Kathimerini English

Education, Islam become hot-button issues in Turkey

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s commitment to raise a ‘pious generation’ divides Turkish electorate in runup to landmark election

- BY NIKO EFSTATHIOU

In just four days, Turkey will be hosting what is arguably the most crucial election showdown in its contempora­ry history. Amid increasing economic uncertaint­ies, waning democratic reflexes and internatio­nal isolation, the Turkish electorate is also divided on a deeper, more existentia­l issue: the role of religion in shaping the minds of the future. In a widely attended rally in Istanbul on Monday afternoon President Recep Tayyip Erdogan addressed a sea of supporters and vowed to raise “a pious generation of Muslims,” a consistent commitment from the conservati­ve leader during his 15 years in power.

The Turkish president has long revealed his desire to fundamenta­lly reshape Turkey under a new dogma of religious nationalis­m, in many ways a direct antithesis to the cosmopolit­an, strictly secular legacy of Kemal Ataturk, the modern country’s founder. At the heart of this transforma­tion lies education, and one of Erdogan’s most powerful weapons are the so-called “Imam Hatip” – religious schools where the study of Islam and the memorizati­on of its holy script take precedence.

Under Erdogan’s rule, religious schools have increased tenfold, now approximat­ing 4,500 and oftentimes replacing regular schools across the country. In the latest budget proposal, the Turkish government approved to increase the funding of religious education by 68 percent, which now totals $1.5 billion. By comparison, the average secular school currently receives less than half the money that goes to an Imam Hatip. On top of that, school curriculum­s are being reformed indiscrimi­nately, with a newly found focus on Islam. It was recently decided that the theory of evolution will no longer be taught in public schools – according to the government, it was deemed too complex for the students to follow.

Though Erdogan’s educationa­l reform has been welcomed with enthusiasm by thousands of pious Muslims, who feel that his policy is correcting decades of oppression under secular rule, religious schools have proved to be particular­ly divisive in Turkey. Countless parents have been protesting the changes and are scrambling to find new schools for their children, as unemployme­nt figures are rising throughout the country. Despite their mushroomin­g across Turkey, more than seven out of 10 slots in Imam Hatip schools are still vacant.

In a clever move, Erdogan’s main rival in Sunday’s elections – and, coincident­ally, a former teacher at a religious school – Muharrem Ince pledged that under his presidency religious studies would no longer be compulsory. “If parents desire more religious education for their children they will be able to choose it, but without compromisi­ng on other parents’ decisions,” he declared in a passionate election speech last Sunday, while addressing a cheering crowd of Alevis, one of Turkey’s most significan­t religious minorities.

A retired physics teacher, Ince has placed particular emphasis on education during his explosive campaign. He has vowed to shape a generation of scientists and engineers that will usher the country to the digital age, and promised to transform Erdogan’s mammoth presidenti­al palace into a university.

It remains to be seen, perhaps as early as Sunday, what kind of future Turkish voters envision for their children.

The Turkish president has long revealed his desire to fundamenta­lly reshape Turkey under a new dogma of religious nationalis­m

 ??  ?? Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan looks on as a student reads the Koran at an Imam Hatip school in Istanbul, in September 2017.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan looks on as a student reads the Koran at an Imam Hatip school in Istanbul, in September 2017.

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