Erdogan
Raising "Devout Generations"
by Burak Bekdil
• April 1, 2015 at 5:00 am
"[Education]
is now being used to raise an obedient generation that will serve the
government." — Sakine Esen Yilmaz, Secretary General of a secular
teachers' union.
Christian
Pastor Ahmet Guvener managed to get his daughter, also a Christian, an
exemption from mandatory Islamic religious classes in her Turkish school, but
he soon found out this was not an easy task. Schoolteachers offered the girl three
options: take as an elective course, "the life of the Prophet Muhammad,
the Quran," or basic religious knowledge -- or fail the year. After the
father spoke to the press, the school offered his daughter an alternative: an
elective course in "astronomy."
For the Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a pious Sunni man is,
by definition, a more decent man than any other. Therefore, he reasons, a
pious Sunni youth is better than any other youth.
In 2012, (then prime minister) Erdogan openly declared that his
political ambition was "to raise devout generations." The
opposition protested that it was not a government's mission to raise devout
or non-devout generations; that in a secular country this choice belonged to
parents, not to the government. In response, Erdogan said: "Should we, then,
raise atheist generations?" He does not understand. He evidently will
not.
At an inauguration ceremony in March 2015, Erdogan proudly said that the
number of "imam school" students had risen from a mere 60,000 to 1
million. That is wonderful news for Erdogan, himself a graduate of an
"imam school."
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Wednesday, April 1, 2015
Erdogan Raising "Devout Generations"
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