Throughline - The Three Faces of Ataturk
Episode Date: October 26, 2023"Authority, without any condition and reservation, belongs to the nation." A military commander named Mustafa Kemal uttered these words in 1923, on the eve of the founding of the Republic of Turkey. H...e would later rename himself Ataturk, "Father of the Turks." And he was outlining a vision for the future: a future where old empires were buried and new nations reigned supreme. That vision would resonate beyond the borders of the new Turkey, becoming a shining example for leaders around the world of how to build a single unified national identity — no matter the cost.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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A warning before we get started.
This episode contains descriptions of violence.
Imagine yourself atop a hill in Ankara, the capital of Turkey, gazing out at a vast landscape
of green trees and red roofs. Below you, lined with flowers,
is a paved beige walkway called the Lion Road.
As you make your way down it,
the smell of junipers and roses surrounds you,
and a row of lion statues greets you.
Two towers loom alongside the road.
To the left,
Independence Tower.
To the right, independence tower. To the right, freedom tower.
And inscribed on their walls are quotes that leap through time.
Life means fighting. It means conflict.
We are the nation that desires life and independence.
There is no such principle as begging for mercy.
Success in life is a burden of independence or death. As you approach the end of Lion Road,
a plaza decorated with hundreds of colorful Turkish rugs
gives way to the final stop,
a massive mausoleum reminiscent of the temples of ancient Rome.
Inside, you find the sarcophagus of the man who spoke those inscribed words.
The man whose spirit animates the hillsophagus of the man who spoke those inscribed words.
The man whose spirit animates the hills and valleys of this nation.
The man who ended a centuries-old empire and created the Republic of Turkey,
forging a roadmap that would guide leaders around the world in the 20th century and beyond.
His name?
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.
Atatürk means Turkey,
and Turkey means Atatürk.
He speaks in our hearts,
burning like the sun,
words that will stand on the path of history. When I hear his voice, my eyes fill up
with tears. Eyes flash with 20 million glances. Turkey wants to be powerful. It wants to revive
its national pride. All the hopes of a nation flowing through the veins of the nation like blood. Our essence is Ataturk, and no one can change our essence.
Like a steel wall breaking apart the wind,
it will break through the gap of time. It's been said that if the Earth were a single state, Istanbul would be its capital.
Turkey sits at the crossroads of Europe and Asia,
a location that's geographically strategic and culturally rich.
And Ataturk, who became Turkey's first president exactly 100 years ago in 1923,
is its inescapable figurehead. I think Ataturk is similar to not just Washington,
but Washington and Lincoln put together. This is Soner Choptay. I'm the director of Turkish
Research Program and a Bayer Family Fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
I'm the author of a number of books, most recently Assaulted in Autumn, Erdogan Faces Turkey's Uncontainable Forces. Ataturk, the surname Mustafa Kemal was taken towards the end of his life,
literally translates to father of the Turks. He cast himself as someone who would lead the nation
to a higher stage of civilization
by building a secular republic.
The current president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
now he wants to be the father of a new Turkish identity.
Unlike other Turks, Erdogan is putting Islam first.
President Erdogan, who's been in power for nearly 20 years now,
also wants to shape Turkey in his own image.
He wants to revive the religious identity of a place that for so long
was the epicenter of a great Muslim empire, the Ottoman Empire.
And instead of facing solely west towards Europe and the U.S. as Ataturk did,
he sought relationships with autocratic regimes like Putin's Russia or Xi Jinping's China.
And yet, even President Erdogan
can't escape the magnetic pull of Ataturk.
He has publicly paid homage to Ataturk's shrine
atop that hill in Ankara.
I think Erdogan too loves Ataturk
because he was raised in secularist Turkey.
But I think the question is not that, loves Ataturk because he was raised in secularist Turkey.
But I think the question is not that he loves Ataturk, it is which Ataturk he loves.
Which Ataturk he loves.
As with any founding leader, those so-called great men of history,
people project their hopes, fears, and anxieties of the present onto them.
It's like the Rorschach test.
An amorphous blot that transforms into what you want it to be.
Is it a picture of Ataturk, the liberator, in an Ottoman army uniform, servant of the caliph?
Is it a picture of Ataturk, the founder of the republic,
dressed like a Downton Abbey politician who eliminated monarchy,
ended the Ottoman Empire? Or is it a picture of Ataturk the reformer hanging out at the beach,
Ataturk teaching people how to write in the new Latin alphabet, Ataturk attending a conference
populated by women given his strong commitment to gender equality? The liberator, the founder, the reformer. Each of these identities is based both in reality and fiction.
And each has cracks in the paint.
Those cracks tell a fuller story of who Ataturk was,
what it takes to create a nation in one man's image,
and what it costs.
I'm Randa Abdel-Fattah.
I'm Ramteen Arablui. Coming up, decrypting the three pictures of Ataturk.
Hi, this is Darcy Castro from Marietta, Georgia, and you're listening to ThruLine from NPR.
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Volume 1. Kurtarıcı. Part 1. The Liberator.
We were in the real Anatolia. This mellifluous name, rivaled in beauty of sound only by Mesopotamia,
means the place where the sun rises.
It had long shone on people and events bound up in the narrative
of all human and spiritual progress.
For we now skirted what might be called the rim of the cradle of mankind. Across these plains had stalked the
stately and immortal figures of biblical days. Here the armies of Alexander and Kent, and the
famous Gordian Knot was cut. Here too passed the mailed crusaders on the road to Jerusalem,
and amid the green hills that rose to the left and the right, the civilization
of the Near East was born.
American journalist Isaac F. Markeson penned these words in 1923 while journeying from
Istanbul to Ankara.
Thousands of miles from home, Markeson was in Turkey on a mission to get an exclusive
interview with Mustafa Kemal, the man who would soon become Turkey's first president.
Friday the 13th came, and with it, the long-awaited interview with Kemal.
He lives in a kiosk, as the Turks call a villa.
They met at Kemal's home, perched on a hill in the countryside,
not far from where he would be buried as Ataturk, years later.
As Markassin waited for the interview to begin, he admired the decorative swords that were hung on the wall alongside inscriptions from the Quran and a life-size portrait of Kamal's mother.
Finally, after some time, he was brought into where Kamal was meeting with the Turkish cabinet.
They greeted each other in French.
Perhaps we had better go into the next room for our talk and leave the cabinet to its deliberations.
From there on, though, Kamal spoke only in Turkish.
Although the Ghazi knows both French and German, he prefers to talk Turkish through an interpreter.
Once seated, there was only one last thing needed before the interview could begin.
A butler, no less well-groomed than his master, brought the inevitable thick Turkish coffee and cigarettes.
Now with strong coffee and cigarettes in hand, the interview with Turkey's new leader commenced.
All my life I have had inspiration in the lives and deeds of Washington and Lincoln.
Between the original 13 states and the new Turkey is a curious kinship.
Your early Americans threw off the British yoke.
Turkey has thrown off the old yoke of empire with all the graft and corruption that it carried.
And what was worse, the selfish meddling of other nations.
Markassin was a skilled interviewer, known for being keenly observant, never taking notes
and putting his subjects, such as Woodrow Wilson or Sunyat Sen, at ease.
Kamal, for his part, knew this interview was an opportunity to mark his place in the world
and convey his vision for Turkey. And it's very clear that in this interview, his intention was
not simply to give the wider public a sense of who he is, where he came from, or just kind of the
kind of trivial aspects of his background. He, from the very early stages of his political career, used himself as a kind of allegory, and that he was very mindful of developing and presenting a persona that embodied principles, values, and aspirations that were important to him.
America struggled through to independence and prosperity.
We are now in the midst of travail, which is witnessing the birth of a nation.
My name is Ryan Gingeris. I am a professor in the Department of National Security Affairs
at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. Ryan is also the author of several books on the Ottoman Empire and the rise of Mustafa
Kemal.
And this interview has always captured his attention.
For many years, imperialism dominated Europe.
But imperialism is doomed.
And that's because in this interview, the world was introduced to Kamal, a man his people knew as the Liberator,
who amidst the ashes of a dying Ottoman Empire,
believed he was destined to create a new nation
capable of rivaling the powers of Europe.
And here's how that story goes.
In 1881, a baby was born into a world of chaos
when the ties of power were shifting.
His name was Mustafa Kemal.
I think the first thing that has to be said
is that the world that he was born into doesn't exist anymore.
He was born in the Ottoman port city of Thessaloniki,
which is now in Greece, which at the time was known as Salonika.
This is Soner Chaptai again.
It was a port city, the gateway to the Balkans, but also a port city with large European origin communities
and, of course, exposed to trends and movements coming from Europe. He grew up in a world in which being a Muslim was the primary basis through which he identified with both state and society.
And now what I mean by that is that the vast majority of the people that he associated with in school and even outside of it were Muslim.
And so his childhood, he characterizes first and foremost through an anecdote in which
when he was young, his mother made him attend a religious school by virtue of the fact that his mother herself was quite devout.
And that instead, what he wanted and what his father wanted was for him to go to a more
progressive school. In fact, a school that was run by a prominent Jewish educator.
Every detail Kamal shared about his life had a greater purpose.
It's very clear that this one scrap that we have
that gives us some kind of insight into his childhood
was not meant solely to inform,
but rather to indicate his own personal preferences.
Like Napoleon, he believed that he was a man of destiny,
and his subsequent achievements have confirmed that early belief.
From his teens forward,
it's clear he also sees state service
as the primary way in which he is going to make his way through life.
Kemal was destined for the army and at the proper age entered the military school at Monastir.
Once in the army, he impressed his colleagues by a real love of soldiering.
Then, as now, he was a nationalist. For Mustafa Kemal and his followers,
nothing confirmed his greatness more than his medal at the bloody Battle of Gallipoli.
Unofficial reports that a decisive action at the Dardanelles has begun.
Reports from the Dardanelles say the Turkish troops have completely driven the French and
British from Setabar and that Gallipoli Peninsula is now clear of the enemy.
In the spring of 1915, World War I was raging.
Mustafa Kemal, a soldier at heart, was fighting for the Ottoman Empire, who had aligned itself with Germany and the Central Powers.
Their enemies were the Allied powers, Russia, Britain, and France,
the side the U.S. would eventually join.
In late April, the Allies land troops on the beaches of the Gallipoli Peninsula,
a region which is generally referred to in Turkish as Çanakkale.
And the Allies are in good shape.
It seemed like all the cards were in the
Allies' favor. But then... It's at this moment, in the very early stages of this landing, that Mustafa
Kemal enters into the battle. He brings up his regiment and quite famously orders his troops to I don't order you to attack. I order you to die.
This moment is remembered thereafter as the great turning point in the Battle of Gallipoli.
Mustafa Kemal's victory was unprecedented.
It wasn't easy for Al-Atrk to defeat those armies. And defeating the French and the British in 1920s
is like defeating the Americans or the Chinese today.
And I have to give him credit
because I think he was a genius in the military realm.
Mustafa Kemal had stood up
to some of the world's great powers
and held his ground.
He was a war hero at home,
but also around the world,
even to the people he defeated.
He becomes something of an international personality of note after the war because veterans of the Gallipoli campaign from Australia and Great Britain identify him and remember him for his heroism. And it's really, again, as somewhat ironic as
it sounds, it's because of the ways in which Westerners come to remember Gallipoli that he
attains this kind of stature as a great leader, great warrior, war hero, what have you.
The Turk is both dignified and proud.
He is also capable and talented.
Such a nation would prefer to perish
rather than subject itself to the life of a slave.
Therefore, independence or death.
The stage was set for Mustafa Kemal to rise to power.
And in 1923, just as he was giving his interview to Markassin,
the final treaty with the Allied powers was being ironed out down the hall.
The Ottoman Empire was no more.
In its place would be a new nation, Turkey, with Kemal as its new president.
Whatever fate holds out for him, he has already written himself large in the history of his time.
Mustafa Kemal presented himself as a rupture with the past, a complete departure from everything that had come before. And with the rise of a new Turkish republic, he wanted the world to believe that the Ottoman Empire had vanished.
Almost like in the old days when you had to reset a computer, you did control-alt-delete.
I think the Turkish version of control-alt-delete, he basically like hard booted the Ottoman Empire
in 1923. He's like, I'm just going to delete the old software.
It's not working.
I'm going to bring a new software, put it into the computer and start a country from scratch.
That's the story he told.
But the full story was much more complicated.
And all the messy, nuanced parts he'd left out, the things that had helped pave his path to power,
were still there on the hard drive.
Whenever we think about our childhoods,
we are omitting things.
We are adding things as we grow up.
The past and the future eliminate each other reciprocally.
Coming up, we rotate the portrait of Mustafa Kemal to see another face,
the man behind the myth and the bloody underbelly of building a brand new nation.
Hello, my name is Subhush Pithachakraborty.
I'm calling from Austin, Texas, and you are listening to ThruLine NPR.
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My idea of nationalism is that of a people of kindred birth, religion, and temperament.
For hundreds of years, the Turkish Empire was a conglomerate human mass in which Turks formed the minority.
We had other so-called minorities, and they have been the source of most of our
troubles, that and the old idea of conquest. When Mustafa Kemal sat down with journalist
Isaac Markassin to give his post-mortem of the Ottoman Empire, he said the source of most of the empire's troubles was, quote, so-called minorities.
I am from Turkey. I was born and raised there. I lived there until the age of 22. Turkey
is mine to keep, but it is a complicated relationship.
This is Lerna Ekmekcioglu.
I am an Armenian from Turkey, and I am a survivor of descendants of the Armenian genocide.
Lerna is an associate professor of history at MIT
and author of the book Recovering Armenia,
The Limits of Belonging in Post-Genocide Turkey.
Growing up in Turkey as a so-called minority,
she heard stories about the Armenian Genocide and how her grandparents survived it in hushed whispers.
We couldn't speak about what had happened publicly.
It was illegal.
The Armenian Genocide was an ethnic cleansing campaign that took place right around the time Mustafa Kemal was making a name for himself.
It left as many as 1.2 million Armenians dead and countless more displaced.
And the forces that led to that tragedy and its subsequent cover-up
were the same forces that propelled Mustafa Kemal into power
and shaped his views on minorities.
A part of the story he conveniently leaves out of the interview with Markassin,
an unflattering crack in the picture of him as the founder.
Now, to understand those forces, we have to take a closer look at the empire he grew up in,
the Ottoman Empire.
Ottoman Empire was a great power, hundreds of years, ruled territories over three continents.
It's huge, and it's biggest from Vienna to the Balkans to the Holy Land in the east.
I think about 50 member states of the UN at one time were controlled by the Ottomans.
The Ottoman Empire was founded in 1299 and by the 1400s had grown to be one of the world's most powerful.
It was a Muslim empire with a caliph at its center,
sort of like the Islamic world's pope.
But many different ethnic and religious groups
lived for centuries alongside one another,
creating a sort of shared cultural heritage,
including iconic folk songs, like the one you're hearing,
called Khatibin.
No such entity existed in this part of the world in Europe.
Think of the expulsion of Jews and Muslims from Spain,
religious wars in Europe between Catholics and Protestants, persecution of Jews in Russia,
and across the continent in general. So when compared to its contemporaries in the 16th century,
it's a progressive place. They were tolerant of other faiths, and tolerant doesn't mean equal.
For example, non-Muslims were taxed more heavily,
but tolerant meant people could live in relative peace,
practicing their faith of choice.
Minority is a modern construct.
Lerna says all these different groups were seen simply as part of the tapestry of the empire,
until the Ottomans began to lose their grip on power.
It started with the defeat in Vienna in the late 17th century.
In the summer of 1683, the Ottoman army attempted to lay siege to the city of Vienna in Austria.
A victory could have changed the course of European history,
and they actually almost succeeded.
But in the end, they were driven out.
This battle marked the beginning of the end for the empire.
It suffered a really slow and painful decline.
Just as European powers, like the British, French and Russians,
were growing in strength.
And by the early 1800s, some of its internal parts don't want to stay with it anymore.
And that jeopardized the empire's stability.
The most vocal group within the empire that won it out were the Greeks. Greeks rebel not in the name of their ethnic nationality,
but in the name of their Greek Christianity.
Because this is how the Greeks have been categorized under the Ottoman rule.
Because in the Ottoman Empire, you are your religion.
And with the banner of Christianity guiding their rebellion,
other Christian European powers came to their aid.
Democracy was born in Greece. Philosophy, like the civilizational root of everything that we
aspire to be, can go back to ancient Greece. And then therefore, let's make a cause out of that.
Eventually, in 1832, the Greek nationalists managed to break off and form their own kingdom.
This, too, was a threat to the empire.
The Ottoman government was worried that, with its power waning,
other minorities within the empire would further tear it apart.
So they extended more equality to other minorities, including the Armenians, and they rebranded themselves.
They reformed their military, drafted a new constitution, built a more secular education system, and expanded rights for women and minorities.
So by the time Ataturk was born in the 1880s,
the Ottomans had been westernizing for roughly about a century.
But despite its attempts at modernizing and westernizing,
the reality was the empire was still crumbling fast.
They were forced to declare bankruptcy.
They continued to lose more and more of their land.
And desperate to wrangle control, the government decided to discard its constitution and embrace an iron fist approach, cracking down on dissent of any kind.
The Ottoman Empire in the 1880s, 1890s, the decades of Ataturk's youth, these were dark times.
A mood of discontent was spreading throughout the empire, which gave rise to a new movement determined to reform the empire. They became known as the Young Turks. In 1908, the Young
Turks staged a revolt, and when they succeeded, they restored the constitution and signaled better days ahead for the empire,
inspiring other youth political movements around the world.
Mustafa Kemal joined the movement.
But here's the great irony of Mustafa Kemal and his generation.
They had come up in secular Ottoman schools and served in its military.
So they weren't trying to break with the past.
They were mostly trying to save the empire from collapse.
In some ways, it is a movement dedicated to saving the state from itself.
But before long, their progressive idealism would be put to the test.
We're back in 1914.
World War I has just broken out,
and the young Turk government decides to throw their hat into the ring.
3,000 miles from home, an American army is fighting for you.
Usually, when we talk about World War I from an American perspective,
we don't even consider the role of the Ottoman Empire, who, remember, joined on the side of Germany.
But while Mustafa Kemal was off defending the empire and succeeding, things were looking very different in the capital, where the young
Turk government grew more nervous that the neighboring Christian Russian Empire might
try to create mayhem within Ottoman lands by funneling support to Armenians living there,
just as they'd done with the Greeks a century earlier.
The biggest group that is left in the empire that is overwhelmingly Christian is the Armenians.
Armenians had been living in a part of the Ottoman Empire called Anatolia long before the empire existed, and some Armenians believed it was time they carve out a nation for themselves there.
The young Turk government was not about to let those ideas grow.
So they decide to eliminate the threat of there was going to be a massacre.
It involves three processes.
Outright massacre, kidnapping, and the third one is the forcible Islamization of Armenians.
All the church bells were ringing.
We didn't know what it is.
Church was over.
Why the bells?
My dad told me his grandmother
had seen during the genocide
how her pregnant mother
was bayoneted in front of her eyes.
They bang on the door,
and next thing we know, that door was open.
My two aunts was killed right before my eyes.
But from my mom's side, they would not talk about it.
I heard all Armenians hollering,
Allah, Allah, neredesin?
Niçin bizi kurtarmıyorsun?
They were asking God, where are you, God?
Why are we punishing so much this way?
Why don't you save us, dear God?
From both sides, they really lost many people,
many, many people.
Like only three, four people survived. The day of conquest and aggrandizement has gone by.
So is also the day of secret covenants
entered into in the interest of particular governments
and likely at some unlooked-for moment
to upset the peace of the world.
In 1918, as World War I came to an end
with the Ottomans on the losing side,
U.S. President Woodrow Wilson
proposed a 14-point plan to establish world peace.
One thing that defines this period of time
in Woodrow Wilson's mind is that empires are often the prisons of national minorities to determine their future
and to present their cases at the end of the war for the creation of new states.
And the Ottoman Empire, which had been around for 600 years at that point,
became a target of Western powers looking to usher in this new era of nation-states.
They demanded the Ottomans own up to their war crimes and suspend their empire.
The irony is that this is a set of demands that are made with respect to the central powers,
not to the British Empire, not to the French Empire,
let alone even to the United States, which had its own colonies.
To this day, the Turkish government contests the use of the word genocide.
They argue that this was a political uprising
during a chaotic period
when disease and famine were also rampant
and that all sides perpetrated violence.
Okay, you might be wondering,
where does Mustafa Kemal fit into all of this?
Remember, he was a part of the Young Turk movement,
the same people who had led the genocide against the Armenians.
But he had been stationed far away, fighting at the Battle of Gallipoli,
and was only transferred east later on.
So when the hammer came down from Western powers looking to hold the young Turks in government responsible for their war crimes,
they didn't see Mustafa Kemal as having blood on his hands.
On the contrary, he was cast as a hero even in the foreign press.
And I think when he said, I'm going to liberate Turkey, people did not say, oh, who are you to do this?
The people lined up behind him and said, oh, yeah, this guy can do it because he had already established himself as a great general.
And over the next few years, he continued to build up his military reputation, leading a successful war against the Greeks and British to keep them from encroaching on what remained of the Ottoman Empire. Even though these military campaigns led to further displacement and large-scale murder of Armenians,
continuing the legacy of genocide that the young Turk government had enacted,
the narrative about Mustafa Kemal as a hero prevailed.
That old idea of force, conquest, and expansion is dead in Turkey forever.
This is why we want a Turkey of the Turks, based on the ideal of self-determination,
which was so well expressed by Woodrow Wilson.
In 1923, Mustafa Kemal's Minister of Foreign Affairs met with world leaders to sign the Luzon Treaty,
which officially
granted independence to what was left of the Ottoman Empire under the banner of a new nation
called Turkey.
It is the birth certificate of Turkey, this Lausanne Treaty.
The issue of war crimes had dissipated, and a war-weary Europe was eager to finally turn
the page, a clean slate for Kemal's new nation.
So Turkey is accepted to Europe having eliminated its own people.
So maybe he wasn't the perpetrator himself, but he supported the perpetration.
The Armenian Genocide suddenly became a footnote in history.
And the voices of people who suffered through it
were silenced amid the grand trumpets of independence.
On October 29, 1923, the Republic of Turkey was formed,
with Mustafa Kemal as its leader.
And one of his first orders of business...
Mustafa Kemal gets rid of the institution of caliphate.
So people's leader, at least symbolic leader,
is symbolically decapitated.
He, like, kills the pope.
Yes.
Coming up, Mustafa Kemal transforms into Ataturk, the father of the Turks.
Hi there, this is Dolores Watson calling from Cleveland, Ohio, and you're listening to ThruLine from NPR.
Part 3. The Reformer We shall raise our national culture above the contemporary level of civilization.
Thus, we should judge the measure of time not according to the lax mentality of past centuries,
but in terms of the concepts of speed and movement of our century.
Compared to the past, we shall work harder.
We shall perform greater tasks in a shorter time.
Time was on Mustafa Kemal's mind when he came to power. He believed the Ottoman Empire had wasted too much of it, and he was determined to untether his new nation of Turkey from
the anchor of its past.
His belief was that the Ottomans had lost so much time, I need to fast forward the reform.
And he believed the first step to doing that was to literally fast forward time.
So one night, Turkey's citizens go to bed.
It's 13-something.
They wake up, it's 1926.
Someone has just forwarded time for them by 600 years.
Up to this point, Turkey, like the rest of the Muslim world,
had used what's known as the Hijri calendar to track time,
which begins the year the Prophet Muhammad and his followers
made the famous pilgrimage from Mecca to Medina to start a new life there.
The Hijri calendar is around 600 years behind the European Gregorian calendar,
which sets year one as the birth of Jesus.
This is known as his calendar reform.
It was part of Kemal's master plan to make Turkey into a full-on European state.
Though he was a product of both Ottoman schooling and the Young Turk movement,
he didn't think either had taken their reforms far enough.
And he said, I think what we need to do
is to drop the old system
and to just become completely European.
To him, that meant a complete and total abandonment
of the empire's Islamic identity.
He abolished the caliph,
abandoned the Islamic calendar,
and then...
Islam was taken out of the state's constitution
as the state religion.
That meant no more explicit references
to Islam in government or in social codes.
To this day, I would say
one of the greatest beneficiaries
of adulterous reforms in Turkey are women.
It is supposed that in Turkey,
women pass their lives in inactivity and in idleness.
That is a calumny. The women their lives in inactivity and in idleness. That is a colony.
The women work side by side with the men in the fields and participate in the national work generally.
It is only in large towns that Turkish women are sequestered by their husbands.
This arises from the fact that our women veil and cloister themselves more than their religion orders.
Tradition has gone too far in this respect.
In the spring of 1923,
he embarks on this rather sweeping tour of Turkey.
His wife comes in tow and plays a really prominent role
in standing beside him, in accompanying him, and even speaking
at times, that really captures the attention of the press, especially the Western press.
She is seen as very Western, very modern. She is a feminist. She's an advocate for the right for
women to vote, not just in Turkey, but everywhere.
Divorce on equal terms.
Polygamy was outlawed.
Non-Muslim men cannot marry Muslim women. From 26 on, in Turkey, you can.
And he revised the dress code for men,
mandating that they wear brim hats instead of the fez,
that red hat with a tassel that you've probably seen in an Indiana Jones movie.
Because Mustafa Kemal viewed the fez
as an artifact of the Ottoman past
and as something that seems to reflect what he feels is a kind of backwardness in Ottoman society.
It was known as the Hat Law.
The Hat Law is a kind of declaration of war upon religious conservatism
and upon the clergy in particular who tend to favor the Fez.
The next thing he went after was language.
He decided to change Turkey's alphabet.
He said, look, we can't be a country of Europe
if we are writing Turkish in the Arabic script.
We have to switch to a Latin-based script.
And again, it's this vision that there's only one path of progress.
And to be European, Turkey has to become completely European, including looking European in the way it writes.
So overnight, he forces newspapers, book publishers and even libraries to switch to a totally new alphabet.
And in one generation, people won't be able to read letters written by their grandparents or their parents.
He didn't believe in gradual reform, in moderation.
And I think perhaps that's why the chasm is so severe.
The reforms were swift, they were dramatic, and they left little room for dissent.
The Turkish nation is democratic by nature.
I have no doubt that the American nation, which has gone so far in this ideal, is Turkey's friend in her aim.
This transition into this new era cannot be really divorced from the fact that it is singularly identified with the consolidation of political control and ultimately the formation of a one-party state under his rule.
Because he was respected as a liberator, but also because he had the military behind him
to act as an undemocratic check and balance on government.
He killed people who were around him, hanged them.
There's a tribunal.
Any kind of opposition to him, he took it as an existential threat.
Mustafa Kemal viewed the world in black and white.
You either had power or you didn't.
You were either fully Turkish or you weren't.
And what that meant was that there had to be a certain homogeneity,
a certain conformity that everyone within this new nation opted into. They fetishized conformity because they saw diversity fundamentally as chaos, at the very best.
At worst, the existence of profound differences within society as the basis from which insurrection and rebellion
can manifest themselves.
So nation states are not always great
for ethnic and religious diversity.
Empires, I think, do a better job of accommodating that.
I'm not praising empires.
I'm just saying in terms of accepting diversity,
nation states have a terrible record. And in this regard, I think Turkey is no exception.
Mustafa Kemal possessed the benefit of presiding over a state that had lost a considerable amount
of its diversity. But while the country had become more homogeneous, Mustafa Kemal understood that there were still deep cultural and social divisions within the country as a whole.
And he understood the power of narratives in reigning in those divisions.
He needed to control the story, to tell a version of history that would support
his power and his vision for this new nation he was building. He established a Turkish
historical society to oversee the writing of an official state history. And in that
story, the Armenian Genocide was erased. Decades later, it would become illegal to talk about
it at all. From the Armenians' perspective, the whole world forgot about their case.
But the complicated thing here for Lerna is that in a lot of ways, this hyper-conformity
and secularization of the country was actually a good thing for Armenians, like her family,
still living in Turkey at the time.
So Armenians have reason to believe that,
OK, maybe they are going through discriminations,
and they are going through discriminations,
but this is a better system for them.
They no longer stood out,
as long as they were willing to fit into the mold
of what being a Turk was under Kemal's new Turkey,
which not everyone was willing to do.
Not everyone was happy under Ataturk.
You know, people who wanted to be conservative and wear religion on their sleeve felt that
this was not their country.
And of course, if they just tried to rise up, they were taken to courts and jailed and
punished.
Second group, I would say, are Kurds who did not fit into Ataturk's vision that everyone
who lived in Turkey
was Turkish. During his nearly two decades as president, Mustafa Kemal would wage several
bloody campaigns against Kurdish nationalists in the country. And ethnic Kurds as a whole were
persecuted, their populations dispersed, and their language forbidden. Some would even describe the
last of these campaigns as another genocide.
And ethnic Kurds who make up 10-20% of Turkey's population continue to face discrimination, detention, and violence.
Today, there's still unrest, including an armed Kurdish faction. Mustafa Kemal's presidency was plagued by health problems.
And in 1933, perhaps knowing that he wasn't long for the world,
he delivers a speech to mark the 10th anniversary of the founding of the republic.
Turkish nation, in every decade which elapses into eternity,
I wholeheartedly wish that you celebrate this national holiday with ever greater honor, happiness, peace, and prosperity.
It was his swan song, the passing of the baton to future generations.
How happy is the one who says, I am Turk.
He's realizing he's living behind a legacy and he wants the youth to protect it.
After this speech, Mustafa Kemal cemented that legacy even more.
He passed a law mandating that every citizen adopt a Turkish last name.
And he officially changed his own surname to Ataturk,
father of the Turks.
He died just a few years later, in 1938.
The name of Ghazi Mustafa Kemal
will forever be inscribed indelibly upon the rolls of history.
Ataturk's legacy is so deeply imprinted in Turkey because his reforms were so radical.
And for decades, leader after leader in Turkey followed in his footsteps
until the current president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
came on the scene in the early 2000s. Erdogan, you know, comes from a conservative family that
wanted to embrace Islam and that family felt second class in Ataturk's secularist Turkey.
He wants to wear religion on his sleeves. But while he rejects Ataturk's vision of a secular
Turkey, Soner says he actually shares a lot in common with him when it comes to his approach to power.
I call Erdogan anti-Ataturk, Ataturk. I think Erdogan also wants to shape Turkey in his own image.
While Ataturk shaped Turkey in his image as secular, European, West-facing, Erdogan wants to shape Turkey in his own image as conservative, Middle Eastern, politically Islamist.
And Ataturk's legacy traveled way beyond Turkey.
During the 1930s and 40s,
as nations around the world grappled with forces of fascism,
of national identity, of how to deal with minorities,
many leaders looked to Ataturk as a shining example of what could be.
On the one hand, colonized people throughout the world were in awe of him as the liberator.
You know, from Latin America to Arab countries to South Asia,
Ataturk was seen as inspirational that this can be done,
that you can stand up to Europeans and liberate your country.
All these people see a decolonizing hero in him.
On the other hand, some admired him as the founder and reformer.
From across the way, Hitler appeared at his window.
And another milestone is marked in Germany's political history.
When Hitler became Chancellor of Germany in 1933.
He declares Ataturk to be the greatest man of the century.
He managed through oppression, through manipulation.
Before the Holocaust, Hitler reportedly said in a speech,
He said, who after all remembers the Armenians?
So it is a recipe.
A recipe for conformity, at any cost, all in the name of building a nation.
And that recipe has been used again and again.
Even now, 100 years on, questioning Ataturk. casting him in a negative light, or what could be perceived as a negative light,
is often construed as an attack on the country itself.
How do you see Mustafa Kemal's legacy and vision playing out in the 21st century?
I feel like there is a parallel in terms of this kind of flocking to strongman rulers,
in terms of kind of really asserting a certain image of the nation that we see happening all over the world today.
I do see from Trump on, but maybe even a little bit earlier, tendencies towards authoritarianism.
There's a lot of unresolved baggage from the past that people instead of usually talking about them, coming to terms with them they are either
justifying them retrospectively or
trying not to talk about them.
If we don't
do anything
to prevent this trend
we will have another big world war.
This is what I feel.
That's it for this week's show.
I'm Randa Adel Fattah.
I'm Ramteen Arablui.
And you've been listening to ThruLine from NPR.
This episode was produced by me.
And me and... Lawrence Wu.
Julie Kane.
Anya Steinberg.
Yolanda Sangwini.
Casey Miner.
Christina Kim.
Devin Karayama.
Sasha Crawford-Holland.
Amir Marashi.
Fact-checking for this episode was done by Kevin Vocal.
And it was mixed by Josh Newell.
Music was composed by Ramtin and his band, Drop Electric,
which includes...
Anya Mizani.
Naveed Marvi.
Sho Fujiwara.
Thank you to Larry Kaplow, Peter Kenyon, Amir Marshi,
Johanna Sturgey, Ajua Jima Bremphong, and Anya Grunman.
Thanks also to Amra Pashich, Shema Bairam, Phil Harrell, Johanna Sturgey, Ajua Jima Bremphong, and Anya Grunman.
Thanks also to Amra Pashich,
Shema Bairam,
Phil Harrell,
Lawrence Wu,
Devin Karayama,
Chow Tu,
Sasha Solovieva,
Alaa Al-Khousami,
and Taylor Haney for their voiceover work.
And as always,
if you have an idea
or like something you heard on the show,
please write us at
throughline at nPR.org.
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