How Erdogan Reoriented Turkish Culture to Maintain His Power
At the final sundown before the first round of voting in
the toughest election of his two-decade rule, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of
Turkey visited Hagia Sophia for evening prayers — and to remind his voters of
just what he had delivered.
For nearly a millennium the domed cathedral had been the
epicenter of Orthodox Christianity. After the Ottoman conquest of
Constantinople in 1453, it became one of the Islamic world’s finest mosques. In
the 1930s, the new Turkish republic proclaimed it a museum, and for nearly a
century its overlapping Christian and Muslim histories made it Turkey’s most
visited cultural site.
President Erdogan was not so ecumenical: In 2020 he
converted it back into a mosque. When Turks return to the ballot box this
Sunday for the presidential runoff, they will be voting in part on the
political ideology behind that cultural metamorphosis.
Join the crowds at the Hagia Sophia Grand Mosque now,
leaving your shoes at the new long racks in the inner narthex, and you can just
about glimpse the mosaics of Christ and the Virgin, today discreetly sheathed
with white curtains. The famous marble floor has been upholstered with thick
turquoise carpet. The sound is more muffled. The light’s brighter, thanks to
golden chandeliers. Right at the entrance, in a simple frame, is a presidential
proclamation: a monumental swipe at the nation’s secular century, and an
affirmation of a new Turkey worthy of its Ottoman heyday.
“Hagia Sophia is the crowning of that neo-Ottomanist
dream,” said Edhem Eldem, professor of history at Bogazici University in
Istanbul. “It’s basically a transposition of political and ideological fights,
debates, polemical views, into the realm of a very, very primitive
understanding of history and the past.”
If the mark of 21st-century politics is the ascendancy of
culture and identity over economics and class, it could be said to have been
born here in Turkey, home to one of the longest-running culture wars of them
all. And for the past 20 years, in grand monuments and on schlocky soap operas,
at restored archaeological sites and retro new mosques, Mr. Erdogan has
reoriented Turkey’s national culture, promoting a nostalgic revival of the
Ottoman past — sometimes in grand style, sometimes as pure kitsch.
After surviving a tight first round of voting earlier
this month, he is now favored to win a runoff election on Sunday against Kemal
Kilicdaroglu, the candidate of the joint opposition. His resiliency, when poll
after poll predicted his defeat, certainly expresses his party’s systematic
control of Turkey’s media and courts. (Freedom House, a democracy watchdog
organization, downgraded Turkey from “partly free” to “not free” in 2018.) But
authoritarianism is about so much more than ballots and bullets. Television and
music, monuments and memorials have all been prime levers of a political
project, a campaign of cultural ressentiment and national rebirth, that
culminated this May on the blue-green carpets beneath Hagia Sophia’s dome.
Outside Turkey, this cultural turn is often described as
“Islamist,” and Mr. Erdogan and his Justice and Development Party, known as the
A.K.P., have indeed permitted religious observances that were once banned, such
as the wearing of head scarves by women in public institutions. A Museum of
Islamic Civilizations, complete with a “digital dome” and light projections à
la the immersive Van Gogh Experience, opened in 2022 in Istanbul’s new largest
mosque.
Yet this election suggests that nationalism, rather than
religion, may be the true driver of Mr. Erdogan’s cultural revolution. His
celebrations of the Ottoman past — and the resentment of its supposed haters,
whether in the West or at home — have gone hand in hand with nationalist
efforts unrelated to Islam. The country has mounted aggressive campaigns for
the return of Greco-Roman antiquities from Western museums. Foreign
archaeological teams have had their permits withdrawn. Turkey stands at the
bleak vanguard of a tendency seen all over now, not least in the United States:
a cultural politics of perpetual grievance, where even in victory you are
indignant.
For this country’s writers, artists, scholars and
singers, facing censorship or worse, the prospect of a change in government was
less a matter of political preference than of practical survival. Since 2013,
when an Occupy-style protest movement at Istanbul’s Gezi Park took direct aim
at his government, Mr. Erdogan has taken a hard turn to authoritarian rule.
Numerous cultural figures remain imprisoned, including the architect Mucella
Yapici, the filmmakers Mine Ozerden and Cigdem Mater, and the arts
philanthropist Osman Kavala. Writers like Can Dundar and Asli Erdogan (no
relation), who were jailed during the purges that followed a failed military
coup against Mr. Erdogan in 2016, live in exile in Germany.
More than a dozen musical concerts were canceled last
year, among them a recital by the violinist Ara Malikian, who is of Armenian
descent, and a gig by the pop-folk singer Aynur Dogan, who is Kurdish. The
tensions reached a grim crescendo this month, shortly before the first round of
voting, when a Kurdish singer was stabbed to death at a ferry terminal after
declining to sing a Turkish nationalist song.
In the days after the first round of voting, I met with
Banu Cennetoglu, one of the country’s most acclaimed artists, whose
commemoration of a Kurdish journalist at the 2017 edition of the contemporary
art exhibition Documenta won acclaim abroad but brought aggravation at home.
“What is scary right now compared to the 90s, which was also a very difficult
time, especially for the Kurdish community, is that then we could guess where
the evil was coming from,” she told me. “And now it could be anyone. It is much
more random.”
The strategy has worked. Independent media has shrunk.
Self-censorship is rife. “All the institutions within art and culture have been
extremely silent for five years,” Ms. Cennetoglu said. “And for me this is
unacceptable, as an artist. This is my question: when do we activate the red
line? When do we say no, and why?”
Nationalism is nothing new in Turkey. “Everybody and his
uncle is a nationalist in this country,” Mr. Eldem observed. And the Kemalists
— the secular elite who dominated politics here for decades until Mr. Erdogan’s
triumph in 2003 — also used nationalist themes to spin culture to their
political ends. Turkey’s early cinema glorified the achievements of Mustafa
Kemal Ataturk. Archaeological digs for Hittite antiquities aimed to provide the
new republic with a past rooted even more deeply than Greece and Italy.
In the 2000s, Mr. Erdogan’s blend of Islamism and
reformism had Turkey knocking at the door of the European Union. A new Istanbul
was being feted in the foreign press. But the new Turkish nationalism has a
different cultural cast: proudly Islamic, often antagonistic, and sometimes a
little paranoid.
One of the signal cultural institutions of the Erdogan
years is the Panorama 1453 History Museum, in a working-class district west of
Hagia Sophia, where schoolchildren discover the Ottoman conquest of
Constantinople in a painted cyclorama. At one point, a painting in the round
might have been immersion enough. Now it’s been souped up with blaring video
projections, a wildly nationalist pageant styled like the video game
“Civilization.” Kids can watch Sultan Mehmed II charge toward Hagia Sophia,
while his horse rears up in front of a celestial fireball.
There’s a similar backward projection in Turkey’s
television dramas, which are hugely popular not just here but internationally,
with hundreds of millions of viewers throughout the Muslim world, in Germany,
in Mexico, all over. On shows such as “Resurrection: Ertugrul,” an
international hit about a 13th-century Turkic chieftain, or “Kurulus: Osman,” a
“Game of Thrones”-esque Ottoman saga airing every Wednesday here, past and
present start to merge.
“They are casting the discourse of Tayyip Erdogan in the
antique ages,” said Ayse Cavdar, a cultural anthropologist who’s studied these
shows. “If Erdogan faces a struggle right now, it is recast in an Ottoman
context, a fictional context. In this way, not the knowledge about today’s
struggle, but the feeling of it, is spread through society.”
In these half-historical soap operas, the heroes are
decisive, brave, glorious, but the polities they lead are fragile, teetering,
menaced by outsiders. Ms. Cavdar noted how frequently the TV shows feature
leaders of an emerging, endangered state. “As if this guy has not been
governing the state for 20 years!” she said.
Culture came on the agenda during the runoff, too, as Mr.
Erdogan showed up to inaugurate the new home of Istanbul Modern. The president
had praise for the new Bosporus-side museum, designed by the Italian architect
Renzo Piano — but he couldn’t help bashing the creations of the previous
century, with what he described as a misguided abandonment of the Ottoman
tradition.
Now, the president promised, an authentic “Turkish
century” was about to dawn.
Assuming he wins on Sunday, his neo-Ottomanism will have
survived its strongest test in two decades. The cultural figures with the most
to regret are of course those in prison, but it will also be a bitter outcome
for the academics, authors and others who left the country in the wake of Mr.
Erdogan’s purges. “A.K.P.’s social engineering can be compared to monoculture
in industrial agriculture,” said Asli Cavusoglu, a young artist who recently
had a solo show at New York’s New Museum. “There is one type of vegetable they
invest in. Other plants — intellectuals, artists — are unable to grow, and
that’s why they leave.”
Turkey’s minorities may face the greatest hazards. At the
memorial museum for Hrant Dink, the Turkish-Armenian journalist assassinated in
2007, I looked through copies of his independent newspaper and watched footage
of his television chat shows, each an admonishment of contemporary Turkey’s
constricted freedom of expression. “Civil society actors are becoming more
prudent,” said Nayat Karakose, who oversees the museum and is of Armenian
descent. “They do events in a more cautious way.”
For Mr. Eldem, who has spent his career studying Ottoman
history, the reconversion of Hagia Sophia and the “Tudors”-style TV dramas are
all of a piece, and are less confident than they seem. “Nationalism is not just
glorification,” he said. “It’s also victimization. You can’t have proper
nationalism if you’ve never suffered. Because suffering gives you also
absolution from potential misconduct.”
“So what the naïve Turkish nationalist, and especially
neo-Ottomanist nationalist, wants,” he added, “is to bring together the idea of
a glorious empire that would have been benign. That’s not a thing. An empire is
an empire.”
But whether or not Mr. Erdogan wins the election on
Sunday, there are headwinds that no amount of cultural nationalism can stand
against: above all, inflation and a currency crisis that has bankers and
financial analysts flashing a red alert. “In that future, there’s no place for
heritage,” Mr. Eldem said. “The Ottomans are not going to save you.”