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Karlsbad'da Geçen Günlerim book cover
Karlsbad'da Geçen Günlerim
1983
First Published
4.59
Average Rating
90
Number of Pages

“2 Temmuz Salı – (...) Almanların bize memleketimizi İngiliz istilasından kurtarmada, yardımlarının derecesini mantıken meydana çıkarabiliriz. Benim bu hususta daima olumsuz sonuca varan kanaatlerim, Veliaht Hazretleri ile vuku bulan seyahatimiz münasebetiyle gerek İmparator ve gerek Hindenburg ve Ludendorf’la olan görüşmelerle pekişmiştir. Bir devlet adamı, kendi insani hislerine tabi olarak devlet meselelerini halledemez, o salahiyete sahip değildir. Memleket, kimsenin malikânesi değildir. Yalnız, biz Türkler memleket ve milletin idaresini elimize aldığımız zaman, kendi şahsi davranışlarımızdaki cömertliği, devlet meselelerinin ecnebilerle hallinde düstur ediniyor, bir çocuk gibi aldanıyoruz.” 1931 yılındaki tarih çalışmaları esnasından Çankaya’daki eski köşkün kütüphanesinde bulunan bu hatırat, bizzat Mustafa Kemal Atatürk tarafından altı deftere kaydedilmiş günlüklerden oluşmaktadır. Atatürk’ün Karlsbad’da Geçen Günlerim şeklinde isimlendirdiği her hâliyle ilgi çekici bu metinler, Mustafa Kemal’in Karlsbad’da geçen günlerini, o günlerde bazı toplumsal meselelere bakışını, okuduğu bazı kitapları ve daha birçok hususta önemli, dikkat çekici ayrıntıları içeriyor. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk’ün kaleminden çıkan bu nadide eseri yazılışından 100, ilk basımından 35 sene sonra yeniden yayımlamanın gururunu yaşıyoruz.

Avg Rating
4.59
Number of Ratings
352
5 STARS
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3 STARS
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2 STARS
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Author

Mustafa Kemal Atatürk
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk
Author · 17 books

Atatürk, the founder of modern Turkey, was born in 1881 (probably in the spring) in Salonica, then an Ottoman city, now in Greece. His father Ali Riza, a customs official turned lumber merchant, died when Mustafa was still a boy. His mother Zubeyde, a devout and strong-willed woman, raised him and his sister. First enrolled in a traditional religious school, he soon switched to a modern school. In 1893, he entered a military high school where his mathematics teacher gave him the second name Kemal (meaning perfection) in recognition of young Mustafa's superior achievement. He was thereafter known as Mustafa Kemal. In 1905, Mustafa Kemal graduated from the War Academy in Istanbul with the rank of Staff Captain. In 1915, when Dardanelles campaign was launched, Colonel Mustafa Kemal became a national hero by winning successive victories and finally repelling the invaders. Promoted to general in 1916, at age 35, he liberated two major provinces in eastern Turkey that year. In the next two years, he served as commander of several Ottoman armies in Palestine, Aleppo, and elsewhere, achieving another major victory by stopping the enemy advance at Aleppo. On May 19, 1919, Mustafa Kemal Pasha landed in the Black Sea port of Samsun to start the War of Turkish Independence. In defiancé of the Sultan's government, he rallied a liberation army in Anatolia and convened the Congress of Erzurum and Sivas which established the basis for the new national effort under his leadership. On April 23, 1920, the Grand National Assembly was inaugurated. Mustafa Kemal Pasha was elected to its Presidency. Fighting on many fronts, he led his forces to victory against rebels and invading armies. Following the Turkish triumph at the two major battles at Inonu in Western Turkey, the Grand National Assembly conferred on Mustafa Kemal Pasha the title of Commander-in-Chief with the rank of Marshal. At the end of August 1922, the Turkish armies won their ultimate victory. Within a few weeks, the Turkish mainland was completely liberated, the armistice signed, and the rule of the Ottoman dynasty abolished. In July 1923, the national government signed the Lausanne Treaty with Great Britain, France, Greece, Italy, and others. In mid-October, Ankara became the capital of the new Turkish State. On October 29, the Republic was proclaimed and Mustafa Kemal Pasha was unanimously elected President of the Republic. The account of Atatürk's fifteen year Presidency is a saga of dramatic modernization. With indefatigable determination, he created a new political and legal system, abolished the Caliphate and made both government and education secular, gave equal rights to women, changed the alphabet and the attire, and advanced the arts and the sciences, agriculture and industry. In 1934, when the surname law was adopted, the national parliament gave him the name "Atatürk" (Father of the Turks). On November 10, 1938, following an illness of a few months, the national liberator and the Father of modern Turkey died. But his legacy to his people and to the world endures.

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