constitution of the Republic of Turkey.

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    professional associations played an open and active role in politics.35 According to the

    Article 33 of the Constitution, voluntary associations and trade unions were banned from

    engaging in any kind of political activity and having relationships with political parties.

    Yet, while this limitation had been lifted with the constitutional amendments in 1995 36, it

    simply made more rigid the already existing state-society dichotomy.

    Paradoxically, the coup which set out to destroy the institutions of civil society

    helped to strengthen the commitment to civilian politics, consensus-building, civil rights

    and issue-oriented associational activity, says Binnaz Toprak. 37 Similar to Topraks

    optimism, every movement flourishing in civil society has been perceived as a furtherstep towards democratization. The scholarship in the 1990s celebrated the emergence of

    civil society without looking at how this new sphere could fulfill its role in the

    consolidation of democracy.38 The very existence of a resistance against the state was

    perceived as sufficient to idealize civil society as the long awaited carrier of democracy.

    However, the relationship between political society and civil society has been ignored.

    Political society political parties, elected governments stands as the mediating sphere

    between the state and civil society in putting the demands of civil society into political

    arena through democratic means. The 1982 Constitution cut the connection between civil

    society and political society by banning voluntary associations and trade unions from

    engaging in political activity and having relationships with political parties. Moreover,

    the state not only restricted the influence of civil society in politics, but also the capacity

    35 zbudun, 130.36 In 1995, 15 Articles of the Constitution were amended right before the voting of the Customs UnionAgreement in the European Parliament. These amendments were related to enlarging political rights of thecivil servants, academics, trade unions and associations.37 Binnaz Toprak, Civil Society in Turkey, Civil Society in the Middle East (Vol.2), ed. AugustusRichard Norton (E. J. Brill: Leiden, 1996) 95.38 See Toprak; Yeim Arat, Toward a Democratic Society: The Womens Movement in Turkey in the1980s, Womens Studies Int. Forum 17. 1994.

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    of political parties in democratic decision-making through dissolving parties or giving

    military warnings.

    Necmettin Erbakan has made the most successful endeavor to organize religious

    groups around a political party. He managed to reorganize his party under a new name

    after each closure. From 1970s onwards, Erbakan launched several parties, including the

    National Order Party (1970-1971), the National Salvation Party (1972-1980), and finally

    the Welfare Party (1983-1998) 39 which was closed down by the Constitutional Court

    following the militarys indirect intervention. The February 28 incident, when a military

    warning demanding that Erbakan curtail the tide of Radical Islam

    40

    forced the WelfareParty to resign from the government, is usually defined as a post-modern coup or a

    soft coup among intellectuals. When Erbakan won the 1995 elections, a great tension

    arose between the secular elite and the government. The National Security Council on

    February 28, 1997 forced the government to enact a list of measures to prevent the rise of

    Islamic movements and to remind the Welfare Party government the armys role as the

    protector of the Kemalist heritage of the Republic. In the following months the

    government was forced to resign because of its failure to execute the decisions of the 28

    February and the Welfare Party and its leader, Necmettin Erbakan, were banned for five

    years from politics with a decree of the Constitutional Court. As a matter of fact, the

    Welfare Party, which had come to power through democratic elections, was closed down

    in the name of democracy and modernity. As Gnter Seufert points out:

    The most explicit result of the 28 February-process was a reaffirmation of thearmys legitimacy in interfering in politics whenever tenets as laicism, modern

    39 Birol A., Yeilada. The Virtue Party, Political Parties in Turkey, ed. Barry Rubin and Metin Heper.(London: Frank Cass, 2002) 62-81.40 Ben Lombardi, Turkey- The Return of the Reluctant Generals? Political Science Quarterly, 112.2.1997: 215.

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    lifestyle and national unity, solidarity and coherence were considered to bethreatened and whenever these tenets were ineffectively protected by policymakers.41

    The Constitutional Courts decision was legal in the sense that it was grounded in the

    Constitution imposed by the military, however, the legitimacy of the decision has been

    subject to intense debate, because it gave priority to the secular regime over the principle

    of democratic pluralism and disregarded the Islamic identity and its role in socio-

    political life.42

    In addition to the Islamists, pro-Kurdish political parties began to form from 1990

    onwards. Not surprisingly, these parties were closed down one by one as well, andreorganized themselves under different names.43 On the other hand, extreme Kurdish

    nationalists and Islamic fundamentalists formed illegal organizations and destabilized the

    regime more than a decade.44 The state has not been able to separate moderate Kurds and

    Islamists from extremist groups such as the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and

    Hizbullah, and has thus labeled every religious and ethnic discourse as a threat to the

    national security and secular establishment. The states failure to make this distinction

    led to the polarization of society into opposing groups like Kemalists, Islamists, Kurds,

    etc. These groups deny sharing a common culture and refuse to engage in communication

    with each other. Instead they all adopt totalizing discourses in terms of their own

    conceptions of good life.

    41 Gnter Seufert, The Impact of Nationalist Discourse on Civil Society, Civil Society in the Grip ofNationalism, ed. Stefanos Yerasimos, Gnter Seufert, Karin Vorhoff (Istanbul: Orient-Institut, 2000) 33.42 Fuat Keyman, Globalization, Civil Society and Islam: The question of Democracy in Turkey,Globalizing Institutions, ed. J. Jenson and B. De Sousa Santos (Ashgate: Aldershot, 2000) 209.43 See,Aylin Gney, The Peoples Democracy Party, Political Parties in Turkey, ed. Barry Rubin andMetin Heper. (London: Frank Cass, 2002) 122-137. for pro-Kurdish political parties in the Turkish history.44 See Birol A. Yeilada for a list of Islamic illegal organizations. Hizbullah was the major Islamistorganization aiming to establish an Islamic state in Turkey. See Ruen akr, Derin Hizbullah: slamciddetin Gelecei (stanbul: Metis Yaynlar, 2001).

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    In such a context, civil society organizations tend to be framed by big societal

    visions45 and not to have relations with political society. A study conducted by Aye

    Kadolu illustrates this. Kadolu has conducted research on three major Islamic non-

    governmental organizations in terms of their connections with political society whether

    they try to influence the agenda of political parties, i.e., interact with political society

    and their discourse whether they entail hierarchic, authoritarian, and organic

    characteristics.46 The three major Islamic nongovernmental organization that she reviews

    are: AK-DER (Women against Discrimination), ZGR-DER (Association for the

    Freedom of Thought and Educational Rights), and MAZLUM-DER (Organization forHuman Rights and Solidarity for Oppressed People). Kadolu shows that among the

    three nongovernmental organizations, only MAZLUM-DER seems to engage in a

    harmonious and balanced relationship with political society. The others view themselves

    as political organizations but seek to transform society by influencing the consciousness

    of people. Even if the constitutional ban which had curtailed the connection between civil

    and political society was lifted in 1995, there is still a tendency on the part of the civil

    society to refuse to be in connection with political society. However, as I have suggested,

    when the National Security Council declared Islamic movements as the primary enemy of

    democracy during the 28 February process, and forced the WP government to resign,

    the attitude of political society toward civil society, especially when its actors adopted an

    Islamic discourse, became very uncompromising. Hence, the result is the emergence of

    two autonomous spheres trying to legitimize themselves at the expense of each other.

    45 Keyman and Ahmet duygu, Globalization, Civil Society and Citizenship in Turkey: Actors,Boundaries and Discourses Citizenship Studies 7. 2003: 228.46 Kadolu 28.

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    Moreover, Kadolu shows that these organizations opt for a fundamental

    transformation of society along Islamic lines. While what they oppose is the existing

    political society, their opposition is also partly due to the inadequacies of political society

    itself. The inefficiency associated with political society as well as its corruption paves

    the way to the conception of an alternative view of politics that is more radical since it is

    above and beyond political society, says Kadolu.47 Her research shows that the more

    frequently these identities are barred from the public sphere, the more particular their

    causes have become. As Cohen and Arato suggest:

    Radical pluralismcannot be so radical as to exclude meaningful normativecoordination and commonality, however minimal, that is recognized, at leastimplicitly, by all of us insofar as we communicate and act togetherIn moderncivil societies a minimal or weak collective political identity can be shared by aplurality of groups, each with its own particular version of the good life.48

    Unfortunately, Turkey has not been able to generate such a weak collective political

    identity due to the hegemonic identity imposed from above. Hence, most groups, ethnic

    or religious, define themselves in terms of their differences, and express distaste for any

    kind of commonality with others. Gle claims that what is needed is at least an agreement

    over the rough boundaries of the political unit,49 yet, in Turkey that kind of agreement

    seems to be lacking. Civil society organizations tend to frame their discourses in the us

    vs. them dichotomy. More interestingly, even human rights associations have a clear

    definition of us. Some of these organizations choose to focus exclusively on human

    47 Ibid 37.48 Cohen and Arato 373.49 Nilfer Gle, Authoritarian Secularism and Islamist Politics: The Case of Turkey, Civil Society in theMiddle East (Vol.2), ed. Augustus Richard Norton (E. J. Brill: Leiden, 1996) 37.

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    rights violations inflicted upon certain persons and refuse to have dialogue with other

    organizations.50

    Fuat Keyman and Ahmet duygu while accepting the role of civil society in the

    process of democratization, call attention to the essentialist discourses about citizenship

    and identity. They argue that it would be a mistake to attribute in an ipso facto manner

    positivity to civil society since it also involves not only democratic discourses, but also

    essentialist identity claims, voiced by religious and ethnic fundamentalism, which argue

    for reconstructing the state-society relations in a communitarian basis.51 They emphasize

    the need to analyze the actors of civil society in terms of their discourses and strategies.They suggest that civil society in Turkey suffers a serious boundary problem, since it is

    not only a sphere for democratization, but also an important site where anti-democratic

    groups put their identities in practice. However, to struggle against the communitarian

    and anti-pluralistic discourses of the Islamic actors in civil society is one thing, and to

    regard every Islamic discourse as an attempt to suppress pluralism another. Turkey has

    suffered more than necessary because of the ruling elites adoption of the latter approach.

    It is true that within the Islamic movement, as in every movement, there are some groups

    which adopt an authoritarian and anti-democratic discourse, but we cannot ignore the

    ones that aim to expand civil freedoms within the borders of the democratic

    establishment.52

    50 See Gottfried Plagemann, Trkiyede nsan Haklari rgtleri: Farkli Kltrel evreler, Farklrgtler, Trkiyede Sivil Toplum ve Milliyetilik. Ed. Yerasimos, Gnter Seufert, Karin Vorhoff.Istanbul: letiim Yaynlar, 2001. 361-396. for detailed analysis of political fragmentation among humanrights associations in Turkey.51 Fuat Keyman and Ahmet duygu, Globalization, Civil Society and Citizenship in Turkey: Actors,Boundaries and Discourses Citizenship Studies 7. 2003: 22152 See Elizabeth zdalga, Civil Society and Its Enemies: Reflections on a Debate in the Lightof RecentDevelopments within the Islamic Student Movement in Turkey, Civil Society Democracy and The

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    Conclusion:

    The 2002 general elections which brought the Islamic-rooted Justice and

    Development Party (JDP) to power led to an intense debate over the future of Turkish

    politics, given the doom of the Welfare Party government. However, the JDP was quick

    to pronounce that it was not going to follow Erbakans path. The party denied an Islamic

    label and presented itself as a conservative-democratic political party committed to the

    secular establishment. The military and the government tend to stay neutral towards each

    other. Unfortunately, we do not see a similar enhancement in the relationship between the

    government and civil society. The JDP during its electoral campaigns continuouslyemphasized the need to include civil society organizations in the democratic decision-

    making process to close the gap between the state and society, thus to move Turkey to a

    more participatory democracy. This gesture of the party was promising for the long

    marginalized groups to have a say in politics. However, the JDP does not seem to hold its

    promise, the government excludes civil society organizations from the policy-formation

    processes53 and is not being loyal to its earlier dedication to religious pluralism. Actually,

    the current balanced relationship between the military and the government seems to be

    due to the governments commitment to state-secularism. The party is trying to gain

    legitimacy in the eyes of the skeptical secular elite but at the same time jeopardizing its

    relationship with civil society.

    Muslim World, ed. Elizabeth zdalga, Sune Persson. (Istanbul: Swedish Research Institute & Curzon Press,1997) 73-84.53 See Suna Tepe, Turkey's AKP: A Model "Muslim-Democratic" Party? Journal of Democracy 16.32005.

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    The Turkish history has been one of state interference in every aspect of social

    life. The authoritarian manner in which the modernization project has been implemented

    alienated large segments of society. As the gap between the state and society widened,

    the development of a viable civil society which could counterbalance the power of the

    state became complicated. The state marginalized the unfit ones in such a way that a

    common political identity which would hold different groups together could not be

    developed. The emergence of civil society against the absolute power of the state led to

    hopes that finally marginalized groups could participate in the political processes and

    democracy could be consolidated in the end. However, the states refusal to share powerwith mediating institutions led to the emergence of two autonomous spheres trying to

    gain legitimacy at the expense of each other. If civil society continues to gain power and

    legitimacy in the public eye, which seems to be the case, and if the state continues to curb

    participation, there is a chance that essentialist identity claims might gain more currency.

    In that case, the state will legitimize its interference in politics to save democracy as it did

    in the past and this vicious circle will continue to disturb Turkish politics.

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