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Turkey Mourns Last Independence Fighter

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  • Turkey Mourns Last Independence Fighter

    TURKEY MOURNS LAST INDEPENDENCE FIGHTER

    TVNZ
    http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/536641/2 310021
    Nov 15 2008
    New Zealand

    Turkey laid to rest the last veteran of the 1919-1923 war which secured
    its independence in a solemn, patriotic ceremony where dignitaries
    and emotional onlookers pledged never to forget.

    Modern Turkey is once again in the grip of rapid social change as it
    undergoes democratic reforms aimed at European Union membership and
    debates its secularism, but Mustafa Sekip Birgol's death this week
    united Turks in gratitude for their freedom.

    Thousands of soldiers, veterans and Turkish citizens pinned Birgol's
    image to their chests and followed the funeral procession of the
    105-year-old former colonel through the streets of Istanbul to sombre
    applause.

    "We feel both proud and sad," said his daughter Ipek Artunc, thanking
    those who had come to pay their respects during a commemoration with
    full military honours.

    "Today we live in freedom and we must show our gratitude to those
    who fought for that privilege," said 50-year-old Ayse Ozutop, who
    had travelled to Istanbul's Asian shore especially to witness the
    procession following Birgol's coffin.

    Birgol was born in 1903 into a fading Ottoman Empire struggling to
    embrace modernity and manage territories stretching from the Balkans
    to the Arabian Peninsula.

    Defeated in World War One after siding with Germany, the former empire
    faced foreign occupation and annexation until Turkey's founder Mustafa
    Kemal Ataturk marshalled an independence campaign, in which Birgol
    fought against the Greeks as a lieutenant.

    "We have lost our last victorious hero, but Turks will never
    forget. Our soldiers are very important to us," said 63-year-old
    retired nurse Zuhal Arnik, speaking in a street lined with flag-waving
    mourners.

    As a rising and more religious-minded middle class moves into positions
    of power and questions Turkey's traditional autocratism, the old guard
    of generals, judges and bureaucrats is losing its grip on society.

    Turkey's metamorphosis involves examining the origins of the state
    and the expulsion of hundreds of thousands of non-ethnic Turks which
    took place in the process.

    This week Turkey's defence minister said he was misunderstood when
    he backed the deportation of Greeks and Armenians as an important
    step in creating modern Turkey.

    Turkey's political parties presented a united front in honouring
    Birgol at the Turkish parliament in Ankara.
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