The Reckoning of Pluralism

At the time Tambar wrote The Reckoning of Pluralism, there was a brief opening in Turkish political life during which ethnic and sectarian plurality was both imaginable and debatable. This opening, initiated by the ruling AKP, attempted to create an official conversation about the Alevis and the Ku...

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Autor principal: Kimberly Hart
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: International Institute of Islamic Thought 2014
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/2194d66ebaad4a189c4cf82420b554db
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Sumario:At the time Tambar wrote The Reckoning of Pluralism, there was a brief opening in Turkish political life during which ethnic and sectarian plurality was both imaginable and debatable. This opening, initiated by the ruling AKP, attempted to create an official conversation about the Alevis and the Kurds. This move indicated that those who have state power were willing to accept the suggestion that Turkish nationalism could encompass sectarian and ethnic diversity. The opening, however, was brutally closed via the violent attacks on peaceful protestors during the Gezi Park events of 2013. Turkish politics changes rapidly, and what was a moment of optimism among those who hope for a greater freedom of expression in Turkey may be revived. This means that Tambar conducted his research when Turks were beginning to discuss religious and ethnic difference, the ongoing war with the Kurds and possible solutions, and a troubled national memory avoided by nationalist historians. Only further research can tell us if the Alevi community feels there is a possibility of greater religious expression. But even within the context of this brief opening, Tambar’s work contributes to the question of how the Turkish government locates, defines, and confines religion, in this case Alevism, in the national imaginary via nationalist historians. Tambar’s work contributes to a growing body of ethnographic and sociological literature on Turkey’s powerful if obviously constructed ideological worldview, in which the state ushers into existence self-evident “truths” for its citizens. In this case the truth is the origin, meaning, and role of the nation’s Alevis. The author describes how their history has been domesticated (chap. 3), how public performances of religiosity are self-contained by the Alevis, who are now burdened with the need to perform national unity and forget aspects of ritual that appear “irrelevant” to contemporary, urban, political, and ideological issues (chaps. 2 and 4), and how ritual has become intellectualized and historicized (chap. 5). Chapter 6, the final chapter, discusses a non-state Alevi mosque run by imams trained in Iran. The book will be useful for specialists, for whom lingering questions about this group’s oft-repeated “shamanistic” origin is a puzzle. Tambar forcefully illuminates the origins of this nationalist fiction and the related denial of any possible connection with Shi‘i Islam. Naturally, for those with some background in Ottoman history, the denial of the Alevis’ sectarian connections to ...