The Early years  
             
            Mustafa was born in 1881 to a middle-class family in Salonica, then 
            a prosperous Ottoman commercial port, which is now in modern Greece. 
            His father Ali Rıza was a junior civil servant at the customs office 
            and his mother Zübeyde, daughter of a farmer, was a devoted 
            housewife. Upon his mother’s wish, Mustafa started studying at a 
            neighborhood school based on the traditional Islamic curriculum, but 
            his father then managed to transfer him to the Şemsi Efendi school 
            providing modern education. His father died when Mustafa was eight, 
            leaving behind a widow with two young children. They had to move to 
            his uncle’s farm. But after a short rural interlude, his mother 
            decided to send Mustafa back to Salonica to continue his education 
            in a state civil preparatory school. Intensely admiring the smart 
            uniform worn by military cadets in his neighborhood, Mustafa sat the 
            entrance examination without telling his mother. She tried to 
            dissuade him from this profession, but nevertheless gave her consent 
            when he was accepted to the military preparatory school.  
             
            Mustafa’s military education lasted thirteen years. It made him the 
            master of his own identity as he later described it, and taught this 
            young fatherless boy the art of getting his own way. His special 
            interest in mathematics led him surpass his teacher, Mustafa, who 
            named him Mustafa Kemal (meaning literally “perfection”) as a mark 
            of distinction both from his own name, and from the rest of the 
            class. In 1895, he went to the military high school in Monastir (now 
            called Bitola in Macedonia), where cadets acquired their first 
            political ideas. Young Mustafa Kemal was deeply inspired by 
            liberal-nationalist literature, in particular by Namık Kemal, known 
            at the time as “the poet of liberty”. In 1899, he entered the 
            infantry class of the War College in Istanbul. His strict adherence 
            to military studies distanced him from adventurers such as Enver, 
            his two years senior at the College, who was to lead the Empire to a 
            catastrophic defeat. He knew French and having read about it 
            extensively, he was profoundly influenced by the French 
            revolutionary thought. He would prove to be more consistently 
            inclined to this nationalist, libertarian and essentially secular 
            experience than most of his contemporaries in the years to come.
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            The Great War: An outstanding soldier 
             
             
            Lieutenant Mustafa Kemal was admitted to the Staff College from 
            where he graduated as a staff captain in 1905. He was appointed to 
            the Ottoman army units in Damascus and then, as an adjutant-major, 
            to Salonica where he revived clandestine liberal-nationalist 
            opposition groups. The liberal-nationalist opposition organized as 
            the Committee for Union and Progress (CUP) ended the repressive era 
            under Sultan Abdulhamid II and restored the constitutional order in 
            1908. Mustafa Kemal was posted to the general staff in Istanbul, 
            before he volunteered for service against Italian invasion in Derne-Cyrenaica 
            (Libya) in 1911. Meanwhile the Ottoman armies were engaged in 
            consecutive Balkan wars. Upon his return, Mustafa Kemal was 
            appointed as military attaché in Sofia and promoted 
            lieutenant-colonel in 1913. After the Great War started Mustafa 
            Kemal was appointed as the 19th division commander in Gallipoli, 
            suppressing the landing Allied troops at Anafartalar in August 1915. 
            This earned him his first major battle success as a colonel and 
            group commander and later the rank of brigadier in 1916. He was 
            appointed twice as the commander of the 7th Army in Syria in 1917 
            and 1918, checking the British advance, before the Ottoman Empire 
            was forced to sign an armistice in October 1918.  
             
            By the time the armistice was signed, the CUP government had 
            collapsed and Mustafa Kemal was put in charge of the entire 
            southeastern front as the Group Commander of the Lightning Armies. 
            The entire army was being dissolved, to be later followed by an 
            invasion of the capital. On his return to Istanbul, he was asked to 
            go to Samsun, a major town in central Black Sea coast, as an army 
            inspector. Having seen that most of the Turkish heartland escaped 
            immediate invasion in the aftermath of the armistice, Mustafa Kemal 
            sought this as his chance to pass to Anatolia, where he could 
            organize a nationalist resistance. As he boarded Bandırma, a barely 
            seaworthy steamer, angry crowds were gathering at the Blue Mosque 
            Square, to protest the killings perpetrated by the Greek invasion 
            troops who landed in Izmir the previous day. Top 
             
            
            
        
            Meeting the nation  
             
            Mustafa Kemal arrived in Samsun on 19 May (1919), a day celebrated 
            as the beginning of the War of Independence and which Mustafa Kemal 
            himself later adopted as his birthday. Sporadic local nationalist 
            resistance against foreign encroachment had already started. They 
            had chosen to call themselves as the National Forces and were 
            already setting up branches of the Society for the Defence of 
            National Rights (SDNR), organizing local congresses to augment 
            national solidarity among the predominantly peasant muslim 
            population, who were beginning to put up guerilla attacks on the 
            advancing Greek troops. There were also Anti-annexation Societies, 
            set up to resist Greek annexation plans as part of the Megali Idea, 
            a historical Greek aspiration to dominate Asia Minor. Having seen 
            that the Greek invasion had stirred up the nationalist sentiments 
            considerably, Mustafa Kemal lost no time in travelling into Anatolia 
            to meet the nation. In June, he sent from Amasya a circular telegram 
            (the Amasya Circular) to all civil governors and local army 
            commanders stating that the government in Istanbul is powerless, 
            explaining the need for a “national body” free from foreign control 
            and inviting three delegates from each province to attend a congress 
            to be held in Sivas. This was the first time that the will of the 
            nation was called to duty to exercise its sovereignty.  
             
            In July he organized a regional congress in 
            
            Erzurum, where he was 
            elected as the leader of a Representative Committee of the Eastern SDNR. In order to stop him, Istanbul government was poised to strip 
            him from his official powers. He resigned in 9 August (1919) from 
            all his titles to remain as a “member” of the nation. In September, 
            he convened the 
            Sivas Congress, this time with members participating 
            from all corners of Anatolia. The Sivas Congress enforced the 
            nationalist stance against the government who had to concede to hold 
            elections in December. The elections were won by the nationalists 
            and Mustafa Kemal was elected as a deputy from Erzurum. The new 
            parliament adopted on 17 February 1920 a National Pact reaffirming 
            the declarations made by the Erzurum and Sivas congresses, 
            proclaiming the political boundaries to be preserved as at the time 
            of the armistice, rejecting invasion and foreign infringement on 
            national independence. The Allied governments moved to occupy 
            Istanbul in March and dissolved the parliament, exiling many of its 
            members to Malta, while the remaining 85 found their way to Ankara 
            to join newly elected provincial deputies, forming the Grand 
            National Assembly on 23 April 1920. Finally, the will of the nation 
            found a place to independently express itself and exercise its 
            sovereignty, under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal as its speaker. 
            Meanwhile, the Sultan and his government in Istanbul yielded to 
            harsh terms of the Sèvres peace treaty signed on 10 August, aimed at 
            the partition of the Turkish homeland into Allied zones of 
            occupation, with prospective Armenian and Kurdish states to be 
            established in the east and a Greek controlled territory in the 
            west. Top 
             
            
            
        
            The War of Independence: A nation and its 
            leader  
             
            The Grand National Assembly in Ankara rejected the Sèvres Treaty and 
            was poised to wage a war of independence. Within months every effort 
            was spent to bring all the local resources and irregular resistance 
            under the control of the Assembly. The government was a 
            “parliamentary cabinet” of ministers appointed from within and 
            controlled directly by the Assembly. The British-backed Greek 
            invasion troops were planning to reach Ankara from the west. 
            Meanwhile in the eastern front, Armenian revolutionary bands who 
            took over Kars and Ardahan from the withdrawing Russian Army during 
            the Bolshevik revolution had to be confronted. In the south, the 
            French were entrenched around Cilicia (Adana, Hatay and Mersin). In 
            October 1920, Kars was re-captured and in December the Treaty of 
            Gümrü was signed with the Armenians. This was followed by a Treaty 
            of Friendship signed with the Soviet Union in March and the Treaty 
            of Kars in December 1921, securing Soviet aid and fixing the eastern 
            border. In January and April 1921, the Greek advance was checked at 
            Inönü, near Eskişehir. Following another offensive launched in July, 
            
            Eskişehir was captured and Greek forces were nearing Ankara about 
            hundred miles in the west. Resuming his military career upon his 
            appointment by the Grand National Assembly as the commander-in-chief 
            in August, Mustafa Kemal won a critical battle in Sakarya, which 
            threw back the Greek army. The Assembly awarded him the rank of 
            marshal and named him Gazi. In October, following the Turco-French 
            Accord signed in Ankara, the French withdrew from southern Turkey. 
            Ten months later, on 26 August 1922, the Turkish army launched its 
            final offensive and won a decisive victory against the Greek forces 
            who had to withdraw from Asia Minor completely by 9 September. The 
            Allied governments had to agree to sign an armistice with the 
            Turkish government in October. The Assembly abolished the Sultanate 
            in November. The last sultan escaped from Istanbul on board a 
            British warship, leaving his heir Abdulmecit the title of caliphate. 
            The Allies would have to negotiate a new peace with a new nation.
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            The Republic and its modernizing leader 
             
             
            Lausanne Peace Treaty, which defined the political existence and 
            sovereignty of the new Turkish state was signed on 24 July 1923. A 
            newly elected Assembly proclaimed the Republic of Turkey on 29 
            October 1923 and elected Mustafa Kemal as its first president. An 
            extensive series of reforms were started under Mustafa Kemal’s 
            leadership. In 1924, the caliphate, religious courts and school 
            system were abolished, 
            Ottoman dynasty was exiled, a new Republican 
            constitution was adopted based on national sovereignty. In 1925, muslim brotherhoods and their lodges were closed, fez banned. In 
            1926, a brand new civil code granting equal civil rights to women, 
            and a modern criminal code were enacted. In 1928, the constitutional 
            reference to Islam was removed and the secular character of the 
            Republic was reaffirmed. In the same year, international numerals 
            and a new Latin alphabet was adopted, Mustafa Kemal declared as the 
            head teacher of the nation. These were followed, among others, by a 
            new commercial code (1929), voting and electoral rights to women in 
            local elections (1930) and later in parliamentary elections (1934), 
            adoption of international weights and measures (1931), first 
            recitation of call to prayer in Turkish (1932), banning of clerical 
            dress outside places of worship (1934), adoption of surnames (1935), 
            opening of a state conservatoire in Ankara (1936) and other 
            overarching reforms. Top 
              
              
				Chronology of Major Kemalist Reforms
              
                | Year | 
                
                Reform | 
               
              
                | 1922 | 
                Sultanate abolished (November 1). | 
               
              
                | 1923 | 
                Treaty of Lausanne secured (July 24). 
                 Republic of Turkey with capital at Ankara proclaimed (October 29). | 
               
              
                | 1924 | 
                Caliphate abolished (March 3). Traditional religious schools closed, 
                seriat abolished. 
    Constitution adopted (April 20). | 
               
              
                | 1925 | 
                Dervish brotherhoods abolished. 
                 Fez outlawed by the Hat Law (November 25). Veiling of women discouraged; 
    Western clothing for men and women encouraged.  Western (Gregorian) calendar adopted. | 
               
              
                | 1926 | 
                New civil, commercial, and penal codes 
    based on European models adopted. New civil code ended Islamic polygamy and 
    divorce by renunciation and introduced civil marriage. Millet system ended. | 
               
              
                | 1927 | 
                First systematic census. | 
               
              
                | 1928 | 
                New Turkish alphabet (modified Latin form) 
    adopted. State declared secular (April 10); constitutional provision 
    establishing Islam as official religion deleted. | 
               
              
                | 1933 | 
                Islamic call to worship and public 
    readings of the Kuran (Quran) required to be in Turkish rather than Arabic. | 
               
              
                | 1934 | 
                Women given the vote and the right to hold 
    office. Law of Surnames adopted--Mustafa Kemal given the name Kemal Atatürk (Father 
    Turk) by the Grand National Assembly; Ismet Pasha took surname of Inönü. | 
               
              
                | 1935 | 
                Sunday adopted as legal weekly holiday.
                 State role in managing economy written into the constitution. 
                 | 
               
             
            
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            A prudent statesman  
             
            Mustafa Kemal’s foreign policy during the turbulent interwar period 
            depended on a prudent and firm principle which he described as 
            “peace at home, peace in the world”. He strived to establish good 
            neighborly relations even with old foes such as Greece as well as 
            with European powers including Britain and France. During his time, 
            Mustafa Kemal hosted in Turkey visits by Venizelos, the Greek Prime 
            Minister in 1930, Reza Shah of Iran in 1934 and King Edward VIII of 
            the United Kingdom in 1936. He observed good relations with Soviet 
            Union. In 1932 the invitation by the League of Nations to Turkey to 
            become a member was accepted. He refrained from unilateral action to 
            re-establish Turkish sovereignty over the Turkish Straits which was 
            ensured by the signing of the Montreux Convention in 1936. Atatürk 
            also endeavoured to solve the 
            
            Hatay issue. In September 1938 Hatay 
            proclaimed a republic. In June 1939 the Hatay Parliament unanimously 
            resolved to join Turkey. In July 1939, Hatay was officially made a 
            province of Turkey.  
             
            * * * 
             
            Mustafa Kemal had a short-lived marriage between 1923 and 1925 with 
            Latife. In 1927, he retired from the army. He was re-elected as 
            president three times in 1927, 1931 and 1935. During the 
            presidential election held by the Assembly in 1935, there were 
            eighteen woman deputies who cast their vote. When surnames were made 
            compulsory for every Turkish citizen, the Assembly awarded him the 
            surname of Atatürk (literally “Father Turk”) by a law enacted on 24 
            November 1934. In 1938, as his health deteriorated, he left 
            
            Ankara 
            for the last time that spring and passed away in 
            Istanbul on 10 
            November the same year. Envoys from all over the world attended his 
            funeral. On 10 November 1953, on the 15th anniversary of his 
            passing, Atatürk's remains were transferred to 
            Anıtkabir (the 
            “Mausoleum”) as his permanent resting place. 
             
            In 1981 on the centenary of his birth, Atatürk was commemorated both 
            in Turkey and abroad as a peerless leader, commander, revolutionary, 
            politician and statesman. It was a source of pride for the Turkish 
            nation when UNESCO declared 1981 as "The Year of Atatürk". Mustafa 
            Kemal Atatürk continues to serve as a shining beacon for the future 
            of both the Turkish Nation and other nations worldwide.
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            _________________________________  
             
            
            
        
            A selected bibliography in English 
             
             
            1. Lewis Bernard, “The emergence of modern Turkey”, Oxford, Oxford 
            University Press, 1961.  
            2. Lord Kinross, “Atatürk -The rebirth of a nation”, London, 
            Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1964.  
            3. Macfie A.L., “Atatürk”, London, Longman, 1994.  
            4. Mango Andrew, “Atatürk”, London, John Murray, 1999.  
            5. Sonyel S., “Atatürk –The founder of modern Turkey”, Ankara, TTK 
            Basımevi, 1989.  
            6. Villalta J. B., “Atatürk”, Ankara, TTK Basımevi, 1979. 
            7.
            Presidancy of the Republic Of Turkey  |