Turkey’s Arabs losing their identity

Updated 19 April 2014
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Turkey’s Arabs losing their identity

Turkey’s Arabs are in need of support for preserving their cultural identity, Shukri Kirboga, president of an Arab-Turkish cultural association, told Arab News.
“Many of these residents know nothing of their original language,” he said. “Saudi Arabia is a prominent Islamic country that can play a big role in helping Arab minorities in several societies reconnect with their native mother tongue.”
“This is precisely why I chose to visit the Kingdom,” he said. “I came to appeal to Saudi leaders to provide support to the Arab community living in Turkey.”
There are more than 7 million Arabs living across 12 cities in Turkey, said Kirboga. “These communities, unfortunately, have no cultural support from Arab countries.”
Five million of these Arabs have supported more than 1 million Syrian refugees through providing humanitarian aid, while several Arab-Turkish tribes support the Free Syrian Army, he said.
Similarly, many Arab-Turks have strong ties with Arab tribes living in the northern regions of Syria.
Turkish Arabs, predominantly Muslim, mostly live along the southeastern border with Syria and Iraq in the Urfa, Batman, Bitlis, Gaziantep, Hatay, Mardin and Adana provinces of Turkey. In fact, most of Hatay’s residents are Arab.
Arabs on the eastern side of the border consist of Bedouin tribes, in addition to other Arabs who settled in the region before Turkic tribes — a collection of ethnic groups that live in central Asia, northwestern China and parts of eastern Europe — settled in Anatolia in the 11th century.
Arab society in Turkey is generally well-integrated into the Turkish population. Many still speak Arabic, in addition to Turkish.
“The current Turkish government allowed Arabic to be taught at Turkish schools and also allowed us to establish our association to preserve Arabian culture,” he said. “This government is unlike previous governments, which were anti-Arab and took action to take away our ethnic identity.”
One Turkish study estimates the Arab population to be anywhere between 1.1 percent and 2.4 percent of the total population, while an American estimate in 1995 pegged the figure at between 800,000 and 1 million residents.
A Turkish study conducted in 2006, however, concluded that less than one percent of the total population of Turkey is ethnically Arab.
Half a million Turkish residents spoke Arabic as a first language in 1992, according to another study.
By contrast, around 365,340 Turkish citizens, one percent of the total population in 1965, had Arabic as their mother tongue. In fact, more than half of this population could speak only Arabic at the time.


Jailed Turkish Kurd leader calls on government to broker deal for Syrian Kurds

Updated 7 sec ago
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Jailed Turkish Kurd leader calls on government to broker deal for Syrian Kurds

  • Clashes between Syrian forces and the SDF have cast doubt over a deal to integrate the group’s fighters into the army
ANKARA: Jailed Turkish Kurd leader Abdullah Ocalan said Tuesday that it was “crucial” for Turkiye’s government to broker a peace deal between the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and the Damascus government.
Clashes between Syrian forces and the SDF have cast doubt over a deal to integrate the group’s fighters into the army, which was due to take effect by the end of the year.
Ocalan, founder of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) militant group, called on Turkiye to help ensure implementation of the deal announced in March between the SDF and the Syrian government, led by former jihadist Ahmed Al-Sharaa, whose forces ousted longtime ruler Bashar Assad last year.
“It is essential for Turkiye to play a role of facilitator, constructively and aimed at dialogue,” he said in a message released by Turkiye’s pro-Kurdish DEM party.
“This is crucial for both regional peace and to strengthen its own internal peace,” Ocalan, who has been jailed for 26 years, added.
“The fundamental demand made in the agreement signed on March 10 between the SDF and the government in Damascus is for a democratic political model permitting (Syria’s) peoples to govern together,” he added.
“This approach also includes the principle of democratic integration, negotiable with the central authorities. The implementation of the March 10 agreement will facilitate and accelerate that process.”
The backbone of the US-backed SDF is the YPG, a Kurdish militant group seen by Turkiye as an extension of the PKK.
Turkiye and Syria both face long-running unrest in their Kurdish-majority regions, which span their shared border.
In Turkiye, the PKK agreed this year at Ocalan’s urging to end its four-decade armed struggle.
In Syria, Sharaa has agreed to merge the Kurds’ semi-autonomous administration into the central government, but deadly clashes and a series of differences have held up implementation of the deal.
The SDF is calling for a decentralized government, which Sharaa rejects.
Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, whose country sees Kurdish fighters across the border as a threat, urged the SDF last week not to be an “obstacle” to stability.
Syrian Kurdish leader Mazloum Abdi said Thursday that “all efforts” were being made to prevent the collapse of talks.