What's new

Mustefa Kemal Ataturk: The greatest Muslim general of the 20th centuary?

That is EXACTLY why these so called "GREAT MUSLIM LEADERS" of 21st century can not be associated with religion! Jinnah Ataturk Ghandi were all Secular leaders who pursued British system over indigenous.

OK, First Ottomans were foreigners in Anatolia. They were speaking Ottoman language, while common people were speaking Turkish language.

If you go back to 16th and 17th centuries, there were fierce battles between Ottoman State and Turkish folk. What happened in 20th century was a delayed revenge of Turks. Ottomans were not the Muslim you used to think. They were the descendants of Christian devshirmes.

Although they are many faults, i glorify the completion of the purification of official language from foreign words.
 
.
great man? he a abomination to turkish culture which he destroyed.
he split up the ottoman empire destroyed caliph even with getting rid of al your culture and trying to be like europe your still not considered fully developed 100 yrs later!!!!


you'd be surprised lol
we created one of the biggest empires by doing that.

You could write which empire and in which year.and dont forget to provide a link so i can see how you created that empire.
There was no turkish culture(only where the turks lived)there was an Ottoman culture(many cultures combined).
 
.
Arab nationalist didn't destroy the islamic constitution. Arabs remained to have strong faith in Islam unlike Ataturk . What kind of leader would ban scarves, destroy mosque, kill top imam, everything and made everyone far from being a Muslim in a Muslim country etc...? and now Turks are sooo unpractical ffs because of him. Even brutal Arab dictators would never destroy Islam in their country, their people remained the same. Anyway I don't care whether if he is a Muslim or not but it's between him and Allah. He is a good 'general' to Turks.
Theres a difference between beeing muslim and governing by sharia rules.
Your faith is for you personaly,it doesnt work if you govern by your faith(Afghanistan,Pakistan many arab countries not all and the ones doing good only because of OIL and GASdeposits)
 
.
Theres a difference between beeing muslim and governing by sharia rules.
Your faith is for you personaly,it doesnt work if you govern by your faith(Afghanistan,Pakistan many arab countries not all and the ones doing good only because of OIL and GASdeposits)

Have you ever red quran in your life? Stop Making stuff up when you do not know what you are talking about.
Surat Al-Ma'idah [5:44-48] - The Noble Qur'an - ?????? ??????
And whoever does not judge by what Allah has revealed - then it is those who are the disbelievers.
 
.
You could write which empire and in which year.and dont forget to provide a link so i can see how you created that empire.
There was no turkish culture(only where the turks lived)there was an Ottoman culture(many cultures combined).
rashidun calpiphate 632
ummayad caliphate 661
abbasid 750
fatimid 910
mamluk 1250
ottoman 1299-1923


you dont need link for these becuase every person with a bit knowledge of history should know. all these empires were created by saying allahu akbar and marching into battle and they were the biggest and strongest at the time of their creation in the whole world.
 
.
Have you ever red quran in your life? Stop Making stuff up when you do not know what you are talking about.
Surat Al-Ma'idah [5:44-48] - The Noble Qur'an - ?????? ??????
And whoever does not judge by what Allah has revealed - then it is those who are the disbelievers.

Yes i started HATIM,read the first 10 pages then stopped because of circumstances.
Dont come to me with your bs.
You are talking to the wrong man.
My belief is for me not for my government.
 
.
rashidun calpiphate 632
ummayad caliphate 661
abbasid 750
fatimid 910
mamluk 1250
ottoman 1299-1923


you dont need link for these becuase every person with a bit knowledge of history should know. all these empires were created by saying allahu akbar and marching into battle and they were the biggest and strongest at the time of their creation in the whole world.
Yes good examples when there were no fighterjets,armed drones,NUCLEAR warheads,tanks etc..
You must be joking right?
Lets try you shout ALLAH ALLAH and kill a drone or a tank with your sword,if you look at those empires they did it with swords.
Give me modern example,you cant.
You fight with your sword ill sit and push a button.
What a joke!
 
.
On 20 August, 1940, Trotsky was struck a fatal blow with an ice-pick by Ramon Mercader, an agent sent to Mexico by Stalin's secret police (the GPU) to murder the exiled revolutionary-alongside Lenin, the leader of the October revolution, the founder and leader of the Red Army, and the co-founder of the Third, Communist International.

Trotsky's assassination was not just a malicious after-thought on the part of Stalin.

It was the culmination of a systematic and bloody terror directed against a whole generation of Bolshevik leaders, and against the young revolutionaries of a second generation prepared to defend the genuine ideas of Marxism against the bureaucratic, repressive regime developing under Stalin.

By the time the GPU reached Trotsky in 1940, they had already murdered- or driven to suicide-many members of Trotsky's family, scores of his closest friends and collaborators, and countless numbers of the leaders and supporters of the International Left Opposition.


This just bs
,if they were al freemasons then why did Stalin kill Trotsky(Stalin sent assasins to south america)
That was just an example.
 
. . . .
Yes good examples when there were no fighterjets,armed drones,NUCLEAR warheads,tanks etc..
You must be joking right?
Lets try you shout ALLAH ALLAH and kill a drone or a tank with your sword,if you look at those empires they did it with swords.
Give me modern example,you cant.
You fight with your sword ill sit and push a button.
What a joke!


you asked for example i gave em to you.
dont act like your stupid or something, you wana compare the fire power of us allhu akbar sayng countries vs you?
pakistan has more firepower then turkey and we are a allahu akbar saying country.
dont act like you have your head up your ***.
we can wipe out turkey and turn it to dust within 30 mins if you want to test us allahu akbar saying people.
 
.
Stories about the Jewishness of Ataturk, whose statue stands in the main square of every town and city in Turkey, already circulated in his lifetime but were denied by him and his family and never taken seriously by biographers. Of six biographies of him that I consulted this week, none even mentions such a speculation. The only scholarly reference to it in print that I could find was in the entry on Ataturk in the Israeli Entsiklopedya ha-Ivrit, which begins:

"Mustafa Kemal Ataturk - (1881-1938), Turkish general and statesman and founder of the modern Turkish state.

"Mustafa Kemal was born to the family of a minor customs clerk in Salonika and lost his father when he was young. There is no proof of the belief, widespread among both Jews and Muslims in Turkey, that his family came from the Doenme. As a boy he rebelled against his mother's desire to give him a traditional religious education, and at the age of 12 he was sent at his demand to study in a military academy."


Secular Father

The Doenme were an underground sect of Sabbetaians, Turkish Jews who took Muslim names and outwardly behaved like Muslims but secretly believed in Sabbetai Zevi, the 17th-century false messiah, and conducted carefully guarded prayers and rituals in his name. The encyclopedia's version of Ataturk's education, however, is somewhat at variance with his own. Here is his account of it as quoted by his biographers:

"My father was a man of liberal views, rather hostile to religion, and a partisan of Western ideas. He would have preferred to see me go to a lay school, which did not found its teaching on the Koran but on modern science.

"In this battle of consciences, my father managed to gain the victory after a small maneuver; he pretended to give in to my mother's wishes, and arranged that I should enter the (Islamic) school of Fatma Molla Kadin with the traditional ceremony. ...

"Six months later, more or less, my father quietly withdrew me from the school and took me to that of old Shemsi Effendi who directed a free preparatory school according to European methods. My mother made no objection, since her desires had been complied with and her conventions respected. It was the ceremony above all which had satisfied her."

Who was Mustafa Kemal's father, who behaved here in typical Doenme fashion, outwardly observing Muslim ceremonies while inwardly scoffing at them? Ataturk's mother Zubeyde came from the mountains west of Salonika, close to the current Albanian frontier; of the origins of his father, Ali Riza, little is known. Different writers have given them as Albanian, Anatolian and Salonikan, and Lord Kinross' compendious 1964 "Ataturk" calls Ali Riza a "shadowy personality" and adds cryptically regarding Ataturk's reluctance to disclose more about his family background: "To the child of so mixed an environment it would seldom occur, wherever his racial loyalties lay, to inquire too exactly into his personal origins beyond that of his parentage."



Learning Hebrew

Did Kinross suspect more than he was admitting? I would never have asked had I not recently come across a remarkable chapter while browsing in the out-of-print Hebrew autobiography of Itamar Ben-Avi, son of Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, the leading promoter of the revival of spoken Hebrew in late 19th-century Palestine. Ben-Avi, the first child to be raised in Hebrew since ancient times and later a Hebrew journalist and newspaper publisher, writes in this book of walking into the Kamenitz Hotel in Jerusalem one autumn night in 1911 and being asked by its proprietor:
" 'Do you see that Turkish officer sitting there in the corner, the one with the bottle of arrack?' "
" 'Yes.' "
" 'He's one of the most important officers in the Turkish army.' "
" 'What's his name?' "
" 'Mustafa Kemal.' "
" 'I'd like to meet him,' I said, because the minute I looked at him I was startled by his piercing green eyes."

Ben-Avi describes two meetings with Mustafa Kemal, who had not yet taken the name of Ataturk, 'Father of the Turks.' Both were conducted in French, were largely devoted to Ottoman politics, and were doused with large amounts of arrack. In the first of these, Kemal confided:

"I'm a descendant of Sabbetai Zevi - not indeed a Jew any more, but an ardent admirer of this prophet of yours. My opinion is that every Jew in this country would do well to join his camp."

During their second meeting, held 10 days later in the same hotel, Mustafa Kemal said at one point:

" 'I have at home a Hebrew Bible printed in Venice. It's rather old, and I remember my father bringing me to a Karaite teacher who taught me to read it. I can still remember a few words of it, such as --' "

And Ben-Avi continues:
"He paused for a moment, his eyes searching for something in space. Then he recalled:
" 'Shema Yisra'el, Adonai Elohenu, Adonai Ehad!'
" 'That's our most important prayer, Captain.'
" 'And my secret prayer too, cher monsieur,' he replied, refilling our glasses."

Although Itamar Ben-Avi could not have known it, Ataturk no doubt meant "secret prayer" quite literally. Among the esoteric prayers of the Doenme, first made known to the scholarly world when a book of them reached the National Library in Jerusalem in 1935, is one containing the confession of faith:

"Sabbetai Zevi and none other is the true Messiah. Hear O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one."

It was undoubtedly from this credo, rather than from the Bible, that Ataturk remembered the words of the Shema, which to the best of my knowledge he confessed knowing but once in his adult life: to a young Hebrew journalist whom he engaged in two tipsily animated conversations in Jerusalem nearly a decade before he took control of the Turkish army after its disastrous defeat in World War I, beat back the invading Greeks and founded a secular Turkish republic in which Islam was banished - once and for all, so he thought - to the mosques.

Ataturk would have had good reasons for concealing his Doenme origins. Not only were the Doenmes (who married only among themselves and numbered close to 15,000, largely concentrated in Salonika, on the eve of World War I) looked down on as heretics by both Muslims and Jews, they had a reputation for sexual profligacy that could hardly have been flattering to their offspring. This license, which was theologically justified by the claim that it reflected the faithful's freedom from the biblical commandments under the new dispensation of Sabbetai Zevi, is described by Ezer Weizman's predecessor, Israel's second president, Yitzchak Ben-Zvi, in his book on lost Jewish communities, "The Exiled and the Redeemed":



'Saintly Offspring'

"Once a year (during the Doenmes' annual 'Sheep holiday') the candles are put out in the course of a dinner which is attended by orgies and the ceremony of the exchange of wives. ... The rite is practiced on the night of Sabbetai Zevi's traditional birthday. ... It is believed that children born of such unions are regarded as saintly."

Although Ben-Zvi, writing in the 1950s, thought that "There is reason to believe that this ceremony has not been entirely abandoned and continues to this day," little is known about whether any of the Doenmes' traditional practices or social structures still survive in modern Turkey. The community abandoned Salonika along with the city's other Turkish residents during the Greco-Turkish war of 1920-21, and its descendants, many of whom are said to be wealthy businessmen and merchants in Istanbul, are generally thought to have assimilated totally into Turkish life.

After sending my fax to Batya Keinan, I phoned to check that she had received it. She had indeed, she said, and would see to it that the president was given it to read on his flight to Ankara. It is doubtful, however, whether Mr. Weizman will allude to it during his visit: The Turkish government, which for years has been fending off Muslim fundamentalist assaults on its legitimacy and on the secular reforms of Ataturk, has little reason to welcome the news that the father of the 'Father of the Turks' was a crypto-Jew who passed on his anti-Muslim sentiments to his son. Mustafa Kemal's secret is no doubt one that it would prefer to continue to be kept.
 
. .
you asked for example i gave em to you.
dont act like your stupid or something, you wana compare the fire power of us allhu akbar sayng countries vs you?
pakistan has more firepower then turkey and we are a allahu akbar saying country.
dont act like you have your head up your ***.
we can wipe out turkey and turn it to dust within 30 mins if you want to test us allahu akbar saying people.
Dont talk big,sort your problems out first and you can wipe yes.
If it hurt you that much try thinking next time before posting.
Dont know who is the stupid but dont forget,Turkey turkish rules.
So the conclusion of this is,without strategy you cant win wars by just faith.
Faith only takes your fears away in a combat if you have to engage man to man.
Tc genius.
 
.

Latest posts

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom