In 2007, a plaintiff petitioned a civil court in Istanbul. His petition stated that although in the civil registers (kütükte) his name was recorded as Mehmet, he had actually converted to Christianity four months before. Now, he declared, he wanted to take the distinctively Armenian name he had been given at his baptism, Agop, as his new first name.Footnote 1 The lawyer's argument that accompanied the petition was strikingly different from other cases of (everyday) name change heard in the courts of Istanbul and other Turkish cities. Bringing up the historical and political underpinnings of her client's name-change request, she argued: “The village where the plaintiff was born and grew up was originally an Armenian village located in the Eastern Anatolia that converted to Islam. However, the Armenians living there never lost their Armenian Christian identities. Recently, the plaintiff converted from Islam to Christianity to go back to his own religion, and … registered his religion as Christian with the state's authorities.”Footnote 2
The court ultimately rejected Agop's request, but his petition was only one of many like it. Since the early 1990s, hundreds of officially Muslim Turkish citizens claiming Armenian descent have submitted petitions to Turkey's legal authorities for changes of their name and religion in the public record.Footnote 3 These persons trace their ancestry to Christian Ottoman Armenians who adopted Islam in the context of massacres culminating in the genocide of 1915.
Perhaps the most significant aspect of legal reform in Turkey in the wake of the European Union's accession efforts is the new law that makes it possible for citizens of Turkey to change, as they see fit, their religious affiliation on their national identity cards. This marks a shift from previous practice, in which such a change required the approval of a local court (Demiralp Reference Demiralp2003: 273; see also Hız and Yılmaz Reference Hız and Yılmaz2004).Footnote 4 Although the column noting a person's religion still exists on Turkish identity cards, which are the primary form of identification required of all citizens, the content of the religion column can now, under the new regulation, be decided by the bearer. A wave of name-change cases has followed this reform, since personal names indicate ethnic and religious affiliation in Turkey.Footnote 5 Many observers have remarked on the coincidence in timing between these reforms and the December 1999 declaration of Turkey's candidacy for membership in the European Union, asserting that the move represents an effort to realize this membership possibility (Kirişci Reference Kirişci2009; Trenz Reference Trenz2007). Because the reforms were a critical moment of recognition for confessions other than Islam, they received praise from the broad coalition that connects the governing Justice and Development Party (AKP) to a diverse array of political activists, NGOs, committees of legal scholars, and, of course, the European Union. Most commentators claim that by recognizing religious and ethnic difference among its citizenry, Turkey is becoming a more robust democracy as it “adopts and introduces policies that become more and more inclusive towards minorities excluded from given and established definitions of national identity” (Kirişci Reference Kirişci2009: 1).Footnote 6
This legal development is widely considered a gateway that, for the first time in the history of the Turkish Republic, will lead to confessional pluralism and religious tolerance. In what follows I argue to the contrary—I contend that it is wrong to assume that democracy and democratization are simply matters of acknowledging religious and ethnic diversity among the national population, based on supposedly recognizable and standard features of minorities. Neither supporters nor critics of the recent legal reforms have questioned how the law differentiates minorities through its definitions of religion, ethnicity, and language (Mahmood Reference Mahmood2012; Povinelli Reference Povinelli2002). I suggest that religious tolerance is not merely a product of public, legal assertions that recognize religion as constituting minority difference. Rather, as I demonstrate, legal reform has shifted the definition of religion in legal space. To foreshadow the argument, I contend that analyses of the recent reform process have implicitly redefined religion as culture, and religious freedom as an individual right to belief. What Wendy Brown calls “tolerance talk” (Reference Brown2006: 2)—tolerating minority differences (including religion) as culture—is central to how the recent legal reforms are presented as a means to “enhance” religious freedom. I will show that, even in those cases where name-change petitions are granted, the courts simply establish the legal subjectivity of the converts as Christians and fall short of establishing their status as Armenians.
As I discuss the legal regulation of name changes, I will also try to illuminate critical shifts in the debate over what secularity means in Turkey. Through an analysis of definitions of religion before and after the reforms, I will pose a critique of multiple readings of secularism. The article is divided into three parts. In the first, I discuss a court case from my own research on a convert population in Turkey, the descendants of forcibly Islamized Armenians. I draw on eighteen months of ethnographic study among this group, including interviews with lawyers, plaintiffs, government officials, and judges, as well as close readings of court arguments and judges' written decisions. I concentrate on the specific legal arguments that Armenian converts and their lawyers put forward in the secular courts in contemporary Turkey, and how state legal officers respond to them. In the second part, I analyze the historical foundations of the regulation of religion and name change by engaging more fully and explicitly with law as a site where minority difference is constructed, authorized, and challenged. My purpose is to show the relationship between individual names and religious denomination, and how these are regulated by the same legal principles in Turkish courts. The article's last part interrogates the idealization of religious tolerance and offers an alternative reading of how it functions in the larger regime of secularism in Turkey. I conclude by pointing to the differences between Wendy Brown's framework of liberal secular states and the situation found in Turkey.
ELEPHANTS IN THE COURTROOM: CLAIMING ARMENIAN-NESS IN TURKISH COURTS
The religion column on Turkish identity cards has been a central issue in legal reform.Footnote 7 Following the European Union's suggestion,Footnote 8 the new Population Services Law was adopted in 2006 and made the indication of religion on the cards optional. Moreover, a court order was no longer required to change one's religious confession. The new law provides that, “Requests about the religious information in household registers shall be approved, modified, left blank or deleted in accordance with the written application of the concerned person.”Footnote 9 Registering religious conversion in official records also ceased to fall under the jurisdiction of the First Degree Appeal Courts. The legal aspect of religious conversion is now marked by a lack of regulation,Footnote 10 and citizens of Turkey, for the first time, have the right to assume the religion of their choosing on their identity cards.Footnote 11 Yet several questions remain unanswered: How is religion defined in the legal reform? Do citizens registered as Christians become minorities with the cultural, linguistic, and ethnic rights of other recognized minorities in Turkey? In short, what are the legal and material consequences of the freedom to select your religion on your identity card?Footnote 12
Answers to these questions lie in name-change cases like the one featured at the beginning of this essay. Moreover, these cases show the importance of ethnic belonging and historical context to understanding how the recent legal reforms actually work. After petitioning the state to record the change in an individual's religious affiliation, name change remains a legal procedure in which converts must solicit the state's approval. Mehmet, the plaintiff in my opening example, changed his religion from Islam to Christianity by submitting a petition to the civil officials.Footnote 13 His request was accomplished without difficulties, according to his lawyer, Mari Hanım. However, as Mari Hanım also emphasized, this change of religion did not “make” him an Armenian,Footnote 14 which was the real intent of his conversion.
The person known as both Mehmet and Agop in his village belongs to a group of people who claim to be descendants of forcibly Islamized Armenians.Footnote 15 The initial conversion of his grandparents is the implicit context of the court's rejection of his name-change request (Deringil Reference Deringil2012). The rejection, in other words, is closely tied to the deeper historical-political context of the recent wave of conversions. Regarding historical violence against Armenians in the last decades of the Ottoman Empire, Turkish governments, including most recently the AKP,Footnote 16 have consistently rejected accusations of genocide, characterizing the events (and the resulting deaths of thousands) as “widespread partisan fighting” in which both Turks and Armenians were killed, and “deportations” necessitated by wartime security concerns (see Akçam Reference Akçam2004; Göçek and Suny Reference Suny, Göçek, Suny, Göçek and Naimark2011).Footnote 17 The debates over naming the violence perpetrated against Armenians continue to shape policies that affect the descendants of Ottoman Armenians today (Akçam Reference Akçam2004; Dadrian Reference Dadrian1995). Given that the Turkish state refuses to recognize the genocide, the return conversion of descendants of forcibly Islamized Armenians unmasks a violence that is still largely unmentionable (Altınay and Çetin Reference Altınay and Çetin2009; Altınay and Türkyılmaz Reference Altınay, Türkyılmaz, Singer, Neumann and Akşin2011; Deringil Reference Deringil2000; Reference Deringil2012; Özuzun Reference Özuzun2006; Üngör Reference Üngör2011).
Although they could theoretically convert to Christianity and keep their “Muslim” (i.e., ethnic Turkish) names, the insistence of Armenian return converts on the double change of religion and name points to the fact that a non-Muslim, non-Turkish name is a marker of minority identity. When I asked a lawyer who represents (de-)converting Armenians why it is so important for them to adopt Armenian names, he answered, “A Muslim name conveys the assumption that the person who carries it is a Muslim.” Therefore, he continued, the main aim in such name-change cases is to “introduce the convert to the public as an Armenian.”Footnote 18
Indeed, in my interview with Mehmet/Agop's lawyer, Mari Hanim, she immediately mentioned the judge's attitude and the “pact” linking the judge, the public prosecutor, and the population registrar in opposition to the claims of her client, as well as against those who acted as witnesses to his being Armenian. She talked at length about an incident that occurred when two witnesses testified in court that they had known the applicant by the name Agop since his conversion, as he had stated in his petition. They said they had in fact known him by this name since childhood, and added, “We used this name when playing football back in our childhood village.” The judge, not knowing what to say in the face of this undeniable evidence of the existence of a village full of Turkish citizens officially registered as Muslims but claiming Armenian-ness, tried to intimidate the witnesses by raising his voice and ridiculing their testimony: “Oh, you are from the same village, so all of you are Armenians?!” Nonplussed by the judge's response, the witnesses tried to explain the ethnic composition of their village, only to draw more of the judge's ire. He declared that the court was not the place for “football playing stories” and passed his judgment without further comment on the entirely plausible testimony.Footnote 19 The tide had shifted. As the plaintiff's lawyer continued to press her case, the public prosecutor and the population registrar began to laugh and derisively repeat fragments of the witnesses' statements. According to the decision on record, the judge followed procedure and asked for the opinions of the two state officials, and they both stated that four to five months was not enough time for the plaintiff to familiarize himself with his new religion, and therefore that his petition for a name change should be denied.
Mari Hanim, trying to challenge the court's interpretation of Agop's relationship to his new belief, as indicated by the word “familiarize,” argued again that her client had not simply converted to Christianity but had converted back to Christianity, intending to rejoin his ancestors' community and religion. Thus, she reasoned, his case should not be considered in terms of converting to a new religion but as a return to his original religion lost during state violence against Armenians. By defining religion as an element of ethnic (Armenian) belonging, and by pointing explicitly to its basis in a communal history that has unfolded in a village in Turkey, Mari Hanim was arguing against the clear-cut boundaries between religious and ethnic identification, between Muslim and non-Muslim, and between Turk and non-Turk, upon which the state's registrars had based their argument.
The court decided against the plaintiff and rejected his petition for a name change on the basis of his failure to provide a just cause. Because the plaintiff missed the deadline for filing an appeal, his case never reached the Court of Cassation (Yargıtay).Footnote 20 “I am sad I couldn't take it to the upper court,” Mari Hanim told me, “yet I don't think that it would make a difference. The ridicule is usually the same there.” Her comments indicate a certain anxiety about how she and her client would be treated in the Court of Cassation. They would still be arguing for an alternative definition of religion, and recognition of a violent historical episode, by insisting that Agop's conversion and subsequent name change represented a return to Armenian ethnicity.
In the critical literature on secularism in Turkey (Akan Reference Akan2011; Navaro-Yashin Reference Navaro-Yashin2002; Özyürek Reference Özyürek2006; Parla and Davison Reference Parla, Davison, Jakobsen and Pellegrini2008; Tambar Reference Tambar2010), two studies in particular use religious conversion to scrutinize the relationship between ethnicity and religion.Footnote 21 Marc Baer (Reference Baer2004; Reference Baer2009) analyzes the historical struggle of the DönmeFootnote 22 for equal citizenship in the new Republic, where they arrived after the great population exchange between Greece and Turkey in 1924. Through the Dönme's failed efforts to join as equal citizens—they were widely rejected as crypto-Jews who could not, therefore, be true Muslims or Turks—Baer shows how Turkish secularism connected religion to race in order to utilize both as salient features of belonging despite official claims that Turkish citizenship designated a purely civic relation. Esra Özyürek discusses recent Turkish conversions to Protestantism in order to shed light on perceptions of religion in the wider context of Turkish sovereignty (Reference Özyürek2009a) and nationalism (Reference Özyürek2009b). She analyzes secularism as a strategy to create a homogeneous, united, and loyal body of citizens, and she argues that secular nationalists perceive conversion as a threat to national unity (ibid.: 400).Footnote 23 Against the grain of arguments that emphasize Turkish secularism's tolerance towards minority religions, both of these works demonstrate how Turkish secularism's nationalist and racist character is particularly visible in its exclusion of convert populations.
Descendants of the forcibly Islamized Armenians, in their attempts to convert to Armenianness, render even more visible the entanglements of religion and ethnicity in Turkey, even if the numbers of such reconverts are small. What makes them so central to the discussion of Turkish secularism is that, as was evident in the discussion of Mehmet/Agop's court case, they challenge the seemingly natural definition of religion in the legal reform as a personal belief that is registered and can be easily changed on identification cards.
As the idea that every individual should be categorized and labeled has increasingly shaped the terms of citizenship, civil registers and identification papers have assumed a prominent place in peoples' relationships to state institutions. Changes in the instruments of classification alter the types of identities that it is legally possible for individuals to assume and still claim citizenship (Noiriel Reference Noiriel, Caplan and Torpey2001). In one sense, these shifts have included potentially empowering aspects, based on the increased recognition of minority groups (Gordillo Reference Gordillo2006; Longman Reference Longman, Caplan and Torpey2001; Taylor Reference Taylor and Gutmann1994; Yngvesson and Coutin Reference Yngvesson and Coutin2006). However, like property titles, censuses, surveys, and other forms that have been carried over from previous eras, identity documentation today also constitutes and consolidates the state's authority. As the state extends its taxonomy of acceptable names and recognizable religious affiliations, it affords individuals more latitude for official self-representation, yet the process simultaneously creates more visible and hence more manageable subjects, and it facilitates discrimination against religious minorities by marking them. Either way, identification cards and civil registers provide a salient illustration of the ongoing tension between recognition and regulation. The redefinition of religion in the name-change cases of Armenian converts links religion to ethnicity and subsequently to historical episodes of ethnic violence. Return converts not only represent pollution of the desired homogeneity of the national body, they also force the courts to come to terms with the 1915 genocide, which is the most taboo topic in the history of the Turkish Republic (Akçam Reference Akçam2004; Bloxham and Göçek Reference Bloxham, Göçek and Stone2008).
Officially, the AKP introduced the legal reform as a move toward religious tolerance and to remedy social ills born of what is colloquially known as Kemalist secularism. Allegedly, it granted the long-overdue cultural and political recognition of ethnic and religious minorities (Taşpınar Reference Taşpınar2007; Yavuz Reference Yavuz2003; White Reference White2013). The critics of Kemalist laicism supported legal reform as doing away with this particular illiberal, republican mode of secularism, which excluded religion from the public sphere while also granting Islam a monopoly on what is defined as legitimate religion. The recent turn in secular politics is explained as the emergence of a liberal and tolerant model of secularism with an ideology of individual freedom of belief (Kuru Reference Kuru2009). The debate between Kemalist secularism and the AKP, in this view, was “not simply a conflict between secularism and Islamism, but rather a discussion about the true meaning and practice of secularism itself” (ibid.: 164).Footnote 24
Scholars of Turkey are not alone in differentiating modes of secularism. A range of analysts has argued that secularism is not a single ideal model, or simply an invention of European culture and Christendom imposed on Muslim societies (Taylor Reference Taylor and Bhargava1998; McClay Reference McClay2001). This line of scholarship on Turkey differentiates between the republican model and the liberal-tolerant model, arguing that not all modes confine religion to the private sphere. Yet the distinction between the private and public spheres remains intact, as do “the secular” and “the religious” as analytical categories. More importantly, the continuities between the Kemalist model and the AKP's treatment and governance of minority religious difference have been ignored. Instead of coming to an easy conclusion as to what secularism is, or how many modes exist, critical scholars of secularism have powerfully shown that the blurring of public and private, and of the religious and the political, is not exceptional but rather is endemic to secular politics (Agrama Reference Agrama2010; Asad Reference Asad, de Vries and Sullivan2006; Connolly Reference Connolly1999; Fernando Reference Fernando2010; Sullivan Reference Sullivan2005). This article will show how these supposedly different modes of secularism in Turkey both work on the same principle—both reserve the power to define religion.
Before I turn to other court cases that deal with name changes sought following changes in religion, the next section briefly reviews the history in Turkey of the legal regulation of names, of name change, and of religious homogenization in order to begin highlighting the role of law in defining the central categories of secularism.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF RELIGION, ETHNICITY, AND NAMES IN TURKISH LAW
In the most critical move of the global spread of secularization, the definition of religion changed from a matter of communal belonging to the individual right to belief (see Asad Reference Asad2003; van der Veer Reference van der Veer2001).Footnote 25 Turkey, where the religious affiliation of every citizen was recorded by legal authorities and registered on national identification cards at birth, was not exempt (Aybay Reference Aybay2004).
Turkish civil law, too, constructs naming as an essentially individual right that is an inalienable part of a citizen's legal person. This attachment of the name to the individual also worked to mark it as an indicator of the individual's religion. Several decisions of the Court of Cassation attest to the notion of the individuality of the name. One 1992 ruling stated that a name is “…a word that defines people and distinguishes them from others. Since everyone has a personality and an ‘essence’ (özvarlık) of their own, it is their right to demand that their personality should be distinguished from others.' Therefore, the right to have a name is, in its essence (nitelik bakimindan), a personal right just like a person's honor and life.”Footnote 26 In this sense, personal names play a curious role in Turkey. A name is, legally, both the most personal item that belongs to an individual and public knowledge about a citizen's identity.Footnote 27 It exists in the space where public and private—a distinction crucial to secular power—overlap and become indistinguishable. This fact marks personal names as crucial for the state and its judiciary to keep under control. As I will illustrate presently, there are many requirements for name-change cases in Turkey that index a statement about the limits on the requests individual citizens can make to the state.
The personalization of religion and the significance of personal names as indicators of the individual's confession were perhaps reflected most clearly in the format and official role of personal identification documents (Aybay Reference Aybay2004). In Turkey, personal identification cards, in particular, reflected the complexity of constraints enforced by the state pre-legal reform in that they formalized religious confession and individual names, and they required judicial review before any changes could be made (see note 5).
Unlike the column indicating religion, in the Turkish legal imaginary a change of name is a basic, regular act through which an individual may take a state-sanctioned opportunity to adopt a name other than that registered at their birth. Falling under the mundane category of “corrections of the records” (kayıt düzeltme), the Turkish Civil Procedure Law's protocol for name-change applicants appears simple at first sight. Government population registrars explained to me in interviews that the most common cases involve citizens who apply to officially adopt middle names that their families did not register on their identity cards when they were born. Left completely out of the picture is any demand that goes beyond this, such as to make changes due to a change of religion, or to adopt a minority name.
Turkish civil law also constructs naming as an individual right that is an inalienable part of a citizen's legal person (Demiralp Reference Demiralp2003: 4). Any person eighteen years or older can adopt any name provided that he or she can demonstrate a “just cause” (Ekşi Reference Ekşi2008: 33). To establish a just cause, an applicant must demonstrate, with support from at least two witnesses, that for a considerable amount of time prior to the court proceedings they have already been known in public by the name they want to assume. The plaintiff may support this claim by providing evidence, such as phone bills, under the demanded name, but in addition they must avow an intention to take on that name permanently. The name cannot be offensive, such as one that contains racial slurs. The law also stipulates that children cannot receive names that do not conform to national culture, moral norms, customs, and traditions.
Furthermore, that name-change petitions are single-party cases (nisbi neshep) categorizes them in Turkish Civil Procedure Law as cases “without a dispute,” having “no opposing two parties, or a dispute, a disagreement between them.”Footnote 28 However, the population registrar (nüfus memuru) and the public prosecutor (cumhuriyet savcisi) must be present in court, where they are required to offer the presiding judge an evaluation of the plaintiff's case (Demiralp Reference Demiralp2003: 167). While name-change hearings are officially single-party cases, state agents are present and act as de facto opponents.
The significance of the presence of state officials as the opponent party becomes even clearer when we examine the conditions that constitute a “just cause” for a name change. Here sole authority lies with the judge to rule based on the plaintiff's petition, statements (mütalaa) by the population registrar and the public prosecutor, and the precedence (ijtihat) of higher courts.Footnote 29 A legal scholar summarized the bottom line of all these regulations: “The individual does not have the right to adopt any name they like” (Ekşi Reference Ekşi2008: 67).
In addition to the legal regulations of name changes, laws enacted to secure ethnolinguistic nationalism also impose a strict control over personal names, and have turned naming into a realm of struggles for minority recognition (Bayır Reference Bayır2013; Kılınç Reference Kılınç2010; Kurban Reference Kurban2003). The Language Reform of 1928 established the Latinized Turkish alphabet and criminalized the use of any language other than Turkish (Ölmez Reference Ölmez2000; Sevinçli Reference Sevinçli2006). As a necessary feature of “Turkification,” the state imposed linguistic uniformity upon a population whose given names as well as surnames were previously drawn from a multitude of languages and traditions. Under this reform, outliers were forbidden (Türköz Reference Türköz2007; Scassa Reference Scassa1996). Following the Language Reform, prosecutors regularly opened court cases against public use of the letters q, w, and x, which do not exist in the Turkish alphabet but do in Kurdish (Aslan Reference Aslan2009; Ekşi Reference Ekşi2008; Esen and Gönenç Reference Esen and Gonenç2008).Footnote 30
The Surname Law of 1934 required every citizen to adopt a family name and enforced certain restrictions on the types of surnames they could adopt. These restrictions indicate the state's motives were more than purely administrative. Article 3, for example, forbade to “tribes and foreign races and ethnicities” any names related to military rank and civil officialdom, surnames deemed unsuitable to “national customs,” and names that could be perceived as “disgusting” or open to ridicule. Surnames also had to be Turkish words.Footnote 31
The only exception to these two regulations on names concerned the minorities “recognized” under the 1923 Lausanne Treaty. Persons in this category were allowed to take non-Muslim/non-Turkish names, but only if transliterated to accord with the Turkish alphabet. This right was not protected by law, however—the law allowed recognized “minorities” to adopt their “religious and cultural” names simply by not explicitly forbidding them to do so.Footnote 32
The Treaty of LausanneFootnote 33 extended international recognition to the Turkish Republic. It established the legal status of minorities in Turkey, since in return for European recognition the new state granted “non-Muslim communities” special self-governance rights based on their religious differences. Yet because the treaty did not specify which communities would benefit from this legal recognition, the new Turkish state granted it selectively. While Jewish, Armenian, and Greek communities within the empire were recognized as religious minorities, official minority status was denied to Christian populations native to Anatolia (such as Assyrians) and to the relatively new Christian communities such as recent converts to Protestantism (Özyürek Reference Özyürek2009a). Also left out were Kurds and non-Sunni Muslim sects such as the Alevis. Together, these “unrecognized” groups became the main targets of homogenization efforts under the discourses of “equal citizenship” (Yeǧen Reference Yeğen2004). Following the terms put forth in the treaty, a notation of “Islam” as a person's religion of record came to connote Turkishness, and having made Muslim synonymous with Turkish, the registers denied ethnic and sectarian differences within the Muslim majority.Footnote 34
Despite this international recognition, in the new Turkish Republic the legal status of the “recognized” minorities was unclear and far from stable (Cagaptay Reference Cagaptay2006). Through the treaty, while religion emerged as the main marker of difference, specific terms of distinction such as ethnicity and specific religious affiliation were subsumed under the catchall category of “Non-Muslim.”Footnote 35 Because the emerging definition of religion in the new nation-state made certain combinations of religion, ethnicity, and language nonsensical at best and a mark of treason at worst, those persons whose identity straddled the accepted ethno-religious categories—such as Armenian Muslim, Jewish Muslim (see Baer Reference Baer2004), or Christian Turk (see Özyürek Reference Özyürek2009b)—found themselves regarded as threats to national unity.
The marking of non-Muslims in the Turkish Republic was part of the regulation of personal names by which Turkish citizens could be accounted for. Naming policies have been a conventional tool used by states to construct a homogeneous national identity through the elimination of distinctive minority names (Caplan and Torpey Reference Caplan and Torpey2001; Scott, Tehranian, and Mathias Reference Scott, Tehranian and Mathias2002; Steedly Reference Steedly1996; Sutherland Reference Sutherland1994; Bruck and Bodenhorn, Reference Bruck and Bodenhorn2006; Watson Reference Watson1986). The Turkification of the names of non-Muslim minorities has been studied in the context of such homogenization (Başgöz Reference Başgöz and Silay1999; Brink-Danan Reference Brink-Danan2010; Türköz Reference Türköz2007). The literature on naming treats minority names as a “stigma” (Bering Reference Bering1992) that marks minorities for exclusion from the purportedly homogeneous nation. In the recent name-change cases, however, personal names also appear as a site of struggle where citizens demand minority rights as members of a recognized minority community in Turkey (Azevedo Reference Azevedo1980; Carucci Reference Carucci1984; Khatib Reference Khatib1995). The growing politicization of personal naming practices among Kurds in Turkey also points toward this emergence of name change as a site of minority recognition struggles (Aslan Reference Aslan2009; Ergin Reference Ergin2010; Esen and Gönenç Reference Esen and Gonenç2008). As a lawyer who took many name-change cases of Armenians related to me, “Name change, in these cases, is a way to confront the state.” Therefore, in light of laws regulating the adoption and use of non-Turkish names, one can see that name change, like religious conversion, is a source of anxiety for the state. It disrupts the normative connection the state has established between its own “identification” of citizens at birth and citizens' self-identification/self-naming as members of an ethnic or religious minority (Viswanathan Reference Viswanathan1998).
Later developments concerning religion and names in the civil registers further consolidated state control. Military coups in 1960, 1972, and 1980 not only suppressed political opposition and economic restructuring but also strengthened the discourse of “equal citizenship,” which in the name of order and the state's interests eliminated any room for dissent or difference (Parla Reference Parla2002). The most important legislation concerning state registers, which came after the 1972 coup, updated and centralized all of the laws and regulations on the civil registrars. While religion had been a feature of identity documentation since the nineteenth century, Article 43 of the 1972 Population Register LawFootnote 36 required the national registry to state the religion of every family member in every household in Turkey.
A decision of the Court of Cassation in the year 2000 is illustrative. It demonstrates how name and religion are strictly tied together in defining minority difference, and in the period immediately preceding the late-twentieth century legal reform, this decision became the precedent for refusing name changes in cases where plaintiffs tried to argue for religious conversion as just cause. In this case, a Muslim citizen of Turkey converted in the Greek Orthodox Church to Christianity, and consequently wanted to change his current Turkish name Enis to a Greek one, Teofilos. The local civil court of first instance declined his request, ruling, “It is impossible to bring to agreement the [new] name that is subject to discussion here with our national culture and our customs and tradition.” The plaintiff took the case to the Court of Cassation, asking it to annul the First Degree Appeal Court's decision, but it instead ratified the decision with the following ruling: “Religious conversion does not necessarily require a name change. Plaintiff's name, Enis, means [in Turkish] companion, friend; hence no inconvenience emerges by having this name, whichever confession a person belongs to. The fact that the plaintiff was accepted into the Orthodox faith [mezhep] by the Greek Patriarchate by this name [Teofilos] does not establish a just cause for changing the name of the plaintiff who is a Turkish citizen in the civil registers.”Footnote 37
In its decision the Court of Cassation devised an authorized definition of religion, as individual confession as registered in the civil records, which has nothing to do with the culture of the religion that is subsequently indicated in the religious identity column of a citizen's identity card. The court's statement that “the plaintiff is a Turkish Citizen” hints at the limits of the rights of citizens. A citizen's name defines the boundaries of the state's sovereignty over its subjects, and a Turkish citizen may not adopt a name that is not in accordance with Turkish “national culture, customs and tradition.” The higher court's judgment once again stressed the unalterable link between the self-identification of a citizen by personal names and the (ethnic, religious, linguistic) identification of the Turkish citizen by the state, as embodied in legal practices such as naming.Footnote 38
And yet, the civil courts did not reject all name-change requests that gave the reason of religious conversion. One striking example was the case of an Armenian citizen who converted to Islam and wanted to change his name accordingly. In his case the court did not ask for witnesses as the law states it must, though it did require the plaintiff to have a lawyer. His petition was granted in just one session.Footnote 39
Thus, the question whether religious conversion ought to be considered a just cause for changing one's name does not produce the same answer in every case. The judiciary reserves the right to decide this for itself. It is not merely a question about civil procedure, nor is it an example of a discriminatory application of otherwise good, secular laws. On the contrary, all of the laws and regulations of Turkey's secular legal system that I have presented here work to ensure simultaneously that “religion” is a private matter but that the state has final, authoritative say as to both the definition of religion and the question of which denomination a person may profess. Though the Court of Cassation declared religion to be essential to personal status, it also enacted its sovereign authority to decide what religion is, how it is connected to a Turkish citizen, and who may belong to which religious denomination.
One can trace the pre-established legal limits of permissible arguments back to the Turkish Constitution of 1982, Article 24 of which addresses freedom of religion and conscience and provides: “Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience, of belief and of religious conviction. Acts of worship, religious services and ceremonies may be conducted freely, provided they do not violate the provisions of Article 14 of the Constitution.” Then again, upon considering Article 14/1 one realizes that the real concern for Turkish legal authorities is “abuse of rights”: “None of the rights and freedoms embodied in the Constitution shall be exercised with the aim of violating the indivisible integrity of the state with its territory and nation, and endangering the existence of the democratic and secular order of the Turkish Republic based upon human rights” (my emphasis). Here, the Constitution conceptualizes the Turkish Republic as an entity that could be endangered by its citizens using (defined as “abusing”) fundamental rights and freedoms in certain ways.
Today, in light of Article 14/1 and the abovementioned articles of the Turkish Criminal Code, the court cases of converts are basically about the state's right to defend the indivisible integrity of its territory and nation. Further, this integrity should prevail over all other rights, including those of religion and name that are tightly attached to the individual by law. Next I turn to the recent policies of religious tolerance in order to analyze further the entanglements of religion and names in the courts, and how religion acquired a new definition in these same courts during the reform period.
TOLERANCE AS A NEW MODE OF REGULATION: RELIGION AS CULTURE
Scholars have discussed extensively the concept of tolerance within the Turkish context as the tolerance of religious, cultural, and ethnic differences within a homogeneously imagined Turkish nation (Kaya Reference Kaya2013). Several have grappled with the concept as it specifically relates to Turkey's religious minorities, asking whether tolerance is in fact a political project centered on a Turkish majority living together with non-Muslim minorities (Brink-Danan Reference Brink-Danan2011; Mills Reference Mills2010).Footnote 40 Nevertheless, this body of work has not tried to analyze tolerance as a political concept that governs and excludes minorities simultaneously, nor has it fully tackled the relationship between the law and the limits of religious freedom in Turkey.Footnote 41 What role does the law play in the construction of tolerance discourse? What role has it played in the establishment of that discourse's central categories such as religion?
In the course of my research, population registrars all reacted to my inquiries about problems with name-change cases in the same way. “You can't find anything problematic,” I was repeatedly told. “It is only correction of records. Especially since the European Union-led reforms, there are no controversial cases left.” But against their claims, there are still name-change cases that define the limits of the toleration of religious difference. The court cases I collected during my fieldwork in the First Degree Appeal Courts (Asliye Hukuk Mahkemeleri) in Istanbul illustrate a shift that has occurred in the definitions of religion and religious freedom as a result of the reformed legal measures.
One case from 2007, the same year as the Agop/Mehmet case, is especially revealing since it exemplifies the redefinition of religion in the legal realm. The local court's decision reads:
The lawyer of the plaintiff states in the petition directed to the court that, as it can be also understood from the civil records, his client is a Turkish citizen and belongs to the Christian confession, and his name is recorded as “Ramazan,” and his client is never uncomfortable with his name, respects the religion of Islam as well as any other religion, but since he belongs to the Christian faith and since the name “Ramazan” does not represent his religion and its cultural character, [the plaintiff] requests to change his name to Daniel, the name of a prophet who lived in one of the historical places in southern Turkey.Footnote 42
The lawyer's petition is striking. He frames the conversion and the subsequent name change in cultural terms by emphasizing the native character of the prophet Daniel with regard to Turkey's national geography.Footnote 43 As this lawyer explained to me, he tried to develop alternative, non-threatening cultural explanations for religious conversion and name change. He deployed a culturalist argument by emphasizing the common history of monotheistic religions as justification for the name change. Accordingly, his reasoning emphasized the multi-religious character of the ancient lands on which the Republic of Turkey was founded. He hoped this would avoid the appearance that his client was challenging the authoritarian nationalist understanding of Turkish culture and customs (Tambar Reference Tambar2010), since it coincided with the government's recent efforts in the wake of the European Union-led legal reforms to underscore tolerance for minority religions and cultures (White Reference White2013).
The local court rejected this petition on the grounds that religious conversion does not establish a just cause for name change. The lawyer then took the case to the Court of Cassation, which overruled the lower court's decision and approved the name change: “The plaintiff converted to Christianity…. His request to change his name, after his conversion, to another one that is in accordance with what he believes to represent his religion and its cultural character, should be accepted as a just cause” (my emphasis).
The decision was subsequently celebrated as a sign of growing religious tolerance. How can we account for the striking difference between how the Agop/Mehmet and Daniel/Ramazan cases were handled in the courts, and their different outcomes? I think that it is wrong to see this dichotomy as a failure of Turkish secularism to provide religious freedom. Senem Aslan (Reference Aslan2009) urges that when we try to understand the differences between the local level bureaucratic and judicial state apparatuses (such as the local courts) and the Court of Cassation, we consider the positions of different state actors. She argues that when analyzing state policies we should not see certain state policies, such as the ban on Kurdish names, as “an absolute and permanent rule that remained valid at all times across similar cases” (ibid.: 2). According to Aslan, the incoherent nature of state policies in Turkey is the result of a “subtle contestation” between the local- and higher-level bureaucracies and judiciaries. While I agree with her nuanced discussion of state power, I do not entirely concur with Aslan's conclusion that incoherence is due solely to a “subtle contestation” between different state actors (ibid.: 3). Regarding the Armenian name-change cases, I offer a different interpretation of the discrepancy between the different courts, one that sees incoherence as a fundamental, inherent aspect of the workings of the state. As these cases illustrate, incoherence is an “active principle of secularism”; that is to say, “the principle that the state has the power and authority to decide what should count as essentially religious and what scope it can have in social life” (Agrama Reference Agrama2010: 503, see also Agrama Reference Agrama2006). With Agrama's analysis of Egyptian law at hand, we can argue that the Turkish state's attitudes toward the rule of law are themselves complex, bound up as they are with questions of sovereignty and governmentality within the modern state.
I argue that the different outcomes serve as an exercise of the state's regulatory capacity, just as they did in the pre-reform era. In both cases, one can see that the struggle was not just about the name change but also the definitions of religious difference. The strategy of Ramazan/Daniel's lawyer to address religion in a culturalist frame was successful in the upper court. Evidently, a vision of national territory as a homeland for different religious cultures complements the religious tolerance of the legal reforms that eased conversion. Although the upper court still considered both name and religion as tied to the personal status of the individual citizen, its argument redefined religion as having a cultural character and an individual's name as representing this character. We thus witness a change in how the law defines the relationship between religion and one's name in Turkey's post-reform era. The courts no longer regulate religion as if it bore absolutely no relationship to ethnic belonging; instead, they redefine religion—and subsequently ethnicity—as a cultural trait. The party that seeks to assert cultural difference phrased as religious freedom is not the population of disempowered minorities, but rather the courts. This reverses the antinomy between culture and the law (see Comaroff and Comaroff Reference Comaroff and Comaroff2004; Hamilton Reference Hamilton2009; Yudice Reference Yudice2003, cf. Merry Reference Merry2000). The law has embraced culture as the central operating category in cases of name-change after religious conversion. Once religion is defined as a cultural trait of individual citizens, religious conversion is tolerated as a claim to cultural difference.Footnote 44 The Court of Cassation once more enacted its sovereign authority to decide what religion is, how it is connected to a Turkish citizen, and what it means to belong to a religious denomination.
The different outcomes of the Daniel and Agop cases, I maintain, provide vital insights into the particularities of tolerance talk in Turkey. They are not just another instance of the “recent global renaissance of tolerance talk” that is characterized by the culturalization of political conflict (Brown Reference Brown2006: 2). In the case of Daniel, the court utilized tolerance “as a unique way of sustaining the threatened entity” (ibid.: 27), as is clear in the references to minority difference and the multi-ethnic, multi-religious (pre)history of the Turkish Republic using manageable terms such as “Anatolian cultural heritage” (Tambar Reference Tambar2010). In contrast, the name-change cases of the descendants of forcibly converted Armenians, exemplified by Agop/Mehmet, triggered legally sanctioned resentment vis-à-vis Armenian claims about the violent fate of their ancestors. Islamized Armenians who appear in the courts and implicitly engage in the forbidden mentioning of genocide are perceived as threats to the Turkish state's integrity and as violating the established limits of tolerance in post-reform Turkey.
My intent here is to show through these cases that tolerance does not resolve difference, but rather “tames” it.Footnote 45 The courts that adjudicate name-change cases manage antagonism toward unauthorized claims to difference. In Turkey, the discourse of tolerance works through this redefinition of religion as culture, and religious freedom as an individual's right to belief. In the case of Agop, the explicit reference to the ethnic aspect of his request for a name change prevented this culturalization of religion from taking place. The name-change cases of the descendants of forcibly Islamized Armenians challenge both the original law's authorized definition of religion as individual belief and the communal culture as redefined after the reform. These cases touch on undesirable and illegal topics, including first and foremost the Armenian Genocide. The tolerance discourse has hardly changed the Turkish state's “aversion,” following Brown's definition, to any mention of the fate of Armenians at the end of the Ottoman Empire and throughout the history of the Republic. For this reason, a non-Muslim religious minority that has been designated an object of tolerance remains marked as a community of undesirable subjects who contravene the established limits for name change and, consequently, for religious tolerance.
Unlike the Western liberal democracies that are the subject of Brown's study, in Turkey the problem of “tolerance talk” cannot be presented as a moral claim to one's “own civilization” at the expense of the immigrant, Muslim, “barbaric” other. In Turkey, the conflicts that tolerance discourse aims to tame and depoliticize are inextricably tied to the history of the nation-state, as well as to discourses of difference that circulate internationally. Tolerance is a strictly national matter that tries to regulate a thin line between the legal and illegal. This fact points to another difference between the Turkish context and the global resurgence of tolerance. Contrary to Brown's argument that “within secular liberal democratic states it is safe to say that tolerance functions politically and socially, but not legally” (Reference Brown2006: 10), I suggest that in Turkey one of its main functions is in fact legal.Footnote 46 It is not an “alternative to full legal equality,” but instead defines which claims are legal and which claims are not. In this sense, political conflict in Turkey does not only become culturalized but also legalized. In the case of Islamized Armenians, the legal context of religious tolerance serves to cover up the political struggles and injustices perpetrated in the past and present. Thus tolerance-based legislation in Turkey has replaced, but not annulled, the pre-reform regulation of difference by legal authorities. The court cases are therefore grounds on which take place the battles over what constitutes religion and how it should be regulated. By continuing to adjudicate the terms of just cause, the courts define and redefine not just whether religion applies, but what religion is. Hence the management of religious and ethnic boundaries by law remains more or less intact in regulations pertaining to name change.
CONCLUSION
On the international stage, the AKP government is upheld as a model of the harmonious coexistence of democracy and liberal Islam for emulation across the Middle East. However, this new model is, as yet, under-analyzed. It is a topic that demands special scrutiny now, on the eve of Turkey's new constitution, and in light of the ongoing arbitrary detentions and political repression targeting various oppositional groups, such as persons involved in the Kurdish rights struggle, university students, and other political opponents of the state. The excessive repression of the Gezi protests during June 2013 dealt a serious blow to the new Turkish regime's legitimacy.
“What is called Turkish secularism,” Özyürek states, “is a manifestation of ideological and religious state centralization” (Reference Özyürek2009b: 411; see also Parla and Davison Reference Parla, Davison, Jakobsen and Pellegrini2008). Her analysis of secularism as a nationalist matter holds true in post-reform Turkey. We can further nuance her insight with a focus on the post-reform notion of religious tolerance as an instrumental vision of culture. In the Turkish courts, the situation is significantly more complicated. There, ethnicity and religion, the historical and the legal, and categories of “Turkish” and “Armenian” are all conjured on the way to legal justice, through shifting authorized definitions of religion. The historical context of name change and the conversions of descendants of forcibly Islamized Armenians push the limits of existing understandings of freedom of religion in Turkey, which renders visible historical injustices that cannot be resolved simply through the notion of “religious tolerance” in the courts. Law is critical to the mode of rule that we call secularism today, not in the way it confines religion to the private realm (e.g., Kuru Reference Kuru2009), but rather by the way it defines the central categories of religion and personal belonging. The politics of tolerance in today's Turkey, like the regulation of the pre-reform era, highlights the fact that “the active principle of secularism is a principle of sovereign state power” (Agrama Reference Agrama2010: 510; see also Asad Reference Asad, de Vries and Sullivan2006).
My analysis here has shown that the relationship between secularism, the law, and religion cannot be reduced to the distinction between secular and Islamic policies, or Islam's compatibility or incompatibility with secularism. Cihan Tuḡal argues that there was a “(thorough yet incoherent and indecisive) shift” in Turkey from “hegemonic nationalism” [Kemalist secularism] that sought to assimilate minorities, to “corporate nationalism” [the AKP government] that seeks to lock minorities into “restrictive cultural identities” (Reference Tuḡal2009: 101). With Tuḡal's claims in hand, one can argue that more is at stake politically in the intolerability of the name-change demands made in Turkey's secular courts by descendants of forcibly Islamized Armenians. These trials seek to create legal subjects who must now define their rights on the basis of an individual right to belief, but also culturalize their religious belonging in order to join the authoritatively defined “national culture.” The courts, at every level, play a crucial role in this definition.
The recent discourse of religious tolerance creates good minorities and bad minorities, which are judged by their contribution, or lack thereof, to a fundamentally national culture. In this sense, “tolerance talk” in Turkey should be evaluated as a legal reform undertaken by a conservative nationalist movement, and this is why it has been incapable of recognizing the descendants of forcibly Islamized Armenians as citizens of Turkey who are legally Armenian and carry Armenian names.