|
Excerpt from the book:
Turkey
is a young republic situated on a very ancient land. Throughout
the ages, several miraculous occurrences took place on the
land that is now Turkey. Perhaps the most important of these
is the Neolithic revolution, during which our ancestors
made the transition from a hunter-gatherer, nomadic existence
to sedentary living and food production. The largest known
Neolithic settlement is Çatalhüyük, located
in central Turkey. This fascinating site possibly had a
population of 10,000 as early as the sixth millennium BC.
The land we call Turkey served as a bridge between Asia
and Europe. Turks, who originated in Central Asia, arrived
in the eleventh century AD and rapidly conquered the land
from the Eastern Roman Empire, founding the Seljuk State.
Seljuk Turks withstood the Crusades and the Mongol raids
but disintegrated shortly thereafter, splitting into sixteen
smaller principalities. One of these, the Ottoman, grew
to be a world empire.
Spreading over three continents, from the gates of Vienna
to the Arab peninsula, the Ottoman Empire covered all of
North Africa and all lands around the Black Sea. It was
a miraculous accomplishment. But it came to an end as the
Ottomans fell behind the advances in science and industry
that took place in the West and as the conquered nations
rose one by one against their rule. The First World War
witnessed the final dissolution of the empire as Arabs mobilized
by Lawrence of Arabia rose against the sultan. Turkey, the
heartland of the Ottoman Empire, was occupied and partitioned
by the allies after the War.
A new miracle—the Turkish Republic—emerged from the ashes
of the Ottoman Empire. This miracle would not have been
possible if it were not for the leadership of a single man,
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, a young general at the time and the
Turkish hero of the Gallipoli Campaign. He mobilized a war-weary,
worn-out nation with a per-capita income of $50 in a campaign
against the victors of the First World War, despite the
urgings to the contrary of the sultan, the traditional ruler,
and his government. Ataturk led his armies brilliantly to
victory in a war that was fought against seemingly impossible
odds. Following the successful conclusion of the war in
1923 he declared the Turkish Republic and sent the royal
family into exile. He then spent the remaining fifteen years
of his life as the first president of Turkey, leading the
reforms that forged a modern nation out of the debris of
a medieval empire.
For the first time in history, Ataturk made a Moslem nation
into a secular one. Also for the first time in a Moslem
country, he recognized the complete legal equality of women
with men. Turkish women could vote and be elected to office
before French, Italian, Greek, and Swiss women. He changed
the lifestyle of the nation. The weekly holiday was changed
from Friday to Sunday. The way people dressed was changed;
the red fez was made illegal and the black veil strongly
discouraged. Western calendar and measurement systems were
adopted.
Even though Ataturk was one of the most brilliant military
leaders in history and had the rank of field marshal, (his
rank well earned on the field), he never wore a uniform
after becoming president and he banned his generals from
politics. He also banned all medals, decorations, and aristocratic
titles. Unlike his contemporaries Hitler and Mussolini,
he never declared himself president for life nor did he
interfere in daily government or in the courts, thus laying
down the foundations of a democracy. It is part of his legacy
that Turkey has been a multi-party democracy since 1946.
Unlike the European dictators who were his contemporaries,
Ataturk refused to define nationhood based on race. He introduced
the modern concept of nationhood with the statement, "How
happy is the one who calls oneself a Turk," meaning that
one is a Turk not by race, ethnic group, or religion, but
by choice. "A Turk," he said, "is a citizen of the Turkish
Republic."
His nation honored him with the name "Ataturk," meaning
"Father of Turks," when he made it a law that Turks would
have second names as well as first, something that they
did not have before. He continues to bless his people and
to give them affirmation as befits a true father, from his
mausoleum in Ankara, where there is not one single word
that praises him but, instead, many of his words that praise
his beloved people, such as "The right to rule belongs to
the people," "Turks are brilliant, Turks are intelligent,
Turks are hard working."
This book is an overview of contemporary Turkey, this
amazing miracle initiated on a very ancient land by Mustafa
Kemal Ataturk.
|