This afternoon, as I was wandering through a poorer part of Kars, lost as usual, I was surrounded by a gaggle of schoolkids who repeated ''
When I went to my favorite restaurant tonight, the friendly proprietor asked if I was excited to watch the election: I said I would be in bed, but that I hoped Obama would win. He agreed, as did everyone in the restaurant. I couldn't follow the conversations around me as I ate my dinner, but nearly everyone was talking about Obama.
I'm going to bed in an hour or so, and I'll sleep restlessly, wondering about election results. (And not just the presidency: there are plenty of other important races too.) Plenty of Turks will wake up tomorrow morning and turn on the television to hear the news from the US.
I am not one to get caught up in cults of personality, and I am certain Obama will not be all his supporters (I'm one) imagine. However, Obama has become a symbol of the world's desire for a good, honorable America. Turks like America: I can't say how many people have looked at me enviously, saying, ''I would like to go to America.'' (I never know how to respond.) I think Barack Obama has rekindled the American Dream in much of the rest of the world, and certainly here in Turkey: if America can elect a man like Obama, the thinking goes, I can succeed there as well.
I hope the US can be the good and honorable country these Turks imagine: it won't be easy. Electing Barack Obama is just the first step, and it is largely a question of his personal determination and willingness to confront Washington's entrenched elite, both Democrat and Republican, while simultanously ignoring the pundits who will insist he must ''govern from the center.'' If he wins, the rest of the world will be relieved, but his post-racial, multi-continental identity alone will not make him friends abroad.
Will those Turkish kids I talked with today have a friend in America, working to make their neighborhood--the middle east--safer? Will America welcome them if they want to visit or study? Will America stick up for real democracy in Turkey? Turkey is hopeful, but action, not eloquence, will determine our standing in the world.
And yes, I voted. I mailed my absentee ballot from Hopa, Turkey, where I had to convince reluctant postal workers to open the post office on a Saturday so I could recover my ballot from

4 comments:
Riley,
I'm sure you know the good news by now, and I couldn't agree more. Romans, Athenians, and Egyptians were all gung-ho Obama fans, and if one person can instantly change attitudes abroad, it's him.
I'm more comfortable saying I'm American now, and with that being said, we'll celebrate over a six-pack or something later this winter.
Out of curiosity: I thought that Turkey and Singapore were the only two countries that preferred McCain. Have you noticed this view during your travels in Turkey?
It's actually quite amusing because my host family in Spain was completely gung-ho for McCain and Palin. They couldn't believe we'd elect someone that is black. I tried to explain to them that race is/should be irrelevant, but they weren't having any of that...
Well, that's a tough question. It's arguable that the Turkish military prefers McCain, but the people as a whole definitely don't. The disastrous war in Iraq has hurt Turkey in a big way, because it's provided an even better safe haven in Iraq for the PKK. People, quite fairly, blame Bush et al. for this mess.
A good number of people here interpret the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as a 21st-century crusade. Although Islam is not as important here as other countries, the idea of ''Islamic brotherhood'' are strong. George Bush--and by association, John McCain--are seen as men who have killed hundreds of thousands of innocents, all for naught. Even non-religious Turks (and me!) can't forgive the Republicans for that.
Turkey's military, and its old-guard elite, probably supported McCain more because hey, war is their business. Okay, not really, but McCain would have seen less nuance in Kurdish question. It's not a terrorism problem; first and foremost, it's a problem a a sizeable minority (around 20 million) oppressed and denied for 80 years. The Republicans have consistently defined it as a terrorism problem, while ignoring its causation, just as the Turkish elite has.
cool...can't wait to hear more when you get back. You'll probably always remember being in another country for the election.
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