• Reklam
+ Konuyu Yanıtla
3 sonuçtan 1 --- 3 arası gösteriliyor

Konu: Turcophobia

  1. #1

    Kayıt Tarihi
    07-05-2005
    Mesajlar
    12
    Karizma Gücü
    0

    Turcophobia

    TURCOPHOBIA

    ...It is a term describing a group of people who have formed their collective identity around the hatred of a race, ethnic or religious group. Turkophobia, is especially common in the Middle East and Balkans and among the some collectives in US and Europe where individuals have severe difficulties to develop their independent mature identity. Small proto-nations, or tribal collections of people have been found to develop hatred of Turks into a semi-religion and almost an art form thus establishing and verifying their very own identity and character. There is almost no cure for this evil bacteria. A lust for blood, preferably of Muslim or Turkish, is the most obvious symptom. A runaway strain of this illness recently has caused much death and destruction in the Balkans: an another Turkocaust which has taken place several times in the last 200 years. Researchers are still trying to find a
    cure.

    TURKOPHOBIA: ITS SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL ROOTS
    By Sabirzyan BADRETDIN

    The roots of turkophobia go back centuries. Some stem from specific historical events, such as the Russo-Turkish wars, the Tatar-Mongol invasion of Russian principalities, the wars between Russia and the Tatar khanates, the conflicts between the Ottoman empire and its colonial vassals, etc. These historical events are usually preserved in the collective consciousness of the nations who were historical adversaries of the Turkic peoples. On an individual level, these events become transformed into personal prejudices towards the contemporary descendants of the earlier Turks. When an Armenian terrorist kills a Turkish diplomat and justifies his crime by what happened seven decades ago, before he was even born, he unwittingly exposes the complex interaction of historical, political, social and psychological factors that form the basis of turkophobia.
    Another source of turkophobia is religious prejudice. Since most Turkic nations are Islamic, all the negative stereotypes of fundamentalist Islamic intolerance and violence are inevitably projected onto the Turkic peoples, despite the fact that most individual Turks are either secular or adhere to peaceful and inoffensive interpretations of Islam. The EU’s recent rejection of Turkey is a vivid example of such prejudice.
    One more factor that contributes to turkophobia is the geographical location of the Turkic lands. Most Turkic lands are located at the so-called "fault lines" of civilizations. According to Samuel P. Huntington’s theory of clashing civilizations, international conflicts are most likely to arise between nations that share common borders but belong to different religious civilizations. There are seven or eight civilizations in the world: Western, Sinic (Confusian), Hindu, Christian Orthodox, Islamic, Japanese, Latin America and, perhaps, African. Among these, Islam is the only one that shares its "borders" with most other civilizations. Many Turkic nations happen to be located at the fault lines dividing these supranational entities. Even in the absence of conflicts, these cultural, religious and political hostilities take their toll on the image of Turkic peoples held by the world.
    Yet another source of turkophobia is the government-sponsored propaganda within the states that either border on Turkic countries or have Turkic minorities in their midst. Very often this propaganda is vague and indirect but its detrimental effect is, nevertheless, very damaging. For example, Greek Cypriot politicians frequently resort to anti-Turkish rhetoric in order to deflect the public’s attention from domestic problems or to win elections on a wave of popular prejudice.
    In the former Soviet Union turkophobia in the form of Tatar-bashing was especially evident during World War II. Stalin unjustly accused the whole Crimean Tatar nation of collaboration with the Nazis and exiled it from its native Crimea. He also introduced special medals and orders commemorating Dmitry Donskoy and other Russian military chiefs famous for successfully fighting against the Tatar-Mongol invaders in the 14th-15th centuries. Stalin’s frequent invocation of the Tatar yoke as a metaphorical analogy to Hitler’s invasion of Russia resulted in an outburst of tatarophobia, directed against the modern Kazan Tatars, despite the fact that the latter had little in common with the Mongols of the Middle Ages.
    Stereotypes of modern popular culture are another rich source of virulent turkophobia. As an example, let’s take "Midnight Express," a profoundly disturbing film about an American who was busted for trying to smuggle hashish out of Turkey and had to spend five years in the squalor and terror of a Turkish prison. The film was released in 1978 and for two decades reenforced the negative image of Turkey in the US. Russian popular folklore also supplies many examples of turkophobia. A popular Russian proverb, "An uninvited guest is worse than a Tatar" (which originally referred to the Tatar-Mongols but is frequently used to taunt modern Tatars) was recently changed to "An uninvited guest is *better* than a Tatar".
    The struggle against ethnic prejudice aimed at the Turkic peoples may succeed only when its specific origins are taken into consideration. For example, the public must be educated about past historic events, the religious practices and beliefs of the Turkic peoples, and the present state of cultural and intellectual life in the Turkic nations. Combating prejudices in a thoughtful, logical and methodical way through education and outreach may be the most promising strategy in the battle against intolerance
    KAneSeKAneSeKAneSe
    Karadenizliler Birliği

  2. #2
    Doomhammer1903 adlı üyenin avatarı
    Kayıt Tarihi
    15-04-2005
    Mesajlar
    999
    Karizma Gücü
    8
    Yes thanks for writting this document. Turkophobia unfortunatly plagues this planet...

    I am a Turk. Hath not a Turk eyes? Hath not a Turk hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions; fed with the same food, hurt with the same weapons, subject to the same diseases, healed by the same means, warmed and cooled by the same winter and summer as anyone else is? If you prick us do we not bleed? If you tickle us do we not laugh? If you poison us do we not die? And if you wrong us shall we not revenge?

    Yes an alteration of Shylock's speech (Merchant of Venice). I do hope you get the message I'm trying to convey. Why this prjudice and hatred, we are all the same in the end. We are all imperfect human beings on this godforsaken planet, why can't all people's on this planet get along? Why develop an irrational hatred for a group of people? We may have different backgrounds, ideas and motifs but whatever man's purpose is on this world, I'm sure that it wasn't to hate and kill each other over such petty reasons. Such a pity that most people on this planet (especially in the Western World) remain ignorant and careless towards other men. The lack of genuine interest and respect has led to the world being the way it is today...

    Long story short: Do not hate us, for we are like you as you are like us.

    Note: It is illegal to smuggle hashish so that guy in the movie had it coming...

  3. #3
    Misafir KONTRTEROR adlı üyenin avatarı
    Kayıt Tarihi
    21-05-2006
    Mesajlar
    102
    Karizma Gücü
    0
    thanks al ot.

 

 

Bölüm Açıklaması

  • Yeni konu açmak için giriş yapmalısınız.
  • Bu bölümde konulara mesaj yazabilirsiniz.
  • Eklenti yükleyebilmek için giriş yapmalısınız.
  • Mesajlarınızı düzenlemek için giriş yapmalısınız.
  •