The Fading
Dream of Europe
Orhan Pamuk
In the
schoolbooks I read as a child in the 1950s and 1960s, Europe was a rosy
land of
legend. While forging his new republic from the ruins of the Ottoman
Empire,
which had been crushed and fragmented in World War I, Mustafa Kemal
Atatürk
fought against the Greek army, but with the support of his own army he
later
introduced a slew of social and cultural modernization reforms that
were not
anti- but pro-Western. It was to legitimize these reforms, which helped
to
strengthen the new Turkish state’s new elites (and were the subject of
continuous debate in Turkey over the next eighty years), that we were
called
upon to embrace and even imitate a rosy-pink—occidentalist—European
dream.
The
schoolbooks of my childhood were texts designed to teach us why a line
was to
be drawn between the state and religion, why it had been necessary to
shut down
the lodges of the dervishes, or why we’d had to abandon the Arab
alphabet for
the Latin. But they were also overflowing with questions that aimed to
unlock
the secret of Europe’s great power and success. “Describe the aims and
outcomes
of the Renaissance,” the middle school history teacher would ask in his
exam.
“If it turned out we were sitting on as much oil as the Arabs, would we
then be
as rich and modern as Europeans?” my more naive classmates at my lycée
would
say. In my first year at university, whenever my classmates came across
such
questions in class, they would fret over why “we never had an
enlightenment.”
The fourteenth-century Arab thinker Ibn Khaldun said that civilizations
in
decline were able to keep from disintegrating by imitating their
victors.
Because Turks were never colonized by a world power, “worshiping
Europe” or
“imitating the West” has never carried the damning, humiliating
overtones
described by Franz Fanon, V.S. Naipaul, or Edward Said. To look to
Europe has
been seen as a historical imperative or even a technical question of
adaptation.
But this
rose-colored dream of Europe, once so powerful that even our most
anti-Western
thinkers and politicians secretly believed in it, has now faded. This
may be
because Turkey is no longer as poor as it once was. Or it could be
because it
is no longer a peasant society ruled by its army, but a dynamic nation
with a
strong civil society of its own. And in recent years, there has of
course been
the slowing down of talks between Turkey and the European Union, with
no
resolution in sight. Neither in Europe nor in Turkey is there a
realistic hope
that Turkey will join the EU in the near future. But to admit to having
lost
this hope would be as crushing as to see relations with Europe break
down
entirely. So no one has the heart even to utter the words.
That Turkey
and other non-Western countries are disenchanted with Europe is
something I
know from my own travels and conversations. A major cause of the strain
in
relations between Turkey and the EU was most certainly the alliance
that
included a sector of the Turkish army, leading media groups, and
nationalist
political parties, all combining in a successful campaign to sabotage
negotiations over entry into the EU. The same alliance was responsible
for the
prosecutions launched against me and many writers, the shooting of
others, and
the killing of missionaries and Christian clerics. There are also the
emotional
responses whose significance can best be explained by the example of
relations
with France. Over the past century, successive generations of the
Turkish elite
have faithfully taken France as their model, drawing on its
understanding of
secularism and following its lead on education, literature, and art. So
to have
France emerge over the past five years as the country most vehemently
opposed
to the idea of Turkey in Europe has been heartbreaking and
disillusioning. It
is, however, Europe’s involvement in the war in Iraq that has caused
the
keenest disappointment in non-western countries, and in Turkey, real
anger. The
world watched Europe being tricked by Bush into joining this
illegitimate and
cruel war, while showing immense readiness to be tricked.
When looking
at the landscape of Europe from Istanbul or beyond, the first thing one
sees is
that Europe generally (like the European Union) is confused about its
internal
problems. It is clear that the peoples of Europe have a lot less
experience
than Americans when it comes to living with those whose religion, skin
color,
or cultural identity are different from their own, and that many of
them do not
warm to the prospect: this resistance to outsiders makes Europe’s
internal
problems all the more intractable. The recent discussions in Germany on
integration and multiculturalism—particularly its large Turkish
minority—are a
case in point.
As the
economic crisis deepens and spreads, Europe may be able, by turning in
on
itself, to postpone its struggle to preserve the culture of the
“bourgeois” in
Flaubert’s sense of the word, but that will not solve the problem. When
I look
at Istanbul, which becomes a little more complex and cosmopolitan with
every
passing year and now attracts immigrants from all over Asia and Africa,
I have
no trouble concluding that the poor, unemployed, and undefended of Asia
and
Africa who are looking for new places to live and work cannot be kept
out of
Europe indefinitely. Higher walls, tougher visa restrictions, and ships
patrolling borders in increasing numbers will only postpone the day of
reckoning. Worst of all, anti-immigration politics, policies, and
prejudices
are already destroying the core values that made Europe what it was.
In the
Turkish schoolbooks of my childhood there was no discussion of
democracy or
women’s rights, but on the packets of Gauloises that French
intellectuals and
artists smoked (or so we thought) were printed the words “liberté,
égalité,
fraternité” and these were much in circulation. “Fraternité” came to
stand for
the spirit of solidarity and resistance promoted by movements of the
left. But
callousness toward the sufferings of immigrants and minorities, and the
castigation of Asians, Africans, and Muslims now leading difficult
lives in the
peripheries of Europe—even holding them solely responsible for their
woes—are
not “brotherhood.”
One can
understand how many Europeans might suffer anxiety and even panic as
they seek
to preserve Europe’s great cultural traditions, profit from the riches
it
covets in the non-Western world, and retain the advantages gained over
so many
centuries of class conflict, colonialism, and internecine war. But if
Europe is
to protect itself, would it be better for it to turn inward, or should
it
perhaps remember its fundamental values, which once made it the center
of
gravity for all the world’s intellectuals?
—Translated
from the Turkish by Maureen Freely
December
25,
2010 midnight
NYRB