White_Turks

White Turks

White Turks

Social group of Turkey


White Turks (Turkish: Beyaz Türkler) is a term used in Turkey for the urban population that embraced or directly benefited from Turkey’s modernization. They are often generalized as embracing values such as secularism, Western enlightenment, positivism and republicanism. White Turks are in contrast to the so-called Black Turks (Turkish: Kara Türkler or Siyah Türkler), a name for the conservative, Islamic, and typically less privileged among the originally rural Anatolian population.[1] The two terms are related to the emergence of a middle class since the end of the 20th century, and is an expression of elite consciousness and also a contempt for a section of the population which is seen as backwards.[citation needed] Civilizing efforts had been part of the imagination of all Turkish elites since the Tanzimat reforms.[1]

The Republic Protests took place in 2007 in support of the Kemalist ethos, avowing state secularism, against the perceived Islamization of Turkey under the ruling Justice and Development Party.

Anand Giridharadas describes the dichotomy between white and black Turks as "an extraordinary culture war over what it means to be a Turk":

The battle — waged in national politics but also in life’s daily minutiae — has become, literally, black and white. In one corner are “white Turks,” who revere the republic’s founder, Kemal Atatürk, and his mission to remake Turkey in Europe’s image — secular, republican, purged of its Ottoman legacies. In the other corner are “black Turks,” conservative Muslims who, in a mostly Muslim nation, were marginalized for decades, excluded from the Turkish elite — until, in 2003, one of their own became a populist prime minister and began what many black Turks consider a healthy rebalancing and many white Turks, the politics of resentment or, worse, revenge.[2]

Tayyip Erdoğan often describes himself as a black Turk.[1][3] The term was also used by 2018 presidential candidate Muharrem İnce to describe himself, claiming that Erdoğan was no longer a black Turk.[4]

In an ironic approach to the conceptual pair, Mümin Sekman wrote in his book "Türk Usulü Başarı" that, among other things, black Turks listen to Arabesque and folk music, while white Turks prefer Western music and Turkish pop; black Turks have arranged marriages, while white Turks choose their own partners; white Turks meet at airports, while black Turks use bus terminals.[5]

Ertuğrul Özkök of Hürriyet considers himself a white Turk and generalizes the group as follows:

They live mainly in coastal regions, are sensitive when it comes to secularism, they drink alcohol, have a high purchasing power, a Western lifestyle and the women do not wear hijabs.[citation needed]

He also stated in 2014 that under the current rule of the AKP, white Turks have become the new oppressed group in Turkey after Kurds and Alevis, and that the increasingly marginalized white Turks must "learn to fight by defending their lifestyles".[6]

Origins

These terms are believed to have originally been coined by the late journalist Ufuk Güldemir [tr] in his 1992 book "Teksas Malatya". The term "white Turks" was meant to be analogous to the American WASP,[citation needed] and was used to describe an old elite who opposed the then-Prime Minister Turgut Özal because of his Kurdish origin, religiousness and lack of military service. The term was subsequently taken up by sociologist Nilüfer Göle and popularized by Turkish columnists, journalists and political scientists who used it to refer to various social groups in Turkey.

Grey Turks

Some observers, such as Ayşe Sözen and Nilüfer Narlı, also note the emergence of a third group of "Grey Turks", who are urbanized, well-educated and enjoy Western music and films, but are pious Muslims. Some use the term to refer to the aspiring black Turks that climbed the socio-economic ladder during the Turgut Özal era and gained momentum during the AKP's current rule.[7]

See also

Further reading

  • "White vs Black Turks: The Civilizing Process in Turkey in the 1990s" (PDF). Bayza Sumer.

References

  1. Giridharadas, Anand (2012-11-30). "In Turkey, Forging a New Identity". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 2018-04-08. Retrieved 2018-04-08.
  2. Mayr, Walter (2007-07-16). "Turkey's Powerful Prime Minister: Who Can Challenge Erdogan?". Spiegel Online. Archived from the original on 2017-10-06. Retrieved 2018-04-08.
  3. "İnce: Erdoğan Beyaz Türk, ben Türkiye'nin zencisiyim". Cumhuriyet. 2018-06-10. Archived from the original on 2018-06-12. Retrieved 2018-06-12.
  4. Sekmen, Mümin (2000). Türk Usulü Başarı. Istanbul: Arıtan Yayınevi. pp. 269–270. ISBN 9789753167185.
  5. "Özkök: Yeni ezilen kesim Beyaz Türkler". Ensonhaber (in Turkish). 2014-04-05. Archived from the original on 2014-04-08. Retrieved 2018-04-08.
  6. Akarçeşme, Sevgi (2012-08-05). "A new class of Hybrid Turks emerging between White and Black Turks". Today's Zaman. Archived from the original on 2012-08-07.

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