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Mustafa Kemal Atatürk
(19 May 1881-10 November 1938)
Mustafa Kemal, founder of the Turkish Republic, was born
in Saloniki on the l9th May 1881 of humble background.
His father started out as a customs officer, later
becoming a timber merchant. Following his sudden death
he left behind a family having to fend for itself.
As a child Mustafa finished primary school in
Saloniki, going on to secondary education at Rucholi gè
School. Despite opposition from his uncle, who had taken
on the responsibility of looking after the widow and her
two children following the death of his brother, Mustafa
entered military school, completing his military
training in Istanbul. He succeeded in entering the
Military School (Harbiye) where he completed his studies
with flying colours, after which he was accepted into
the School of the General Staff. In December 1905 he was
commissioned as General Staff Captain.
Throughout his studies Mustafa Kemal
consistently proved himself a conscientious, aspiring
and diligent student who liked to interest himself with
particularly difficult and complex problems. Whilst at
military school in Saloniki, he distinguished himself in
mathematics and literature. At the same time, and due
mainly to his own efforts he started to learn French, in
which he made considerable progress. Yet another trait
of character which began to show through in his early
youth was Mustafa's ability to show initiative and
exceptionally his ability to give orders, whilst at the
same time maintaining a sense of fraternity with his
comrades. In the School of the General Staff he pondered
long and hard over the hardship caused by the
dictatorial rule of Abdullamid, who from within his
famous Yildiz Palace spread fear throughout the whole
country. Just like his comrades at the school, Mustafa
harboured the same feelings of disgust and
rebelliousness towards the political regime of the
Sultan. For this reason he did not hesitate for one
moment about taking part in the secret underground
activities going on at the General Staff School,
directed towards the overthrow of the Yildiz Regime.
Between the years 1905 and 1918 Mustafa Kemal
was deservedly awarded high ranking posts in the
military chain of command. He became Chief of General
Staff of the army that was sent out from Saloniki to put
down the uprising of the l3th April 1909, a movement
designed to return the country to Hamadic Absolutism and
which had started with the non recognition of the
Constitution that had been declared on the 23rd July
1908. Mustafa proved to have special qualities in the
organisation and management of this army of oppression,
known as the Army of the Movement. In 1910 he lead the
Turkish Forces during military manoeuvres in the
Province of Picardy in France. In 1911 he fought in
Tripoli against the Italians, and in 1914 whilst serving
as Military Attaché in Sofia, he successfully drew the
governments attention to the catastrophic results
connected with Turkey's entry into the war with Germany
and its allies.
During World War I Mustafa fought against the
Allied Forces at the Dardanelles, the Russians on the
Mus Front, in the east and against the British in Syria
and Iraq. During the war he visited Germany as Military
Adviser, together with hereditary Prince Vahdettin. At
the time of signing the Armistice Declaration on the
30th October 1918 Mustafa Kemal remained at the head of
his troops, a command given to him by the German General
Liman von Sanders. In the years between 1918 and 1923
Mustafa Kemal was at the forefront of the Turkish War of
Independence and involved with the eradication of the
antiquated institutions of the Osmanic Empire and in
laying the foundations of the new Turkish State. He
approached the National Congresses of Erzurum and Sivas
to organise and lift the morale of the people in its
determined opposition to the Forces of the Entente who
were occupying Anatolia.
By the end of these conventions he had managed
to convey the message that the idea and the ideals of
outdated imperialism ought be dropped so that people
within the national boundaries could make decisions in
accordance with the principles and general guidelines of
an effective national policy. After the occupation of
Istanbul by the Forces of the Entente he laid the
foundations for the new Turkish State when in 1920 he
united the Great National Assembly in Ankara. With the
government of the Great National Assembly, of which he
was President, Mustafa Kemal fought the Forces of the
Entente and the Sultan's army which had remained there
in collaboration with the occupying forces. Finally, on
the 9th September 1922 he succeeded in driving the
Allied Forces back to Izmir, along with the other forces
which had managed to penetrate the heartland of Anatolia.
By this action he saved the country from invasion by
foreign forces.
On the 24th July 1923 the States of the Entente
were obliged to recognise the territorial integrity of
Turkey in the Treaty of Lausanne. So it came to pass
that in quite a spectacular fashion Mustafa Kemal had
achieved the first step in his reform programme, the
creation of a sovereign and independent state.
From 1923 to 1938 Mustafa Kemal's main work lay
in leading the Turkish State and its people along the
path in the direction of the outside civilised world.
The ideal of an independent fatherland within national
boundaries had already been achieved before 1922 and
therefore the idea of a truly modern state, whose role
relied on the sovereignty of its people, could be
developed by the most rational means available during
this period.
Following their separation, Sultanat was
abolished in 1922, whilst Khalifat continued to exist.
At the Proclamation of the Republic on the 29th October
1923 this emporia institution proved to be superfluous
and it was likewise abolished. This also resulted in the
disbandment of other theocratic institutions on which
Khalifat was founded. By the same token all similar
types of organisations and theological institutions
which had regulated the role of the individual and
society in general were closed. Finally by amendment to
the constitution, the principle of (secularism) - that
all so important factor in community life - was
introduced as an anchor of the new democratic and
republican constitution. As a result of this new
direction, all laws, rules and regulations, institutions
and methods of a theological nature that had been an
influence on the dealings of state and social order were
abolished and various political and social reforms
introduced along Western lines, suitably adapted to meet
national security and interests.
In brief are mentioned here some of the
important reforms introduced under Kemal: the
international calendar and time were adopted (1923).
in place of the traditional head garment, the
fez, introduced under the rule of Sultan Nahmond II, the
West's style of hat became obligatory (1925).
Swiss civil law was introduced adapted to the
conditions and needs of the country (1926).
the Latin alphabet was adopted (1928).
The Civil Code, Penal Statute Book and the Trade
Law Book were introduced.
The legal position of women and their place in
society in the new republic was greatly improved (for
example the active and passive voting right at national
and local elections).
Only due to the efforts of this great man, which
he maintained with exceptional strength of character and
persistence, helped along by his ability to work
methodically, was it possible to introduce all these
reforms. Thanks to his great organising talent he led
the country to considerable prosperity and down the path
of civilisation and peace.
Kemal laid the foundations of a truly modern
Turkey, a democratic, republican and independent state
based on national sovereignty. Although these ideas
originated from him and were paramount in the foundation
of the new state they remain today an integral part of
the republican government of our country. The foundation
stone, or perhaps even the very soul of Ataturk's
spiritual and intellectual philosophy, was the thought
of universal peace and although the biggest part of his
life was taken up by war, he always considered it a
crime.
According to Ataturk war can only be just or
justified if it is fought out of sheer necessity or for
reasons of national defence, or pursued by a people
awaiting their sovereignty, their very lives depending
on it.
To live freely and be independent is both a holy
right of the individual and of the nation, this right
being stronger than power itself. Only by his own
personal conviction was he able to frame the all
inspiring guiding principle of the Republic of Turkey -
"Peace in the country, peace in the world." This
principle points with absolute clarity and determination
the way forward for the country's future home and
foreign policy.
From the ideas that Ataturk held the idea of
civilisation should not be overlooked as it is no less
important. In the course of his short life he never
ceased repeating the fact that views which are based
broadly on regional perspective's of the West or East,
or on religious perspective's, be they Islam or
Christian, often weaken the thoughts of civilisation, as
they fail to manifest the small or special
characteristics. Civilisation is something whole and
exclusively human, a universal property. It therefore
goes without saying, that the share every nation in the
world has in civilisation is considerable.
In the view of this inspired reformer, mankind
has a duty to constantly adapt himself to the needs that
reason demand. His guide in life should be science.
Following on from these basic beliefs Kemal took it upon
himself to provide everyone in the country with an
education, at the heart of which lay the creation of
citizens having special qualities, or in other words,
the sense and direction of the education he wanted to
give to the people was very clear in that the Republic
needed to produce generations of people whose thinking,
beliefs and education were totally free. Not to mention
his view of egoism being wholly incompatible with the
idea of civilisation "Egoism, whether individual or
national is to be condemned". He reminds us that all
nations of the world form one large family and that
whenever a disaster strikes one of its members, then it
is felt by the rest - like the pain felt from a needle
penetrating a part of the body and felt throughout the
whole body.
With the intention of spreading his ideas within
the educational sector, and supported by national
campaigns, Kemal continued to put forward his form of
humanitarian education, with the aim of producing an
enlightened people free from prejudice and intolerance.
The desired objective being simply to develop citizens
of the world, free from desires such as envy, revenge
and conspiracy. In a world inhabited by such communities
it might be possible to find an instrument, an
organisation that stands above individual states, or in
other words: "a body of united nations", whose main
purpose is to maintain peace.
In this respect Ataturk's ideas date from the
time between the World Wars, particularly that before
World War II but are nevertheless topical because in a
way Ataturk had predicted the concept of the United
Nations.
Furthermore, it was at a time when the
ideological battle had reached its climax and for this
reason such views were of a prophetic nature.
For a man who had set himself the task of
building up a country based on the most convincing human
achievements and under the banner of reason.
The Inauguration of the Monument to the "Unknown
Soldier" held in Dumlupinar on the 30th August 1924
Mustafa Kemal was again dressed very well, his eyes
sparkling and radiant with happiness over the "Great
Victory" and accompanied by his wife Latife Hanim and
wartime comrades. He talked to the crowd, his beloved
people, saying; "A country may be conquered forcibly,
but that in itself is not enough to govern its people.
As long as its soul has not been conquered, its
determination and resolution cannot be destroyed and it
is a nation impossible to rule" …. "Undoubtable, the
foundation laid will give to the new Turkish Republic
and state its stability. The eternal life of the Turkish
Republic has been crowned here. The Turkish blood shed
on the battlefields and the souls of the martyrs in
heaven will be the immortal guardians of our state and
republic" …. "Gentlemen, the most important effect of
this great victory is that the Turkish Nation has gained
absolute control of its independence. If we remember the
years of suffering under the reign of khans, monarchs,
sultans and caliphs, we can now understand the
importance of gaining independence." In connection with
the nations independence Mustafa Kemal stated; "Gentlemen,
the nation's independence is a power that breaks chains
and burns crowns and thrones. Unions which were based on
the slavery of nations, will always be condemned to
decline."
On the Cal Plain, Ataturk expressed his opinion
about the sultans and caliphs saying: "My friends,
expelling from Turkey those who sat in their palaces
relying on nothing other than (Turkishness), and who
marched with our enemies against Anatolia and against (Turkishness)
has proved an even greater mission than that of removing
the enemy from our country. (!) Absolute control of the
Turkish Nation, our country and ancestral heritage,
could only be achieved following the closure of these
superfluous and harmful offices.
Ataturk in expressing his opinion about
technology and science stated; "Our country not only
needs cultural development and wealth but also science,
technology, civilisation, freedom of thought and a free
ideology. Our honour, independence and existence must
support us in the basic and important work necessary to
achieve the interests of the nation.
The people who ruled Turkey for centuries
thought of everything except Turkey itself! Our nation
is unselfish in its desire for independence and land and
this has been proven. Our nation is the guardian of
reform. A nation encompassing such high values cannot
therefore be led astray by others."
At midnight on Thursday the 3rd September 1936,
during the Balkan Festival at the Beylerbeyi Palace,
Ataturk honoured the gala with a visit. Yugoslavian,
Bulgarian, Romanian and Turkish delegations and folk
groups took part. When Ataturk arrived all the groups
sang together; "Welcome, Mustafa Kemal Pasa". General
Kazim Dirik read out Ataturk's speech to the guests; "The
fortunes of mankind must be realised by moving closer
together, by loving each other and by meeting each other
with pure feelings and thoughts. A symbol of this high
human ideal is our being here together this night. For
this reason, I express my great appreciation to our
important guests."
Later, a Turkish child communicated Ataturk's
notes to the guests. "A nation is able to carry out
reforms in many ways and to succeed in them. The
reformation of music however reflects the exceptional
development of a nation.
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