Turkey: against their own deen!

um muhammad al-mahdi

لا اله الا الله محمد رسول الله
Staff member
:salam2:
I don't know if this video has been already posted in TTI. But I thought to share it with you.
May Allah (swt) bless our brothers & sisters in Turkey!

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Aapa

Mirajmom
Salaam,

I have not seen it before. I wrote to Yvonne Ridley's organization to attempt to have a formal petition to present to the Turkish officals. Her organization has not responded. I will find another oraganization to start an e-mail petition.
Yes, the petition is simply a token idea but we need to let our sisters know we are right there with them. I will post the name of the oraganization which will support us as soon as I can find one that will.
We can get at least 50,000 signatures. We just have to keep on keeping on.

Your aapa,
Sister Mirajmom
 

Jihan

Junior Member
jazakAllah khair Very informative. I was always wondering about Turkey's condition concerning the religion.

May Allah bless the ones who are willing to fight for their rights.
 

zainab

Junior Member
:salam2:

My family and I plan to imigrate to the Turkish Republic of northern Cyprus soon InshAllah.

Shame on those people. I am really disgusted.

May Allah ease the suffering of the oppressed and soften the heart of the oppressor. May Allah guide as all Amen.

:wasalam:
 

Jihan

Junior Member
:salam2:

My family and I plan to imigrate to the Turkish Republic of northern Cyprus soon InshAllah.

Shame on those people. I am really disgusted.

May Allah ease the suffering of the oppressed and soften the heart of the oppressor. May Allah guide as all Amen.

:wasalam:

so do you live in turkey at all.
 

um muhammad al-mahdi

لا اله الا الله محمد رسول الله
Staff member
...something more

Turkey

Effects of the Hijab Ban

Hijab ban at work

Many men with family members who wear the hijab are constantly in fear of being passed over for promotion, having their employment terminated or failing to gain employment. The following example fields of work are just illustrations of common events.

Parliament

In April 1999, Merve Kavaçki was prevented from taking the parliamentary seat she had been elected to because she violated the Turkish government’s ban on Islamic dress in state offices. This is after she had been approved as a candidate, campaigned and had been elected democratically. President Suleyman Demirel revoked Kavaçki’s citizenship.
"Turkey is a country that has a target of full democracy. If we want a full democracy with no double standards, which means democracy for everyone, in an equal manner and hence in parliament, the representation has to be fair. … The parliament is not a state office. It is the parliament of the nation and consists of people who represent the nation. On the door of the parliament, they have some writing of Atarturk’s which says ‘the leadership and control unconditionally belong to the nation’. I wonder at how they can scream and shout ‘Get out! Get out!’ at me for one hour after I have been elected through the democratic process and emerged as the nation’s choice. … People have chosen me with my scarf!”

Dress codes


Those working in public institutions and organisations are subject to a code:

“Women: Dress should be cleaned ironed... the head should be uncovered in the work area, hair should be well - combed and gathered together.
Men: dress should be neat, ironed...the beard should be shaven everyday’.

Judges

In 2000 2 judges were dismissed and 5 relocated. This is as a result of granting permission for female pupils to attend school wearing the hijab. A judge at a Tax Court was sent the following as part of a letter seeking his resignation:
‘Because of the clothes of your wife, which are not modern, an opinion came into being that you are closer to thoughts against secularism; and because you sit in two groups when you have visitors and it is said that in the office you listen to religious broadcasts and religious songs’.

Soldiers

Soldiers who have joined the army as a career were pressurised to prevent their wives from wearing the hijab. On failure to comply some were dismissed and prevented from getting any other employment. The following letter demonstrates the sinister and controlling interference of the government in the private life of its citizens.

Letter to a soldier November 1997:
‘The Islamic way of dressing is a political symbol that uses it for political propaganda. Your wife, with Islamic dress, has participated in not only home visiting, but also some social activities like family meetings with dinner. Although I have warned you verbally to change your wife’s dressing style in accordance with modern culture, your wife will not consider it. For this reason, this is my last warning to you. We can intervene in your wife’s dress style. This is our responsibility’.

Hijab ban in schools

Pupils

All pupils are forbidden from wearing the hijab.

Teachers

No teachers are allowed to wear either hijab or wigs. Many trainee students were failed in their exams due to them wearing the hijab and many other teachers refusing to remove the hijab were sacked.

Hijab ban at universities

The hijab ban was not passed as a law, as it has been elsewhere. It was enforced through YOK (Association of Higher Educational Institutes). All educational institutes have to be affiliated to this organisation in order for their qualifications to be recognised. (National Security Council ruling: ‘all private hostels, foundations and schools connected with a religious sect must be inspected by the Authorities and the must be vested in Ministry of National Education’). YOK used the threat of disaffiliation to pressurize institutions throughout Turkey to comply with the government edict. Many faculties were reluctant but all succumbed eventually to huge political pressure and the fear of job loss and imprisonment.

Spread of the ban

The first university to ban the hijab was Istanbul University in 1997. The bans then spread eastwards as the pressure on universities from YOK grew. The last university to ban was Bosphorus University (an English medium establishment) in 2001.

Banning of all alternatives to the scarf

Many Muslim women sought any way to fulfil their religious duties whilst continuing their education. Some shaved their heads as a sign of protest, whilst others opted for hats and wigs, sometimes on top of their hijab. The sight of these women trying to evade the security by walking around the edges of the campuses to find gaps through which they could sneak their way into their classes with their hats pulled down and collars pulled up is a truly tragicomic one. But the university authorities were content with this level of humiliation, they went on to ban the ‘ideological hat and wig’ in many universities. Marmara University declared ‘it is forbidden to wear scarves, berets and wigs which can be defined as ideological’. They also declared that ‘female students should wear such clothes that their necks and heads would be uncovered’.

Exam results

Female students who were unable to attend classes because they were refused entry to the universities still had their names registered for the examinations. As a result, when they attempted to enter the examination halls and were prevented from doing so, their non-attendance was recorded as absence with cause. Hence they were unable to re-sit the exams, their marks were recorded as 0% and they forfeited their degrees.

Membership of libraries

Membership of libraries for a number of women was suddenly ceased due to their attire. Many of these women were long-term researchers.

Hijab ban and hospital treatment

In May 2002 women wearing hijab were prevented from participating in a meeting intended to inform asthma sufferers about the illness.
In June 2002 Medine Bircan, a patient at Istanbul University Hospital, was refused treatment on the grounds that her head was covered in a photograph present in her documents. This clearly contravened article 1.5 and 1.6 in the European Declaration of Patients’ Rights (Amsterdam 1994).

Popular opinion on the hijab ban

According to research 96.9% of the Turkish population positively identify themselves as Muslims. 77.3% also see the republic revolutions as having taken the country forward. This challenges the view that Turkish society has become polarised between Islamists and Secularists. According to official statistics 76% of Turkish women wear hijab, but only 58.9% of people think it is obligatory. 76% of the population think that university students should be allowed to wear the hijab and 74.2% think it should be permissible for female officers of state as well.


Sources: ‘Near history of scarf ban by photographs’ (AKDER)
‘Briefing on human rights abuses in Turkey 2002’ (MAZLUMDER)
‘Evaluation of the headscarf ban in the light of surveys and reports of human rights organisations’ (AKDER, 2004)
www.mutamainna.com
 

al-fajr

...ism..schism
Staff member
Assalam

Female students who were unable to attend classes because they were refused entry to the universities still had their names registered for the examinations. As a result, when they attempted to enter the examination halls and were prevented from doing so, their non-attendance was recorded as absence with cause. Hence they were unable to re-sit the exams, their marks were recorded as 0% and they forfeited their degrees.

sick.

ataturk, 1924, the collapse of the Khilafah, and how it was ensured it could never agian take root in turkey, this video explains some if ataturk's aims and objectives, very informative inshAllah.

(jzk to the person on youtube who made this..its a cool vid)

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