Erdoğan’s hubris
Justinian built it, Mehmet II took it by conquest,
Ataturk turned it into a museum. Erdoğan
stacked a court with his acolytes, signed a paper converting it into a mosque
and reckons himself a conqueror.
When a monument stands majestic and wondrous for
over 1,500 years, as Hagia Sophia has done, it becomes a symbol for all
humanity, something like a force of nature. It takes the gall of a Herostratus
to believe that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s political games will
amount to more than a miserable footnote in the history of Hagia Sophia. They
will, however, mark a milestone in Turkey’s hasty retreat from the 21st
century.
The Turkish court’s decision annulling Ataturk’s
conversion of Hagia Sophia from a mosque into a museum was no surprise. Equally
predictable was the speed with which Erdoğan
signed his own proclamation, bringing the monument under the jurisdiction of
his Presidency’s
Directorate for Religious Affairs. And yet, despite the certainty that the
Turkish president would try to marshal his supporters in this way and to insult
Christians everywhere, especially in Greece, I confess I was surprised by the
sorrow and anger the decision provoked in me. These feelings, I believe, do not
stem only from the fact that I am a Greek and a Christian – although this
definitely plays a role.
What I find inconceivable is the persistence of one
man to keep violating borders, rules, laws, agreements and rights, and then to
step this up by gleefully trampling on civilized forms of behaviour, upsetting
a whole region, driving his people ever further from our era.
Turkish dissidents are in prison, in exile or
stripped of the right to work and to have social security. The news media and
society are under strict control. Whereas early in his time in power Erdoğan
eased pressure on the Kurds, in the past few years he has been relentless in
his belligerence towards them, trying to gain from division, sucking up to
nationalist extremists for their support. He acts like a great leader, as if
Turkey is a superpower, but his chief weapon is in the hands of others – the
tolerance that the international community has shown him. And as long as this
appeasement continues, his behaviour will become more brutal, relying more and
more on a combustible mix of nationalist and religious extremism.
The architects of Hagia Sophia were pagans, members
of Alexandria’s Platonic School. The great church was built in just under six
years and was inaugurated on December 27 in 537. In 538, the dome collapsed and
was rebuilt. Since then, it collapsed partially several times.
Built long before the schism between Eastern and
Western Christianity (in 1054), Hagia Sophia was the grandest and most
important cathedral in all Christendom before becoming the symbol of Orthodoxy.
I mention this history to note the “multicultural” nature of the church’s
creation, its importance to all Christianity, and the fact that even before the
Fall of Constantinople in 1453 and its conversion into a mosque, the Church of
Holy Wisdom had suffered much but was still standing.
A church for 916 years, a mosque for 482 and a
museum for 85, Hagia Sophia is at the start of a new chapter now. It will
always be a symbol of Christianity and the model on which great Turkish
architects based their designs for grand mosques. But it will also represent a
lost age in which Turkey, for good or ill, tried to keep up with the rest of
the world. As long as it remains a mosque, it will stand witness to Turkey’s
return to the behaviour of a dark past. Justifying its new conversion on the
grounds of a medieval “conquest” is proof of this.
Perhaps the only surprise these days is that Erdoğan
has played this card so early, without trying to extort much more from the
international community, as he has done with the exploitation of migrants and
refugees, with the invasion and occupation of foreign territory, with the
violation of borders and the rights of neighbours, with support for extremist
Islamists, and so on.
Erdoğan’s strongest support
comes from presidents Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin (to the extent that
Turkey helps undermine NATO), and relies on tolerance by other countries,
mainly in the European Union. This time, though, his hubris may be a step too
far even for them.




