Originally posted by paiktis22
Correction:
I think there are a lot of other muslim countries which are secular.
Correction:
I think there are a lot of other muslim countries which are secular.
Originally posted by Ramo
For instance, Bangladesh and Indonesia (which actually are both much larger than Turkey) are both secular and nominally democratic.
'Course, I wouldn't really say they're democratic, but then again I wouldn't call Turkey democratic either.
For instance, Bangladesh and Indonesia (which actually are both much larger than Turkey) are both secular and nominally democratic.
'Course, I wouldn't really say they're democratic, but then again I wouldn't call Turkey democratic either.
Actually, Turkey is the only country that has enshrined secularism as a clearly stated and defined principle in its constitution, thereby closing all institutional ways and byways or loopholes for religious extremists to work their way into state structure.
And needless to say, Islam has a history of being political. It was (and still is in some places) inconceivable throughout Islamic history to imagine Islam to be something not covering every aspect of human activity. Social contracts, relation of the individual towards the state, legal system, economy and by default politics were never thought in any way different or seperate from the practice of religion.
In light of this prevalent and suffocating interpretation of Islam, Turkey cut the Gordion's knot instead of trying to fit modernity into the tight shirt of obsolete tradition, as the vast majority of Muslim countries try with varying degrees of success today. How dangerous an alternative is that for AQ?
There are in the Muslim world varying degrees of secularism, some declare Islam as state religion. Some like Indonesia fall short of that but lacking a state commitment to secularism, there's a growing pressure on the government to adopt Islam as state religion. You don't have that in Turkey.
Bangladesh has Islam as official state religion since 1988.
Originally posted by Ramo
'Course, I wouldn't really say they're democratic, but then again I wouldn't call Turkey democratic either.
'Course, I wouldn't really say they're democratic, but then again I wouldn't call Turkey democratic either.
It now meets even the EU criteria after the recent constitutional amendments, as even the ever-stringent EU commission points out to no fundamental shortcoming on Turkey's behalf but rather wants to observe implementation of recent amendments.
You can use this to say "see, as long as you don't implement things, you're not democratic", but the failures of implementation are not endemic nor are they as severe as the stereotype would lead many to believe.
This should steal a lot of steam from the rather straightforward statement of "Turkey cannot be called democratic"
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