The Encyclopedia of Islam and hate speech

Prof. Mumtazer Turkone
Prof. Mumtazer Turkone


Date posted: January 27, 2014

MÜMTAZER TÜRKÖNE

The Encyclopedia of Islam, a project backed by the Turkish Religious Affairs Foundation (TDV), has finally been completed after 30 years of hard work. This 44-volume work signifies the current level of Turkish theology and social sciences.

The TDV established an institute, the Center for Islamic Research (İSAM), to this end. The center has been populated by Turkey’s best experts in their areas of specialization. A big secretariat and documentation center was established. Worldwide documentation support was provided to the authors contributing to the articles. I know that work on the encyclopedia has been extremely fastidious as I, too, have written an article for it. This huge project has produced very lustrous work in a period spanning more than a quarter of a century.

Over the weekend, a ceremony was held to mark the end of the work for three projects, including the encyclopedia. At the ceremony, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan gave a speech in which he sacrificed this simple achievement to the sharp rhetoric of daily politics. With a gross example of hate speech, the prime minister humiliated all religious scholars who don’t think like him. His obvious target was Fethullah Gülen, but it is clear that he also attacked anyone who doesn’t think like him with phrases such as “false prophets,” “fake mystics” and “so-called scholars.” This denigration is problematic especially in terms of secularism. Indeed, the prime minister hurls gross insults at religious interpretations that diverge from his own. In his capacity as a prime minister, he imposes his beliefs and acts onto those who do not think like him. One step beyond these remarks would be the prime minister’s supporters’ resorting to violence against those he places on the bull’s eye.

This hate speech targets not only divergent religious interpretations but also anyone who criticizes the government’s policies. He recently accused Muharrem Yılmaz, the head of Turkey’s elite business club the Turkish Industrialists and Businessmen’s Association (TÜSİAD), of treason for saying, “Foreign investment will not come to a country in which there is no respect for the rule of law.” For a long time there were rumors that the prime minister would send tax inspectors to businessmen who would not surrender to him. The prime minister’s remarks are not part of polemics, but are open threats. The prime minister first accused the head of TÜSİAD of treason and then threatened him publicly: “After you said that, how will you promote your business with the prime minister? You will get your response at that time.” In other words, he said, “You will be dismissed when you apply for business with the state.” TÜSİAD comprises the most powerful and richest entrepreneurs. It wouldn’t be difficult to predict the magnitude of this threat to the fundamental rights of ordinary people. The prime minister controls the organs of a huge state apparatus. The judiciary has been canceled out in all respects. Even prosecutors and judges cannot save themselves from the prime minister’s rage.

This rage and flame is not normal. It indicates that the prime minister is in a difficult position. Feeling the heat from the graft probe, the prime minister is trying to thwart these pressures using hate speech. Hate speech will amplify the polarization of society. It will make for a more organized and lumped voter base sticking to the prime minister. This solidification of the voter bank will consolidate the national vote for the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) in the local elections slated for March 30. By deliberately pushing limits in his hate speech, the prime minister intends to achieve this.

Will he be successful? This time, the prime minister is employing his hate speech against the conservative voters who had backed him. In other words, he is destroying the very ground on which he stands. Therefore, he is simply damaging himself. We will see the outcome two months from now.

Source: Todays Zaman , January 27, 2014


Related News

Power struggle for the state or deep rift about Turkey?

As an external observer, I see a profound rift having taken place between Erdoğan — more than anybody else in the AKP — and the Hizmet movement; and that has much less to do with the power struggle than a resistance to another massive, individual attempt to accumulate power in one person.What has defined Erdoğan’s way with various social segments since 2011 is to alienate, antagonize, suppress and devour. So was his pattern with the dissident Kurds, Alevis, leftists, liberals and now Hizmet.

Turkish businessmen have first iftar with Syrian refugees in Hatay

A group of Turkish businessman traveled to Kilis province on Wednesday to join an iftar dinner with Syrian refugees, according to media reports. After iftar, one of the Syrian refugees gave a speech in Turkish, saying: “We are refugees here and you have left your homes and your children and you have come here to have iftar with us. We are very happy and grateful for what you have done for us.”

SCF Reveals Mass Torture And Abuse In An Unofficial Detention Facility In Turkey’s Capital

“I heard all kinds of curse and swearing against my family during the interrogation. They threatened me with raping my family members. I saw one man who had a black eye on his eyes. I witnessed another man as having difficulty in walking because police shoved a baton into his anus. So many victims have marks in their bodies from abuse and torture.”

MHP: Gov’t should not harass its citizens who open Turkish schools abroad

Vural said that if the government does not protect its citizens who are involved in the Turkish schools — which are affiliated with the Hizmet movement, inspired by the teachings of US-based Turkish cleric Fethullah Gülen — but instead complains about them to international governments, questions need to be asked.

Gülen calls for support to a [presidential] candidate with true integrity

Commenting on the upcoming presidential elections on Sunday, Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen has urged Turks not to cast their vote for a candidate who oppresses citizens, does injustice to them and disregards the rule of law.

Turkey’s Brain Drain and the Disappearing Academic Freedom

Hasan was the luckiest because he was not in Turkey during the coup. He was studying abroad on July 15th and learned the coup through the Internet. He was supposed to go back to Turkey but he decided not to do so because of the news on the immense purging in mostly the government and some private institutions. Few days after the coup he learned that he was dismissed from his position at a state university.

Latest News

Fethullah Gulen – man of education, peace and dialogue – passes away

Fethullah Gülen’s Condolence Message for South African Human Rights Defender Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Hizmet Movement Declares Core Values with Unified Voice

Ankara systematically tortures supporters of Gülen movement, Kurds, Turkey Tribunal rapporteurs say

Erdogan possessed by Pharaoh, Herod, Hitler spirits?

Devious Use of International Organizations to Persecute Dissidents Abroad: The Erdogan Case

A “Controlled Coup”: Erdogan’s Contribution to the Autocrats’ Playbook

Why is Turkey’s Erdogan persecuting the Gulen movement?

Purge-victim man sent back to prison over Gulen links despite stage 4 cancer diagnosis

In Case You Missed It

Government purges police officers who exposed massive corruption

‘A bridge should not demolish other bridges,’ says scholar Gülen

Uplifting Orphans in Moldova

Turkey’s post-coup crackdown hits ‘Gulen schools’ worldwide

What Erdogan and Khomeini Have in Common

Torture – Turkish prisoner says tied to chair, pushed into sea while under custody

Erdoğan has to respect civil society

Copyright 2025 Insightful Neighbor