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TV drama scene involving pork sparks backlash in Turkey

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A scene in a television drama aired on the pro-government ATV station has sparked widespread backlash on social media, with critics accusing the show’s producers of deliberately fueling tensions between secular and religious segments of Turkish society ahead of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

The controversy erupted after the second episode of “Aynı Yağmur Altında” (Under the Same Rain), in which a character portrayed as modern and secular individual serves pork to a conservative Muslim family during a dinner gathering. The scene quickly became one of the most discussed topics online.

Pork is not illegal in Turkey. However, due to the country’s predominantly Muslim population, which abstains from pork for religious reasons, its public depiction in sensitive contexts often provokes strong reactions.

Many critics argued that the portrayal went beyond artistic choice and appeared to frame secular citizens as dismissive of religious sensitivities.

Journalist İsmail Saymaz said the scene reflected an unrealistic depiction of Turkish society.

“There is no such Turkey, there never has been,” he wrote on X, arguing that the vast majority of secular citizens neither consume pork nor would knowingly serve it to Muslim guests. He suggested the timing of the episode, shortly before Ramadan, risked inflaming secular-religious tensions for ratings.

Columnist Mehmet Ali Güller described the storyline as part of a broader attempt to stigmatize secular lifestyles ahead of Ramadan. He said presenting secular families as intentionally disrespectful toward religious values amounted to an “intelligence operation” and not something one would normally see on television.

Güller also noted that the series airs on a station widely regarded as aligned with the government, implying that the controversy cannot be viewed in isolation from the broader political climate.

 

Political scientist Fatih Yaşlı also criticized the production team and broadcaster, calling the depiction “deeply pathological hostility” toward religious people.

The Turkish Orthodox Community issued a statement rejecting the realism of the portrayal, stressing that even among secular circles pork consumption is rare in Turkey.

“We Turkish Christians rarely eat pork ourselves,” the group wrote on X. “We would never serve pork or alcohol to a Muslim neighbor. Who writes these scripts?”

One social media user, Abdullah Naci, questioned whether the scene was deliberately designed to deepen social divisions. Writing on X, he said he had never seen anyone in Turkey intentionally try to serve pork to a Muslim guest and suggested that such portrayals serve the interests of those who “need society to remain polarized in order to sustain their dominance.”

 

ATV is considered part of Turkey’s pro-government media. Critics have long argued that mainstream broadcasters aligned with the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) frequently portray cultural tensions through the lens of conservative political narratives.

Turkey is officially a secular state but predominantly Muslim. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has repeatedly stated that he aims to raise “pious generations,” a vision that has intensified debate over the role of religion in public life.

Secular groups have accused the government of gradually undermining the country’s secular foundations, while government officials deny such claims.

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