Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 8 – The Confederation
of Circassian Organizations, together with the Pluralist Democratic Party, is planning
demonstrations in Ankara and Istanbul this Sunday to press for a television
channel in their national language and for inclusion in the new Turkish
constitution on the basis of equality with the Turks and Kurds.
Selcuk Baglar of the University of
Van points out that Turkey is home to Internet broadcasting in 42 different
languages and that there are 13 television channels and eight radio channels
which broadcast around the clock in four languages – Turkish, English, Kurdish
and Arabic (kavkazr.com/a/turetskie-cherkesy-sobirayutsya-zayavit-o-svoikh-pravakh/28356221.html).
But
there are none in Circassian, despite the fact that the Circassians have a
prominent role in the state, that they have been promised such broadcasting in the
past, and that it is entirely appropriate that they receive that and constitutional
equality with the other indigenous nations of Turkey, Baglar continues.
Turkey
must show Russia the way in this regard, he says. “Today in Russia broadcasting
in Circassian occurs only two or three hours a day. Most of this is devoted to
transmission of local news. Circassians in Russia watch broadcasts of local
news in Circassian but they can get international news only in Russian. This is
unacceptable.”
Worse,
he says, although Russia is a federal state on paper, it is in fact a unitary
one; and Moscow “is trying to destroy the Circassian language,” blocking
students from working in it in universities in Circassian areas. If Turkey forms a Circassian television
channel, that will be the basis for the growth of Circassian in Turkey -- and
put pressure on Russia as well.
But
there is no time to lose, Baglar says. “Earlier in places of compact residence
of Circassians, the imams and efendis were Circassians. In mosques, services
were in Circassian. Now, however, this practice has been violated: most imams
are Turks who do not know Circassian or the mentality or customs of the
Circassians.”
Later
this month, Baglar says, there will be a referendum in Turkey and the
Circassians will vote: if the television issue isn’t resolved, “we will call
for voting against the government’s proposals.”
But we are confident that it will be resolved and that the rebirth of
the Circassian nation will begin in Turkey and extend back to the homeland in
the North Caucasus.
In
recent months, Moscow has had difficulty in maintaining relations between the
Circassian groups in the North Caucasus it controls and those in the diaspora
and especially in Turkey it does not. This new push for a Circassian television
channel in Turkey is the first fruits of Moscow’s failure to keep ties even
where they were.
And
the likelihood that the Circassians will follow the Kurds and the Arabs as
recognized constituent nations in Turkey will only increase their activism and
its impact on the Circassian community in the North Caucasus. Moscow had always thought it could count on
Ankara to oppose the Circassians, but now it appears Turkey may be the
Circassians news ally.
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