Google’s Newrosis: How the issue language pre-determines the content of Google search results
It is only since 2000, that the Turkish government has removed the ban on celebrating Newroz. Being a Turkish citizen with Kurdish nationality, I know many Kurdish people who live in Turkey. Yet, none of the people I know have ever been to a Newroz celebration in Turkey because of the extreme political undertones of Turkish celebrations of Newroz, the first time I attended one was when we moved to Hungary with my family and the Syrian community organized yearly Newroz celebrations, where politicizing was off-limits and it truly was about celebrating the coming of spring with a Kurdish community and with those, who enjoy the Kurdish culture.
BDP went ahead with its Newroz celebrations on 18th of March and the government responded with sending riot police to the celebrations and barricading the entrances towards the square in Diyarbakir and locking down the whole city to discourage people from leaving Diyarbakir to celebrate Newroz.5. The police went on to using water cannon, tear gas and baton charges to break up the demonstrations, which led to the death of the BDP politician6.
Since there was such a visible contrast between the content of these articles (expressing pro and anti-Kurdish sentiments), I wanted to see whether the different world views associated with these two spellings can be observed in other spheres as well. I searched for these two terms on Google Images and was met with an image of what it means for a government to reclaim a celebration as its own. Wikipedia article on Newroz stresses the importance of fire to the celebration: “On the eve of Newroz, in southern and eastern Kurdistan, bonfires are lit. These fires symbolize the passing of the dark season, winter, and the arrival of spring, the season of light.”7
The search results on Google Images show fire, the Kurdish flag and the traditional Kurdish costumes for the newroz query, yet for nevruz, we are met with Turkish flags, pictures of Atatürk, Turkish military men, spring flowers, traditional Turkish costumes and basically no hint of the Kurdish culture. It is as if the two terms didn’t even refer to the same celebration. Hopefully, one day Kurdish and Turkish people will both celebrate together under a common name, but today, it seems like they aren’t even celebrating the same event.
- http://bianet.org/bianet/bianet/17453-newroz-1991-... [↩]
- http://www.theworld.org/2009/11/illegal-letters-in... [↩]
- http://globalvoicesonline.org/2012/03/18/turkey-po... [↩]
- http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/the-stupidity-of-... [↩]
- https://twitter.com/#!/YekbunAlp/status/1812837016... [↩]
- http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/03/18/us-turke... [↩]
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newroz_in_Kurdistan [↩]
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