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3.1 Turkish Nationalism

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    [BLANK_AUDIO]
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    So, what were the challenges that led to
    the emergence of Turkish nationalism?
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    In Turkish nationalism, we are talking
    first and
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    foremost of the pressure that is coming
    from
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    Europe and the problem of secession by the
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    Christian populated territories in the
    European part of [INAUDIBLE].
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    Ottomanism failed to keep the Christians
    inside the Empire.
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    During the [UNKNOWN] read on the about the
    equality
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    about the law that was passed, and this
    equality before
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    the law that included Christians and
    Muslims; was suppose
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    to create a shared Ottoman identity but it
    did not.
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    In the face of Christian secession,
    Sumpana turn to
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    [INAUDIBLE] to strengthen the bonds
    between the increasingly Muslim empire.
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    As Christian seceded, so the Empire became
    even more Muslim.
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    But this idea of pan-Islam and uniting the
    people on the basis of their religion.
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    Was becoming less and less acceptable to
    the new, Westernizing Turkish elite.
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    They believed in Turkish national
    solidarity.
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    Based on a common langauge, Turkish,
    European-style.
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    The empire now was almost entirely Turkish
    and Arab.
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    Therefore, the emphasis on Turkishness
    could be a cause of tension with
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    the Arabs, especially after 1908 when the
    young Turks came to power.
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    So, though Turkish nationalists, the young
    Turks
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    were reluctant to push Turkish nationalism
    too far.
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    Not create a break with a very large
    narrow Muslin population.
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    Then who were the young Turks.
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    The young Turks were young military
    officers and bureaucrats, the graduates
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    of the [INAUDIBLE] and not the usual
    opponents of the Sultan.
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    Not the local [INAUDIBLE] or the unruly
    tribes or the Christians.
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    And it's the Young Turks who stage a
    revolution
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    in July 1908, dispose the Sultan in April
    of 1909.
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    And continued with the process of reform
    in the military with German advisers,
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    as they continued like their predecessors,
    building
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    new schools and adding to legal reform.
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    The young Turks continued as
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    their predecessors, building a modern
    infrastructure.
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    Telegraph, roads, and railways, generally
    modernizing the Ottoman Empire.
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    Government became ever more centralized.
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    Even the development of an effective
    secret police.
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    Many of the revolutionaries, those who
    came out the revolution of 1908.
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    Where military officers organized in an
    organization that
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    was called The Committee of Union and
    Progress.
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    In short, the C-U-P.
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    They sought the salvation of the empire
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    and the restoration of the 1876
    Constitution.
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    They believed in Turkish nationalism.
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    On Westernized education and on the
    implementation on the constitution.
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    There was very impressive impact amongst
    the young
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    Turks and others in the Muslim middle
    east.
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    Of the defeat of Russia in 1905, by the
    Japanese.
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    This was a defeat of a European power by
    an Asian power.
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    And in looking for the success of the
    Japanese against
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    the Russians, many in the Middle East
    focused on the fact.
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    That Japan had gone in the direction
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    of constitutionalism, whereas the Russians
    had not.
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    And therefore, the idea of a
    constitutional government
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    was gaining ground as a source of
    collective power.
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    But also, for the young Turks.
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    Constitutions meant, the steady shift of
    power into the hands of
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    the army at the expense of both the sultan
    and the bureaucracy.
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    They also believed that the resumption of
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    parliamentary life, would ease you to peer
    pressure.
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    But he did not.
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    In the Balkans, the Ottomans continued
    losing ground.
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    And in 1911 the Italians took Tripoli in
    Libya.
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    In 1912, '13, the Ottomans lost nearly all
    the territory they had left in Europe.
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    In 1913, the CUP assumed complete control,
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    which they had not enjoyed entirely until
    then.
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    But they didn't manage to do much before
    the outbreak
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    of the First World War, and that changed a
    great deal.
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    Since the second half of the 19th century,
    there had been
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    a steadily increasing interest in the
    history of the Turkish people.
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    As well as in the Turkish language, in
    Turkish literature.
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    Ziya Gokalp, who lived from 1876 to 1924,
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    was the most prominent idealogue of
    Turkish nationalism.
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    He rejected autonism and made theTurkish
    nation the basis of his program.
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    But as long as the empire continued to
    exist.
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    Turkish nationalism, as a practical,
    political program, had little
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    appeal to the leadership and to the
    general public.
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    The CUP, those sympathetic and supportive
    of Turkish nationals, continued like
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    their predecessors with autonism,
    centralization and modernization.
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    It would take the end of empire for
    [INAUDIBLE]
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    ideology to become the policy of the new
    Turkish republic.
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    This emergence of Turkishness, and Turkish
    nationalism, gives
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    rise to a question of how this all
    relates.
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    To the notorious Armenian tragedy.
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    And now we turn to this so called Armenian
    problem.
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    Since the Empire was losing territory all
    the time, what was
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    left of the Empire which essentially was
    the area of Anatolia.
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    Faced increasing nationalist challenges by
    others,
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    that served to reinforce Turkish identity
    and nationalist fashions.
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    With the loss of the European province.
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    Anatolia was established as the heartland
    of the Turkish speaking people.
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    And it was its zone of their prospective
    self-determination.
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    But this allowed for the emergence of the
    Armenian problem.
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    As a potential threat to the Turkish
    [INAUDIBLE].
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    Anatolia developed, impressively like the
    rest of the empire,
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    especially in the west of Anatolia during
    the 19th century.
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    Eastern Anatolia remained less developed
    and
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    there was considerable social and
    political tension.
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    Between the Armenians who are Christians,
    and the [INAUDIBLE]
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    who are Saudi Muslims in the eastern part
    of Anatolia.
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    There were Armenians in all of Anatolia,
    but especially in the eastern provinces.
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    And during the 19th century.
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    An Armenian National Consciousness
    developed very much under the
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    influence of western sources, especially
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    through the American partisan missionaries
    who were active amongst the Armenians.
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    The Armenians engaged in provocations
    against the [INAUDIBLE].
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    To attract European intervention on their
    behalf.
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    Cooperation with Russia, men's cooperation
    of the
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    Armenians, with the traditional enemy of
    the Armenians.
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    Tensions between the Turkish speaking
    muslims and the Armenians rose.
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    And in the last quarter the nineteenth
    there were massacres of Armenians,
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    by Kurdish irregulars of the Ottoman army
    in the eastern part of Anatolia.
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    A combination of a lack of
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    government control, with suspicion towards
    the Armenians
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    as a national move threatened what the
    Turks had left of their Empire.
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    These two came together to allow for a
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    terrible massacre of the Armenians to take
    place.
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    This terrible massacre took place in the
    midst of
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    World War One, in the early years of the
    war.
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    [BLANK_AUDIO]
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    Armenians in Eastern Anatolia had fought
    with the Russians against the Ottomans.
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    Other Armenians had engaged in guerrilla
    operations and some
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    Armenians populations rose against the
    Ottomans during the war.
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    In the spring of 1915, with the British
    attacking at the Dardanelles.
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    The Russians attacking in the East and the
    British apparently advancing on Baghdad,
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    the Ottomans decided on the deportation of
    the Armenians in Eastern Anatolia.
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    In the process of this deportation,
    hundreds of
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    thousands, maybe even one million
    Armenians or even more.
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    Perished because of the harsh conditions,
    dying of hunger, disease and exposure.
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    Many were murdered by local, mainly
    Kurdish, tribesman and villagers.
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    The Armenian tragedy is part of.
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    A general transition that is taking place
    in the Ottoman Empire.
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    The transition from commoner identity to
    territorial self-determination.
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    And this had some very unfortunate
    consequences on the ground.
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    The transition from communal co-existence,
    where religious
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    communities lead side by side Ottoman
    style.
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    To territorial nationalism, European
    style.
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    Required some degree of territorial
    continuity.
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    The need for communities now to acquire
    territorial continuity.
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    In the name of self-determination, rather
    than communities just living side
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    by side, created unavoidable clashes
    between the mosaic
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    of minorities within the Ottoman Empire,
    accompanied by horrific bloodshed.
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    The Balkans of those days.
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    And latter-day Yugoslavia of the 1990s
    were one example.
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    The Armenians in Anatolia was another.
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    Not all parts of modernity and change had
    positive results.
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    Some were quite catastrophic.
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    Indeed, the Turkish-Armenian clash.
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    Was the worst example of this unfortunate
    reality.
Title:
3.1 Turkish Nationalism
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Video Language:
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Duration:
11:32
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for 3.1 Turkish Nationalism

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