Edward Said & his sister, Palestine 1940
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Cosmic Funnies
Three Goblin Art

Kaledo Art
Jules of Nature

No title available
Today's Document

blake kathryn
Sweet Seals For You, Always

ellievsbear
$LAYYYTER

Origami Around

@theartofmadeline
untitled

★
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
One Nice Bug Per Day

Andulka

seen from Switzerland

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Belgium
seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from Iraq

seen from United States
seen from Norway
seen from Peru
seen from Philippines

seen from United States

seen from Brazil

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Colombia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
@kirmizinokta
Edward Said & his sister, Palestine 1940
Volkan Konak - Gurbet / 2012 Orijinal Şarkı / "Orhan Gencebay İle Bir Ömür" (by WhyDovesCry)
Mavi Boncuk | FREDERICK-ARTHUR BRIDGMAN ; YOUNG WOMAN FROM CONSTANTINOPLE ; LOCATED, SIGNED AND DATED LOWER LEFT CONSTANTINOPLE 1880 ; OIL ON CANVAS
The fate of İstanbul’s historic Tarlabaşı by Ian Almond*
2
11 July 2012 / ,
Over a month ago, I was invited to give a talk in İstanbul by the Prime Minister’s Office. The invitation came out of the blue, and I was happy to receive it.
They flew me over from my university in the US, put me in a hotel for three nights and asked me to speak at a number of events. They paid for my meals, looked after my luggage, arranged for some wonderful people to talk to me. I got the invitation because, as a European researcher, I have spent a large amount of time and energy trying to dismantle Western images of Turkey and of Islam. A lot of my research has tried to argue for the richness and complexity of Turkish history and culture -- as opposed to the set of Orientalist clichés some Westerners still seem to prefer.
And so I was somewhat surprised to see the very same government that had invited me to speak about the value and worth of Turkish history in Europe to be in the middle of destroying large parts of historic İstanbul. The very same prime minister whose office invited me to speak about Turkey’s historical significance in Europe is currently demolishing huge areas of the city -- beginning with Tarlabaşı -- and planning to level even more, including parts of the most historic parts of Beyoğlu. My last day in İstanbul, I walked around some of the streets in Tarlabaşı. The destruction is horrifying -- a quarter of which has been populated since 1535, in an area rich in historical significance, is in the process of being bulldozed and sledgehammered into rubble.
To make way for what? A series of boutique, luxury hotels among other things, it would seem -- to be built by a construction company connected to the prime minister’s son, Berat Albayrak. Buildings over a century old -- buildings perfectly capable of being restored -- will be reduced to rubble, to allow a series of characterless, modern, luxury hotels and expensive town-housing to be put in their place. The municipality has put up a silly website with the title “Tarlabaşı yenileniyor!” (Tarlabaşı is being renewed!) The pictures it offers of clean, modern apartment buildings have little to do with the history it is replacing -- even though the website’s video has the audacity to begin with two minutes’ worth of Ottoman music and old black and white pictures, romanticising the suburb’s past.
Tarlabaşı has been, through the centuries, the historic district for all kinds of İstanbul residents -- Muslim and non-Muslim. Over 360 listed buildings were destroyed in the 1980s to make way for the six-lane Tarlabaşı Boulevard. Rows of turn-of-the-century Levantine architecture forms its streets; a home for non-Muslim diplomats in the 16th and 17th centuries, it began to attract Greek and Armenian artisans after the 1870 fire that destroyed large parts of Pera. Over the past few decades, they have been increasingly occupied by Kurdish refugees from the Southeast.
Let me be very frank: even if we dismiss the social, human objection here -- the thousands of poor people who are to be relocated to the outskirts of the city, so that the wealthier classes can have their modern townhouses in the center -- another objection still remains: that it is absurd for a tourist-reliant city such as İstanbul to squander its cultural capital by destroying the very historical areas that, properly restored, could put it among the Venices and Romes of Europe (I am not exaggerating). No one pretends that some of these areas, such as Tarlabaşı, do not have social problems. An intelligent, historically sensitive urban policy towards these areas would see them as potential assets. Instead of simply demolishing these old, valuable buildings, the cleaning-up and restoration of these streets could add prestige and authenticity to İstanbul -- adding whole new historic areas to the city for visitors to see. The European Union’s restoration of Bulgarian houses and historical areas is a good example of how to restore sensitively without requiring what one academic has called the “Demirören” effect (named after the notorious “historical” shopping center sledgehammered into the middle of İstanbul’s largest street). İstanbul is already a tourist magnet -- imagine what would happen if vast areas of the old city (precisely areas such as Tarlabaşı and Beyoğlu) were cleaned up and restored; historical plaques placed on streets, explaining which buildings were erected when and by whom; local histories of each neighbourhood, showing the rich multicultural past of Ottoman İstanbul… Is this really such a poor alternative to five-star hotels built by the prime minister’s son-in-law?
Even as I write this, the destruction work goes on. House after house, street after street disappears. As a foreigner, I cannot believe a Turkish government is doing this to its own city. Neither terrorists nor NATO could raze a city to the ground as effectively as the real-estate market is doing. There are only two conclusions to be drawn: Either Mr Erdoğan has simply been won over by the various construction/real estate lobbyists and has reluctantly agreed to sacrifice the historical value of his native city for a finite price, or, equally plausibly, the prime minister has nothing but contempt for Turkish history.
*Professor Ian Almond is an instructor in the department of
English at Georgia State University and the author of many books, his latest being “History of Islam in German Thought from Leibniz to Nietzsche” (Routledge, 2009).
Arab politicians covet ‘Tatlıses moustaches’ ISTANBUL- Hürriyet Daily News
Arab politicians come to Turkey for moustache implants to give themselves a boost of charisma...
Moustaches like those of Turkish stars like Kadir İnanır (L) and İbrahim Tatlıses (R) seen in this one decade old photo are most frequently asked for by potential moustache implant patients. Turkey is today exporting moustache implants.
Turkey, which has made a name for itself in hair implants, has now begun to export moustache implants. More and more patients are coming to Turkey every day in search of the thick moustaches they see on their favorite Turkish television shows and stars like İbrahim Tatlıses and Kadir İnanır. Arabs – and especially politicians from the region – are particularly keen on the moustache implants. Doctor Selahattin Tulunay, who has been working in the hair implant and aesthetic arena for 30 years, said in a press release that moustache implants have now become as popular as hair implants, adding that patients often come with photos of their favorite stars saying, “I want this moustache.” Adds to tourism sector “Due to the large demand, we have signed partnership agreements with agencies in Dubai and Iraq and have opened representative offices in Europe. Our patients book tourists packages and while they have the implants, their families are able to vacation in Turkey, thereby contributing to Turkey’s tourism sector,” Tulunay said. In fact, according to Tulunay, politicians from the Arab world are now coveting moustache implants to add to their charisma during election periods. “Every month we have about 60 applications for beard and hair implants,” Tulunay said. “We have applicants from Iran, Iraq, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Germany, Franceand Ireland who come for hair, moustache and beard implants. Whether they are from Western Europe, the Middle East, North Africa, or South Korea, we there is serious demand for hair and moustache implants,” he said. Tulunay said the special implant technique called “FUE” was developed in Europe but was implemented most successfully in Turkey. Tulunay also conducts the implants on burn patients who have lost their hair or facial hair and those who have lost their hair due to chemotherapy. Turkish hairdo has already gone beyond borders with the popularity of Turkish TV series increasing in the Middle East and North Africa every day, Turkish actors are becoming idols in the region. In many of the barbershops in the Sudanese capital Khartoum, one sees posters of Necati Şaşmaz, who plays Polat Alemdar on the Turkish TV series “Kurtlar Vadisi” (Valley of the Wolves), and Kıvanç Tatlıtuğ, who is very popular in Arab countries.
October/08/2012
Istanbul 2844 (by bernard-paris)
IleftmyheartinIstanbul.com
The ancient city of Istanbul, which straddles the divide between Europe and Asia, shines brightly at night in an astronaut photo (via Muhabbet Sokağı)
IleftmyheartinIstanbul.com
(via Nostaljik tramvayda tehlikeli yolculuk)
Here are the new posters to represent Turkey. by Ministry of Culture and Tourism « Erkan's Field Diary
via
the ministry site here.
inShare
TURKEY Tr-National
Paragliding toll raises concerns
ISTANBUL | 9/4/2011 12:00:00 AM | Işıl Eğrikavuk
Despite its unique nature and climate, paragling in Turkey has recently been making the news with the news of accidents, which some claim that are caused by lack of security measures. Experts say that Turkey needs to have a better civil aviation law in order to control whom and how paragliding is done in Turkey
The prospect of paragliding high above Turkey’s beautiful, sunny coastline attracts thousands of curious people, both Turks and foreigners, each year. But the sport has become a subject of controversy following the death last week of a 27-year-old-man while tandem paragliding with a pilot in the southwestern province of Muğla.
The victim’s wife, Miray Güler, who witnessed his fatal fall from a height of 700 meters, has accused the company of not taking appropriate safety precautions, claiming her husband’s security belt was not tied.
“We asked several questions about safety before jumping but the pilots wanted to hurry and told us we were asking too many questions,” she said.
The deadly incident is not the first in Turkey, where the number of paragliding accidents is rising each year. Since July of this year, such accidents have reportedly killed four people and injured four more.
Insufficient civil aviation laws
Experts say there are a number of reasons for the deaths, primarily insufficient civil aviation laws and the lack of oversight of pilot trainings.
“The current civil aviation law specifies that people who want to paraglide do not have to have a license and must take responsibility for their own safety,” professional paragliding trainer Alim Yıldırım told the Hürriyet Daily News.
“There is a major lack of discipline and organization among paragliders. Everybody started paragliding on their own. There are even professional pilots who do not have a license.”
Yıldırım added that the growing competition among companies is causing some to cut corners by using cheap equipment. “In order to make more money, pilots fly many times per day and some companies buy cheap gear,” he said.
“The companies race against time when there is wind. They try to make as many jumps as possible when there is a good wind. Some companies also use parachutes that are sun-damaged. These things should all be controlled,” said Mehmet Ilga, who works at the Aviation Federation in Muğla.
Ilga added that pilots should also be monitoring for alcohol use.
“A lot of pilots also die while doing acrobatic jumps. However, we know that some of them do this while intoxicated,” Ilga said.
University student Hayal Öztuna, 23, said she narrowly avoided a major accident while paragliding near the Mediterranean town of Kaş.
“I went to Kaş last year with a group of friends. We all wanted to try paragliding and we found a company [to do it with]. They quickly put some gear on us and gave us a two-sentence briefing. Right before I jumped, I noticed that my belt was untied,” she said. “I warned them and they locked it. I still jumped but I have been very careful since then.”
Paragliding pilot licenses are given by Turkey’s civil aviation authority, which oversees paragliding companies, but experts say these controls are not standardized due to insufficient laws.
Officials with the recently established Aviation Federation say they are trying to implement new regulations but it will take time.
“Paragliding only started in the 1980s in Turkey and has now become an industry. Each jump costs between 100 to 150 [British] pounds and companies compete for this money. Only a legal regulation can fix [the problem],” Ilga said.
Turkey’s sunlight and wind will continue drawing paragliders to the country, said trainer Yıldırım.
“Many people dream of jumping off Babadağ [Mt. Baba in Muğla’s Fethiye district] due to its unique nature. There is no place in the world where there are this many jumps at the same time. We should definitely make better use of these wonderful sources,” he said.
Spanish government plans to ban abortion
MADRID - Reuters
Women with slogans written on their bodies reading ‘Yes to life, but I choose’ and ‘Priests and judges out of my body’ take part in an anti-abortion protest in Madrid on July 29.
Spain’s conservative government plans to ban abortions, overturning a two-year-old law allowing terminations on demand, a justice ministry source told Reuters, in a move likely to galvanize support among its core voters. The previous Socialist government passed a law in 2010 allowing women to have a termination up to 14 weeks into a pregnancy or up to 22 weeks in cases of severe abnormalities, in line with most European countries. The ruling People’s Party, which came to power in December, is expected to present a bill which scraps that law in October, based on the recommendations of a committee of experts, the source said. Justice Minister Alberto Ruiz-Gallardon last month made clear his opposition to the current abortion law. “I can’t understand how protection is removed from the fetus, permitting abortion, merely because it has some kind of disability or malformation,” he said in an interview with right-wing newspaper La Razon. A spokesman for the justice ministry said there had been no law change proposed as yet. Any move would keep a campaign promise made by Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy to overturn the 2010 law of the government of then Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero. Similar protests in Turkey Pro-abortion groups and the opposition Socialists said a change in the law would push Spanish society back decades to the period of the right-wing dictatorship of Francisco Franco when abortion was banned. Anti-abortion activists welcomed the government’s proposed changes and some said they hoped Spain would eventually ban abortion in all circumstances, including cases of rape. Pro-abortion protests began in Turkey after Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan announced on May 30 that he had delivered instructions to the Cabinet to begin drafting new legislation on abortion, in the wake of his comments equating the practice with murder.
August/10/2012
Lyons: Islam, Women and the West
Posted on 02/05/2012 by Juan
Jonathan Lyons writes in a guest column for Informed Comment
Islam, Women, and the West This essay is adapted from my latest book, Islam Through Western Eyes: From the Crusades to the War on Terrorism, newly published by Columbia University Press. For more information, please see the CUP catalogue, at the CUP catalogue or my web page. In the mid-1840s, French novelist Gustave Flaubert presented readers with a tantalizing view from the top of the Great Pyramid after an arduous climb under the blistering Egyptian sun: “But lift your head. Look! Look! And you will see cities with domes of gold and minarets of porcelain, palaces of lava built on plinths of alabaster, marble-rimmed pools where sultanas bathe their bodies at the hour when the moon makes bluer the shadows of the groves and more limpid the silvery water of the fountains.”
Flaubert’s excitable prose – “Open your eyes! Open your eyes!” – were penned four years before he ever set foot in the Middle East and so tells us far more about the writer’s idea of the Muslim world than they do about anything he could possibly have seen from distant France. Yet, Flaubert was by no means alone. European artists routinely created their own representations of the Muslim Orient at home and only then set out on their travels in search of confirmation. Eugène Delacroix’s earliest representations of Ottoman women, intimate portrayals of Muslim female sexuality characterized by passive repose, overt submission, and sumptuous surroundings punctuated by symbolic reminders of restraint or outright captivity, were made some five years before his first trip to the Muslim world, which took him to Algeria and Morocco and not to Ottoman Turkey.
When they did arrive in the Orient, many Europeans were deeply disappointed by what they found. Gérard de Nerval, whose Voyage en Orient became a classic, groused to a friend that the Oriental cafés back home in Paris were more authentic than those of the Orient itself. Rather than mingle with real Egyptians, he conducted much of his research in a French-run library in Cairo. Nerval was so nonplussed that he even incorporated whole sections from a pioneering English work on the subject and passed it off as his own observations. Another writer used this same text, which described Egyptian customs, and applied it wholesale to daily life in Syria.
Flaubert’s disappointment was more primal. He found the women of Egypt, in particular those of the urban middle and upper classes, commonly veiled and often secluded and thus inaccessible to his European gaze. Unable to locate the idealized Oriental woman – or man –of his erotic fantasies, Flaubert had to literally create his own; he routinely hired prostitutes to act the parts he so ardently sought.
Not even the new tecnology of photography, with its implied promise of realism, could alter the equation. Soon, an entire commercial apparatus to manufacture the eroticized imagery of the Middle East was in place. Like the writer or the painter before him, the photographer was excluded from his intended subject, and could do little more than re-imagine existing images in the new medium. Entrepreneurs set up local studios where they could gather props, hire prostitutes as models, and then stage harem scenes to create the erotic Oriental postcards their audiences back home demanded. “What the postcard proposes as the truth,” writes the scholar Malek Alloula, “is but a substitute for something that does not exist.”
What is most interesting about this seeming confusion between the imagined and the real, between reading and seeing, is the extent to which the former so often takes precedence over the latter. This, in turn, reflects the primacy in Western thought of the expert “text” – philological, anthropological, theological, etc. – over any lived experience or personal observation of the Muslim world. In fact, whenever observation or experience on the part of the travel writer, the memoirist, or the diplomat conflicts with textual evidence, the prevailing narrative dictates that the text almost certainly wins. Today, we see this in the myopia that plagues most Western news reporting and analysis from the Muslim world.
In other words, Islam cannot be what the Muslims say or do or even what they say they mean, but only what a handful of “texts” – selected and then interpreted by the Western Islam expert – tells us it is and is not. This phenomenon reflects what I call the anti-Islam discourse, a totalizing western narrative that dates back to the run-up to the First Crusade at the close of the eleventh century. Yet, its core elements – that Islam is inherently violent, sexually perverse, and anti-modern – remain as influential today as they once were in the halls of the Roman curia.
These developments have, in turn, left the West unprepared to respond in any constructive way to some of the most daunting issues of the early twenty-first century – the rise of Islamist political power, the emergence of religious terrorism, clashes between established social values and multicultural rights on the part of growing Muslim immigrant populations, and so on.
Historical trends in Western scholarship have contributed greatly to such attitudes and ideas. Nineteenth-century representation of the Orient was closely tied to the earlier Enlightenment notion of Islamic civilization as timeless, dead, and without history. Thus, the Western imagination stepped forward to fill the void that was Islam. Only then could it be properly represented and in due course conquered, subdued, and colonized.
When it comes to the women of the Muslim world, the “hidden” quality represented by the institutions of the harem, of seclusion, and of the veil struck a nerve in the Western mind that went beyond attitudes toward other non-Western women. Initially, this focused particular attention on the imperial harem – with its legions of concubines, guarded by eunuchs – presenting what was in effect an institution restricted to the highest reaches of the Ottoman court as symptomatic of Muslim family life in general.
The general seclusion of middle- and upper-class Muslim women elicited two powerful strategies aimed at revealing the previously unseen: to draw on the storehouse of the Western imagination to fill in the blanks left by this inaccessibility, and later to literally unveil the women of Islam. Both responses drew on the anti-Islam discourse to produce an enormous number of Western statements about Islam and the Muslims, first in the form of Orientalist art and literature and then, beginning with outright colonial rule, in the shape of policies, reforms, and White Papers aimed at ending the degradation.
By the early twentieth century, the institution of veiling had for the most part supplanted the more exotic harem as the focal point of Western attention. Still, the underlying logic of the discourse of Islam and women remains firmly in place today. The end result has been a “sexualization” of the Western view of Islam, one in which the totality of Muslim beliefs and practices and even the entire Islamic civilization are too often reduced to Western perceptions and assessment of the male–female dynamic.
Exhibit A may be found in our obsession with the hijab, or veil, as a barometer of social progress and overall well-being within Islamic societies, to such a degree that it has become a commonplace of Western mass-media coverage, social activism, and political discussion alike. For years, the veil has been a staple of endless news articles, books, and documentaries, and it is captured in magazine and television images – all as shorthand for a society, a civilization, or a system that is backward, alien, immobile, and inherently antithetical to human rights and dignity.
Running throughout this public discourse is the persistent binary opposition of oppression and freedom, veiled and unveiled, bad and good. Islam itself and on its own terms is once again ignored in favor of an unquestioned Western construction. And this construction dictates that the West’s approaches and policy proscriptions toward Muslim societies be seen solely through the lens of our own flawed understanding of both women and gender relations in Islam.
Nothing else can adequately explain the Western fascination with the veil and the apprehension of this institution as the root of the oppressive conditions faced by many women in Muslim societies. The prevailing idea of veiling, and of the associated degradation of women, creates the notion of an inferior Muslim world in need of rescue from itself, by force if necessary. This recalls Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak’s famous critique of colonialist rhetoric as largely consisting of “white men saving brown women from brown men.”
To see the immediate dangers in such a course, one must only reflect on the ways in which the U.S. government was able to mobilize public support for two doomed wars against Muslim societies by tapping directly into the overarching discourse of Islam and its important subset, Islam and women. The expropriation of the rhetoric of women’s rights under Islam in order to unleash deadly violence on Muslim nations shows just how much the struggle for women’s equality has become a discursive one rather than a material one.
Closer to home, the discourse of Islam and women recently played out in America’s living rooms, after the obscure Florida Family Association (FFA) successfully pressured advertisers to drop support for a reality TV show, All American Muslim. According to the show’s producers, the program “takes a look at life in Dearborn, Michigan … through the lens of five Muslim American families. Each episode offers an intimate look at the customs and celebrations, misconceptions and conflicts these families face outside and within their own community.”
But the FFA labeled the program “propaganda.” At the heart of the group’s critique, one apparently endorsed by Lowe’s and other departed commercial sponsors, lies the notion that “the show profiled only Muslims that appeared to be ordinary folks.” Once again, when it comes to Muslims, appearances must be set aside in favor of the more powerful – and persuasive –discursive reality of Islam. Not surprisingly, an FFA statement on its Web site directs a central part of its argument on the established narrative of Islam and women: “Many woman were shown wearing hijabs and many who were not, but the program did not show what happens if one of the hijab-wearing women decides to take it off.” Tellingly, FFA sees no need to respond to its own question – what happens? – for the group can have no doubt but that we all know the answer.
______ Jonathan Lyons, former Reuters Tehran bureau chief from 1998-2001, is the author of several books, most recently Islam through Western Eyes.
NEW RULES FOR TURKEY RESIDENCE PERMIT
New rules have been bought in for foreigners who reside in Turkey without a residence permit.
The new rules, set to be implemented from February 1st 2012 onwards, will see foreigners who do not have a residence permit only allowed to remain in Turkey for 90 days consecutively, or 90 days within a 6 month period.
The previous law for foreigners in Turkey without a residence permit allowed for foreigners to arrive in Turkey and spend 90 days in the country, and then simply leave Turkey for a short amount of time and then return back for another 90 days – repeating this cycle over and over again as long as they wish. This will no longer be allowed under the new laws.
The reasoning for the new law is that Turkey has seen an increase lately in the amount of foreign workers who work illegally in Turkey – the new regulation will see this end as foreigners without a residence permit will only be allowed to stay in Turkey for 90 days in every 6 month period, making it seemingly impossible for anyone to work in Turkey for a long period of time without a residence permit.
With Turkey rising to become one of the wealthiest nations across Europe, many foreigners are seeing the opportunity to move to Turkey and work in the growing nation. This isn’t the only new law set to be passed in Turkey of late that will affect foreigners who are in Turkey. A new law is expected to be passed in the near future that will make it easier for foreigners to purchase a property in Turkey, more information can be found at Place Overseas. With the property Turkey market being such a luxurious market for foreign investors, Turkey is set to seize upon the opportunity that will see property in Turkey sales increase dramatically and prime areas such as Istanbul real estate see an influx of more foreigners buying a property in Turkey and a further increase in the number of foreigners who decide to move to Turkey.
How the east was lost juillet 28, 2012
Financial Times (UK) Saturday, July 28, 2012, p. 8
FT Weekend Supplement – Life & Arts
By Mark Mazower *
Oh, East is East and West is West, and never the twain shall meet,” wrote Rudyard Kipling in 1889. This was nothing if not wishful thinking, and no one knew it better than the poet of the imperial Raj himself: indeed, that same year Kipling visited Hong Kong and bemoaned the likely impact of bringing railways and newspapers to China. “What,” he warned, “will happen when China really wakes up?”
From the Ruins of Empire: The Revolt Against the West and the Remaking of Asia by Pankaj Mishra, Allen Lane, £20, 368 pages
With the British empire at the zenith of its power, it was hardly an immediate worry. The Chinese might pride themselves on avoiding the fate of a “lost country” such as India, with its viceroys and its foreign empress, but the Qing dynasty was losing its grip and only a few years later the nationalist Boxer rebellion would be brutally crushed by a western expeditionary force, precipitating the crisis from which China did not emerge for half a century.
Yet very gradually, the global balance was starting to tilt in the other direction. When Japan annihilated much of the Russian navy in the Tsushima Strait in May 1905, it announced to the world the rise of the first non-western power in modern times. The first world war precipitated much soul-searching in Europe and Oswald Spengler’s gloom-laden The Decline of the West caught the mood of Weimarian pessimism. Reporting from the Greco-Turkish frontlines in Anatolia, the historian Arnold Toynbee discerned the glimmering of a new power in the east, and the gradual waning of that “shadow upon the rest of humanity [which] is cast by western civilisation”. As Greece’s bid for empire was rebuffed by the Turkish nationalist army led by Mustafa Kemal (later Atatürk), Toynbee saw the global implications: Europe, he warned, could no longer afford its traditional indifference to the east and would now have to come to terms with the existence of other civilisations.
His words were not immediately heeded, and some would say that the west still has a way to go to accept other cultural and intellectual traditions as real equals. No doubt the waning of its economic predominance and the ongoing Chinese awakening that Kipling foresaw will accelerate the process. This lively and intelligent book by Pankaj Mishra, an Indian writer whose previous works have explored the contemporary interweaving of European and Asian thought and faiths, can only help too. From the Ruins of Empire offers an engaging account of how, at the apogee of European global hegemony, Arab, Persian, Indian, Chinese and Japanese intellectuals responded to the intrusion of colonisers, diplomats and merchants. Dreaming of resistance and re-assertion, they advocated solidarity – sometimes of Muslims, sometimes of Asians – and they felt deep humiliation at their helplessness in the face of the global imbalance of power. The idea that what was happening was some vast clash between the forces of western modernity and eastern tradition has long underpinned a rather benign and often frankly celebratory view of “the expansion of Europe”. Mishra accepts the paradigm but there is nothing very positive about the story as seen through the eyes of its victims and critics.
The first such thinker to be introduced is the mysterious figure of Jamal al-Din al-Afghani, who was born in a village in north-west Persia in 1838 and who died in Istanbul in 1897. A Shia who passed himself off as a Sunni Muslim of Afghan origins, his wanderings – between Persia, Afghanistan and the Raj, the Ottoman lands, Egypt and Russia – gave him an acute appreciation of Islam’s possibilities as an anti-western political force. When Whitehall officials spent sleepless nights worrying about the pan-Islamic threat to the Raj, Egypt and the Sudan, this was in no small part thanks to Afghani and those he inspired. Later acolytes included pre-first world war Egyptian nationalists, and key figures in the interwar Arab and Indian movement to restore the Caliphate, a doomed attempt to forge political unity among Muslims after the collapse of the Ottoman dynasty. Nor was he forgotten by the postwar émigré Iranian intellectuals who spent their days in Left Bank cafés plotting the downfall of the shah.
Afghani was old enough to have been born into the old ways but sharp enough to see that without an overhaul of education to take account of modern science, those traditions would perish. He belonged to the first generation of journalists in Arabic, and understood the power of the printed word: his debate with French historian Ernest Renan over the relationship between Islam and modernity was a dramatic encounter in which Renan came off second best. But like some of the other figures Mishra revives for us, Afghani died a disillusioned man, disappointed in turn by the rulers of Afghanistan, Persia and the Ottoman empire.
Though born a generation later in 1873, the Chinese reformer Liang Qichao offers a kind of parallel life, and not only in his frustrations. Like Afghani, Liang understood the power of the press and wielded the pen to stunning effect, teaching (among others) the young Mao Zedong that political reform was imperative to shore up the state and save the nation. And like Afghani, Liang knew the west far better than the west knew him: he travelled widely across the US and his experience of the acute inequalities of wealth and the racism of the Gilded Age influenced his vision for China.
A disparate bunch, Mishra’s preferred thinkers are wanderers, anticolonial cosmopolitans who dream of new alliances of peoples and who warn of western materialism and the need to preserve spirituality and faith across borders. When he turns to China, we inevitably get a sense of the allure of anti-colonial nationalism, of the pull of western socialism and the dream of material progress. But there is little space for the many socialists, theosophists, feminists and rationalists who flourished, above all in the Raj, and the book does not really try to explain the sudden turn to socialism among Arab intellectuals between the two world wars. In fact, what it offers is in some ways a glimpse of paths not taken. Those endless invocations of eastern spirituality – exemplified in the vatic pronouncements of the Bengali poet and Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore, who also looms large in this book – ring oddly now. Today’s political and business elites in Asia and the Middle East compete for western capital. Boutiques and billionaires in Mumbai, Prada and Louis Vuitton in Beijing, let us not even mention Dubai: all this was just about Tagore’s vision of hell – the ultimate triumph of the west’s desire for stuff – but it has won out over the contemplative life without much of a struggle.
Tagore, for one, was more a figure of his time than Mishra allows. Thinking big, his generation spoke as readily about “civilisations” as western contemporaries such as Spengler and Toynbee did. Their pronouncements sometimes got at deep truths but often teetered on the edge of vacuity, and the way both Tagore and Toynbee were embraced between the two world wars as scholar-seers, unifiers of a divided world, now seems distinctly overblown. How far Mishra’s easterners owed their talk of civilisational decline and resurgence, of spirit versus matter, to the European Orientalists who were both their teachers and their opponents is an intriguing question. But their indebtedness to the latter may explain why they often emerge as much more effective critics of western hypocrisy and shortcomings than they do as guides to the byways of their own traditions.
Was there even an “east” at all? How much – apart from the pain of being condescended to, ruled and humiliated in countless ways by Europeans and Americans – did the very different faiths, languages and historical communities of the lands between the Mediterranean and the Pacific really share? The truth is that cosmopolitans – whether anti-colonial or communist – were generally let down by the 20th century and the rapid spread of nationalism across the colonial world in the hands of technocrats, military men and party officials. By the 1930s, at the latest, pan-Islamism and pan-Arabism were both dead as political projects; neither Nasser nor (much later) al-Qaeda had any chance of reviving them. As for pan-Asianism, it was pretty much dealt a deathblow once the Japanese turned it into an excuse for their own version of imperialism.
Mishra praises the non-aligned movement and, as an effort of developing countries to stand against the cold war, it was impressive. But it was not the beginning of any kind of movement of anti-colonial solidarity. The minute the empires collapsed, India and China began their tussle for regional leadership, profiting from Japan’s defeat. Today’s Asia strikingly lacks any serious impetus to political integration. In the end, it was Atatürk’s Turkey – forging a proud independence as a national state – that proved the most potent model.
Yet a deeper truth in Mishra’s book remains all too pertinent today. We live in an age in which the so-called international community, driven by the west’s ethical concerns, no longer respects the sanctity of state sovereignty or the inviolability of borders, and intervenes more readily on humanitarian grounds than at any time in the past century. Western politicians lecture the Turks on genocide recognition, and scold the Chinese for their human rights abuses. Perhaps this book will help supplement their sense of moral righteousness with a little historical understanding. For the memory of European imperialism remains a live political factor everywhere from Casablanca to Jakarta, and whether one is talking nuclear power with Tehran or the future of the renminbi with the Chinese, contemporary diplomacy will fail if it does not take this into account. Of course, as the example of Robert Mugabe suggests, developing-world elites may have their own very self-serving reasons to harp on about the evils of empire; nevertheless, such rhetoric resonates. No one likes being told what to do, and empire was all about that. As a record of what some of the most penetrating commentators at the sharp end thought of western values and western pretensions, From the Ruins of Empire retains the power to instruct and even to shock. It provides us with an exciting glimpse of the vast and still largely unexplored terrain of anti-colonial thought that shaped so much of the post-western world in which we now live.
Mark Mazower is professor of history at Columbia University. His new book, ‘Governing the World: The History of an Idea’, is published by Penguin this autumn.
Without a mosque, Greece's Muslims go underground
10/07/2012
The Greek government has stalled for more than a decade the construction of official mosques to satisfy the religious needs of the Muslim population.
By Andy Dabilis for Southeast European Times in Athens -- 10/07/12
Muslims pray at an underground makeshift mosque in Athens. [Andy Dabilis/SETimes]
Muslims in Greece are left to pray in basement apartments, coffee shops, garages and old warehouses, many of which are targets of arsonists, as the Greek government has stalled for over a decade in building an official mosque.
"All the other religions here -- Jews, Buddhists -- they have a place but we do not," Osama al-Najjar, 48, a petroleum industry supervisor, told SETimes.
"If we want to observe our religion, we have to do it underground. We are not doing anything wrong," he said.
Naim Elghandour, 57, chairman of the Muslim Association of Greece, which claims nearly 18,000 members, said he has not prayed in a mosque for 40 years since coming to Greece from his native Egypt.
There are over 100 makeshift mosques in Athens, such as in the basement next to a convenience store owned by Elghandour's friend, Mazen Rassas.
"It is not the same," Elghandour told SETimes. "Without an official sanction, Muslims are also without an imam," he said.
Elghandour said there are practical difficulties in accessing the makeshift mosque from neighbourhoods half an hour or more away, as well as in maintaining it.
"Who could come here and pray five times a day? All these makeshift mosques are not legal," Elghandour said.
An estimated 500,000 Muslims live in Greece, with about 40% of them in Athens.
"Many of them [are] illegal immigrants, recent targets of racist attacks and a government purge to rid the city of them, moves which have intensified enmity towards Muslims. More than half of Greeks polled last year opposed an official mosque," Rassas told SETimes.
Athens is the only capital in the EU without a mosque; one has not been allowed since 1883, when the Ottomans evacuated the city.
Only in the Turkish-dominated Muslim enclave of Thrace has the Greek government officially supported Islamic shrines.
The government has considered a number of sites to fund the building of a mosque. The economic crisis, however, coupled with Greece's public enmity for associating mosques with the Ottoman presence, as well as pressure from the powerful Greek Orthodox Church, has stalled all plans.
It includes a proposal last to renovate a structure on a defunct naval base in western Athens at a cost of 750,000 euros.
"But we were never called and asked about that site," Elghandour said.
He said the plan is for the mosque's design to be minimalist, without minarets or any Islamic motifs, radically reduced from earlier plans to build a new 1,000-square-metre, 16m-euro structure for 500 worshippers.
Muslims meanwhile are growing exasperated. Two years ago, nearly 1,000 worshippers used the square at Athens University for open-air prayers but had to be guarded by 7,000 police officers.
Last September, supporters of the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn -- which won 18 seats in parliament last month -- assaulted worshippers during prayers, pelting them with eggs and yogurt.
Prior to the 2004 Athens Olympics, Saudi Arabia offered to build a mega-mosque far outside the city near the airport, but the idea was abandoned after the powerful Greek Orthodox Church voiced strong opposition.
Related Articles
Illegal immigrants dream of a better life in EU countries
22/11/2010
On WWII anniversary, Greeks say "No" again
31/10/2011
Bulgarian economy suffers due to Greek farmers blockade
21/01/2010
New Greek deal targets defence spending, cuts minimum wage
10/02/2012
Austerity, anti-immigrant fervour drives Greek elections
26/04/2012
However, there are indications the government position may soften. Yiannis Boutaris, mayor of Thessaloniki, said he wants an official mosque there for the 5,000 Muslims living in the city.
Boutaris is known for pushing for a memorial to Turkey's founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, who was born in the city and has said Greeks and Turks are brothers.
One mosque in the heart of Athens -- the Mosque of the Congest -- is a historic Islamic shrine from the 15th century which is in disrepair and has been used as storage for archaeological finds. The Monistiraki flea market is located there.
Muslims in Greece will persist until they get one. "They cannot stop us," Elghandour said.
This content was commissioned for SETimes.com.
Eurocentrism means that some farting head like Piers Morgan knows nothing about Chinese music, whereas Chinese folks like me are well-versed in their blip of music history. You really think a few decades of rock ‘n’ roll lifted from African American traditions compares favorably against 6,000 years of Chinese musical development?
Let’s put it this way: Chinese cultural contributions celebrated at the Beijing opening ceremony included paper, the compass, movable type, gunpowder, as well as the most traditional Chinese instrument, the 5,000-year-old guqin, which is still played and remains popular. London opening ceremony is celebrating James Bond, children in pyjamas jumping on beds, Mary Poppins, Peter Pan, JK Rowlings, and British rock ‘n’ roll. With the greatest respect to Britain…you decide.
Every. Single. Time. this stuff brings me back to my British ex-boyfriend asking me “if you have someone like Shakespeare, how come I’ve never heard of him?” NO ANSWERS. I JUST DIE.
via huffingtonpost:
The book’s listing was removed by Amazon on Thursday evening. According to Amazon’s website, it had been on sale since October 2011, and had received 15 one-star reviews, all of which complained about its subject matter. The book was also available for free in the Kindle Lending Library, which according to the terms and conditions of Amazon’s Kindle publishing platform, one of the largest self-publishing platforms in the world, meant that it was exclusively available on the Kindle.
Love146, an organization based in New Haven, CT, had asked its followers to send letters and emails, and to telephone Amazon, requesting that they withdraw the book.
Before its removal, Jo Coles, Collective Shout Officer at Love146, told The Huffington Post via email that “We have protested Amazon before and they have responded well and removed ‘The Pedophiles Guide to Love and Pleasure.’ This is one of the reasons why we are not asking people to boycott Amazon.”
Amazon Attacked Over Sex Tourism EBook