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Mustapha Kemal Ataturk: still worshipped after all these years

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  • Mustapha Kemal Ataturk: still worshipped after all these years

    Montreal Gazette , Canada
    June 3 2007



    Mustapha Kemal Ataturk: still worshipped after all these years
    Founder of modern Turkey has his influence felt even today

    NORMAN WEBSTER, The Gazette
    Published: Sunday, June 03, 2007

    "Revered" is too mean a word to describe how Mustapha Kemal Ataturk
    is regarded by his countrymen. Hero worship is closer to the mark,
    the way Mao Zedong was seen by Chinese in earlier days, but without
    the brainless hysteria that used to play such a part in Mao idolatry.

    Everywhere, Ataturk gazes down on his people - from portraits in
    waiting rooms, from snapshots of his life (swimming, declaiming,
    teaching the alphabet) posted on public walls, or pointing the way
    dramatically forward, from astride a rearing horse, in the town
    square of Nevsehir in Cappadocia, deep in Turkey's Asian heartland.

    Although he died in 1938, he remains a guiding force. Founding father
    of the Turkish republic in 1923, he decreed that this overwhelmingly
    Muslim nation should be Western-oriented and secular in its public
    life. The army remains loyal to the vision, periodically overthrowing
    governments it considers to be straying from the true path.

    Ataturk. Take George Washington (father of his nation), add in some
    Abraham Lincoln (moral force), then a dose of Maggie Thatcher
    (implacable, often unpleasant) and our own Sir John A. (a visionary
    with a fondness for the bottle - Ataturk died of cirrhosis of the
    liver), put them all together and you approach the figure this man
    still cuts in his world.

    Westerners might know him best as the soldier who beat the British
    (plus Aussies and New Zealanders) at Gallipoli in 1915. His real
    contribution to history, though, was to rescue the republic from the
    ruins of the Ottoman empire and drag it Westward by the scruff of the
    neck.

    His ambition was phenomenal. He abolished the sultanate and the
    religious caliphate, changed the nation's script from Arabic to a
    Latin alphabet, adopted the Gregorian calendar, outlawed the fez and
    the veil, granted suffrage to women and required all Turks to adopt
    surnames, taking Ataturk ("Father of Turks") for himself.

    This was a leader who literally changed the way people dressed,
    spoke, worshipped, were named and governed, not little things by any
    measure. And the amazing thing is, he's still on the job.

    Istanbul was the recent site of the annual assembly of the
    International Press Institute, a global group which keeps a watch on
    press freedom.

    Nations that wish to stifle freedom of speech find all sorts of
    ingenious ways to do so. Turkey has a beaut, Article 301 of the
    Criminal Code, which applies savage penalties for "insulting
    Turkishness" - such as, for example, indicating the Turks committed
    genocide against the Armenians during the First World War.

    We asked the prime minister what he was going to do to correct this.
    He said he was working on it. He might be some time.

    It has been 20 years since I first went to Turkey, and the change is
    striking. The air is cleaner, the buildings sturdier, the streets in
    better shape, the taxis no longer battered and polluting, the people
    better dressed, the prosperity almost palpable.

    Returning to Montreal these days feels less like returning from the
    Third World than the other way round. You really have to go abroad to
    appreciate how unbelievably badly our streets, roads and public
    spaces compare - and how pervasive and degrading are our so-called
    graffiti (a.k.a., mindless scrawls by vandals).

    Face it, our town is scruffy, shabby and down at the heels. Less and
    less do we resemble Paris or Singapore, and more and more Harare,
    say, or Cairo. Mogadishu? Not yet, although our potholes would do
    credit to a war zone.

    The Topkapi Palace remains a wonder, especially its collections of
    precious stones. We gape at a 68-carat diamond once used, incredibly,
    as a ring before being retired to a turban ornament.

    There are ropes of pearls, gigantic rubies, emeralds seemingly the
    size of billiard balls. Then the famed Topkapi Dagger, with its three
    huge emeralds, the one Melina Mercouri and her lads set out to steal
    in the 1960 film Topkapi.

    Those sultans might not be missed by the masses, but they did have a
    certain style.

    Finally, a quote that adds to the feeling that Turkey really must
    succeed, eventually, in winning admittance to the European Union. It
    comes from Jeffrey Kopstein, director of the Centre for European,
    Russian and Eurasian Studies at the Munk Centre for International
    Studies at the University of Toronto.

    Kopstein writes that Europe's political elites "fail to consider the
    broader implications of refusing Turkey altogether. If left out,
    Turkey will pursue its own security agenda and, in the context of
    Iran's nuclear ambitions, that can only mean developing its own
    nuclear program. Who could blame them?"

    I don't know about you, but that made me sit up in my chair.

    Norman Webster is a former editor of The Gazette.

    http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/ne ws/business/story.html?id=440cd5df-a500-43c6-acee- 1b1896112c8b
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