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Turkey orders sermons on women’s rights

May 13, 2004 7:07 am By Robert Spencer

AliBardakoglu.jpg
Ali Bardakoglu

Will it work? I myself doubt it, but it’s an intriguing attempt. Now if we could get sermons on equal rights for non-Muslims and freedom of conscience for converts from Islam, we’ll be making real progress!

From the Chicago Tribune, with thanks to Nicolei:

ISTANBUL — Turkey’s young governing party, with roots in political Islam, has confounded critics and some supporters alike by transforming the nation’s 70,000 mosques into bully pulpits from which preachers advocate women’s rights and other democratic reforms.

The government’s Directorate of Religious Affairs, which dictates the all-important Friday sermons, has instructed the nation’s imams to turn their spiritual guidance to the arena of human rights and ridding Turkey of unwanted vestiges of traditional society.

Rather than the calls to holy war that echo through mosques in some parts of the world, worshipers here are being told that “honor killings,” in which men murder female relatives suspected of tarnishing the family name, are a sin as well as against the law.

Those attending services also are hearing about formerly taboo subjects, such as a need for equality of the sexes in the home and the workplace and women’s reproductive rights. …

The architect of the transformation is Ali Bardakoglu, the head of the Religious Affairs Directorate, which regulates religious practices in Turkey.

A former academic with a mild manner, Bardakoglu has taken the unusual step of consulting numerous women’s groups and physicians as part of an effort to craft sermons addressing women’s issues. …

Bardakoglu said the country’s religious practices must parallel the modernization under way in other sectors of Turkish society. Part of that transformation, he said, involves using the influences of imams to point out that abuses of human rights, particularly women’s rights, do not originate in Islam.

“In modern Middle Eastern society, when you say `women’s rights,’ not everyone or every country has the same understanding of the term,” he said. “Not only in Turkey but also throughout the Islamic world, we are trying to help these issues be better understood.”

Bardakoglu said the government would prefer that the imams write their own sermons, but he said the majority of the preachers could not deliver the right message because they lack the proper training and resources.

As a result, a committee of 16 religious scholars affiliated with his agency prepares the sermons for the Friday services, and the messages are dispatched across the country. The imams, who are civil servants, risk losing their jobs if they do not deliver the sermons, though they are free to make their own comments afterward.

Eventually, Bardakoglu said, he hopes a majority of imams will be allowed to craft their own sermons, reflecting the simultaneous progress of religion and democracy in Turkey.

Not everyone is pleased with the process. Some conservative preachers bristle at the control exercised from Ankara, the nation’s capital, angered as much by the meddling in religious affairs as the messages.

“In a secular state, which Turkey is supposed to be, this is not right,” said Abdullah Sezer, imam at a mosque in Istanbul’s conservative Fatih neighborhood. “But we do not have religious freedom in this country, the way they have it in the United States.”

But a younger imam, who asked that his name not be used, said the government plays an important role.

“As a citizen and as a Muslim, I think government control is helpful,” he said. “Without it, some mosques could go out of control.”

The government-dictated sermons would seem to violate the strict secular tenets on which modern Turkey was founded in 1923. But the definition of secular here differs slightly from the American practice of separating church and state by tolerating all religions equally. In Turkey, as in France, there is a stricter understanding of secularism, which results in a ban on wearing head scarves in schools or beginning a parliamentary session with a prayer.

Imams resistant

In an attempt to eradicate religion from government, the staunchly secular Turkish military in 1996 ousted a prime minister it considered too Islamic, and the state established control over the mosques. Through the Religious Affairs Directorate, the state pays the salaries of the imams and regulates how religious schools are run.

Bardakoglu acknowledged, however, that getting the imams not only to deliver the sermons but also to embrace their sentiments will take time.

“It is a challenge for the imams that people close their ears to such things,” he said. “The resistance is normal, though. It shows that change has begun.”

An area where change cannot come fast enough for most Turks is honor killings. There is no reliable record of the numbers of victims annually, but it is thought that relatives kill dozens of Turkish women every year for supposedly besmirching the family honor.

The problem was dramatized in late February when two brothers shot their 22-year-old sister to death as she lay in a hospital bed in Istanbul. She had given birth to a child out of wedlock a few months earlier and was recovering from an earlier attempt on her life.

The Religious Affairs Directorate reacted immediately, bumping another sermon off the schedule. Bardakoglu issued a statement saying that honor killings are only one of the many problems faced by women around the world.

“These problems do not arise from a religious source,” he said at the time. “These problems are caused by social, cultural and economic reasons. … The fact that 14 centuries after the Koran was revealed to us women still face discrimination is saddening and thought-provoking.”

It doesn’t surprise me at all, in light of Sura 4:34 and other passages. It will be interesting to see how the Turkish authorities deal with such material.

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Filed Under: Turkey, women's rights in Islam


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