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Doctor Nazım

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mehmed Nazım
Minister of Education
In office
21 July 1918 – 8 October 1918
MonarchMehmed VI
Prime MinisterTalat Pasha
Preceded byAli Münif Yeğenağa
Succeeded byGelenbevizade Mehmet Said
Secretary General of the Union and Progress Party
In office
23 July 1909 – 23 Jule 1910
Personal details
Born1870
Selanik, Salonica Vilayet, Ottoman Empire
Died26 August 1926 (aged 55/56)
Ankara, Turkey
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
SpouseEvliyazade Beria Hanım

Selanikli Mehmed Nâzım Bey also known as Doktor Nazım (1870 – 26 August 1926) was a Turkish physician, politician, and revolutionary. Nazım Bey was a founding member of the Committee of Union and Progress, and served on its central committee for over ten years. He played a significant role in the Armenian genocide and the expulsion of Greeks in Western Anatolia.[1][2][3] He was convicted for allegedly conspiring to assassinate Mustafa Kemal Atatürk in İzmir and was hanged in Ankara on 26 August 1926.[4] He also served as the chairman of the Turkish sports club Fenerbahçe S.K. between 1916 and 1918.[5]

Early life

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Born in 1872 to a Dönmeh family,[6] Mehmed Nazım was raised in Salonica; his family were longtime residents of the city, and were successful in running various businesses. His father Hacı Abdülhamid Efendi was from a Vardar (Macedonian) Turk clan[7] and died while he was a baby. His mother was Ayşe Hanım.[8]

Agitating against Abdul Hamid II

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After completing his secondary school education in Salonica, Nazım entered the Istanbul Military Medical High School in 1885 at the age of 15. After three years of education in this school, he entered the Military Medicine Academy. Influenced by the writings of Namık Kemal, and he founded the Society of Ottoman Union in the academy on 4 June 1889 with a group of friends, and took active roles in the society in its early years. While continuing his education, in 1893, together with his classmates Ahmet Verdani and Ali Zühtü Bey, he went to Paris to establish connection with Ahmet Rıza's Young Turk faction, and united the two societies there and established the "Ottoman Progress and Union Committee" (later known as the Committee of Union and Progress) (CUP). Ahmed Rıza became the society's first president, and on 1 December 1895 Nazım helped Rıza to debut the newspaper Meşveret, which criticized Sultan Abdul Hamid II's regime, advocating for a democratic and secular "French style" of government and society instead.

The future of the Young Turks was put in jeopardy in 1896, when Abdul Hamid found out of an planned coup d'état by the Unionists. While a massive crackdown on opposition took place in Constantinople, Yıldız Palace also put European governments under heavy pressure to deport the Young Turks. The French government affirmed the Porte's demands of deporting the Unionists, who settled in Switzerland after being deported from Belgium also. Rıza lost his chairmanship to Mizancı Murad during this time, who expelled Nazım and Rıza from the organization, but Rıza returned to the CUP chairmanship after Murad and several other Young Turks defected and returned to Constantinople to accept a pardon from Abdul Hamid.[9] Nazım and Rıza's CUP eventually returned to Paris in 1899 with more personnel and capital than before.[10]

With Prince Sabahaddin's flight to Paris to join the Young Turks, a division surfaced in a 1902 congress that split the group between federalists and nationalists. An imperial firman declared Doctor Nâzım a traitor and sentenced him to death at this time for his role in Meşveret.[11]

Outside of politics, Nazım enrolled in the Medical Faculty of Sorbonne University and completed his education in 1895. He became a gynecologist and started working at the Paris Hospital.[12][13][14][15][16]

Lead up to 1908

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Proclaimers the Second Constitutional Monarchy in 1909 Doctor Nazım, Ahmed Rıza, Prince Mustafa Fazıl Pasha, Ahmed Saib, Samipaşazade Sezai

Nazım secretly returned to the Ottoman Empire and with Bahattin Şakir they organized CUP branches in Salonica and Smyrna with the aim to start a revolution. Staying in Midhat Şükrü's house in Salonica, Nazım was instrumental in the 1907 merger between the CUP and Ottoman Freedom Committee, led by Talat Bey. In Smyrna, he opened a shop that was a front for anti-Hamidian propaganda. He met with Mehmet Tahir, Halil Menteşe, gendarme commander Eşref Kuşçubaşı, and Çakırcalı Mehmet Efe in the lead up to 1908 revolution. When the revolution kicked off with Niyazi and Enver's flight into Albanian foothills, the Smyrna army corps was sent to Salonica to put down the revolt, but upon landing in the Salonican docks they defected in favor of the Young Turk revolutionaries. By July 23, Abdul Hamid II capitulated to the revolutionaries, and proclaimed the Second Constitutional Monarchy. Nazım heard the news of the revolution when he was at Milas and rushed to Salonica to gave a speech from the balcony of the London Hotel.[17]

Balkan Wars

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Following the revolution, Nazım became a permanent member of the CUP's central committee while also continuing his medicinal career as the Chief Physician of the Municipal Hospital of Salonica, and was affiliated with the Red Crescent. He was offered general director of Anatolian Vilayets, but declined administrative work.[17] With the CUP being suppressed after the 1912 coup d'état, Nazım laid low in Salonica, but was taken prisoner by the Greeks on 9 November when they occupied the city during the First Balkan War. He was imprisoned in an Athens prison as a Turkish nationalist, only being repatriated two months before the start of World War I after the CUP reclaimed power and pressured the Greek government.[18] The guards abused him and told him that his family had been killed, and that Constantinople was already occupied, while Anatolia would soon fall to the Greeks. He was deeply troubled by his family's fate (and that of his baby daughter) and the exile from his hometown. Upon returning, he called attention to Bulgarian komitadji atrocities committed against Muslims and "call[ed] for vengeance against the remaining Ottoman Christians" in his newspaper articles .[18] The Ottoman defeat and the ethnic cleansing of Muslims was traumatic for many Young Turks and led to a desire for revenge; Nazım's "transformation from a patriotic doctor into a rabid, vindictive nationalist... symbolized the fate of many others".[18]

World War I

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Portrait of Dr. Mehmed Nazım

Doctor Nazım's return led to his concern that the Turks were economically poor here. He organized economic congresses and encouraged entrepreneurship. He established a collective grocery company in Rumelihisarı. Although he wanted to join the army to fight, it was found more appropriate he remained in the central committee. Sources don't agree on whether Nazım supported joining World War I or staying neutral. Upon the suggestions of Dr. Hamid Hüsnü (Kayacan), a close friend and former president of Fenerbahçe, with whom he worked with during their exile in Paris Nazım became president of Fenerbahçe Sports Club between 1915 and 1916. Later, together with Celâl Sahir (Erozan), he first published the "Halka Doğru" magazine in Smyrna and helped in the establishment of the Turkish Hearths.[19]

On July 21, 1918, Talat Pasha insisted Nazım join his cabinet, which he reluctantly did as Minister of Education. Nazım meticulously protected state property and was never transported by the car reserved for cabinet members.[20]

Role in the Armenian genocide

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Nazım was a leading figure in the Turkification of the Ottoman Empire.[1] He was a member of the Teşkilât-ı Mahsusa (Special Organization in the Ottoman Empire).[21] Many members of this organization eventually participated in the Turkish national movement and had played special roles in the Armenian Genocide.[22]

In a speech delivered on during the closing remarks of a Committee of Union and Progress meeting, Nazım said:[23][24][25][26]

If we remain satisfied with the sort of local massacres which took place in Adana and elsewhere in 1909...if this purge is not general and final, it will inevitably lead to problems. Therefore, it is absolutely necessary to eliminate the Armenian people in its entirety, so there is no further Armenian on this earth and the very concept of Armenia is extinguished.

And continued by saying, "the procedure this time will be one of total annihilation-it is necessary that not even one single Armenian survive this annihilation".[27]

During one of the secret meetings of the Young Turks, Nazım was quoted as saying, "The massacre is necessary. All the non-Turkish elements, whatever nation they belong to, should be exterminated".[28] In February 1915, two months prior to the commencement of the Armenian Genocide, Nazım declared a new government policy which would "produce total annihilation" in which would be "essential that no Armenian survives".[1] He has been noted to have said that the Ottoman Empire should be "freeing the fatherland of the aspirations of this cursed race" when referring to the Armenians.[29]

Exile in Russia and Germany

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Doctor Nazım was one of the eight Unionists that fled the Ottoman Empire on a German torpedo boat on 2 November 1918 following the signing of the Mudros Armistice.[30] Due to his role in the Armenian genocide, Nazım was sentenced to death in absentia by the Turkish Courts-Martial of 1919–1920, but this was never carried out due to him having fled to Berlin.[31] While in Berlin, he participated in the establishment of the Society of Islamic Revolutions, an anti-Entente Islamist organization. When he learned that Enver Pasha had been arrested by the Bolsheviks, he went to Moscow and after negotiating his release from prison, he returned to Berlin to open an office to support the Turkish nationalists led by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk in their fight against Entente forces. He went to Moscow and Batumi in 1921, where he carried out the work of the Islamic Revolution Society. Nazım convinced Enver Pasha from entering Anatolia and becoming an opponent of Mustafa Kemal Pasha. Meanwhile, he too wrote to Mustafa Kemal Pasha multiple times that he wished to return to Anatolia to help the Turkish revolutionaries but did not get a response.

He met with Djemal Pasha in Çarçu and worked to organize the Turks of Bukhara with Enver and also told Djemal to convince the Soviets to support the Turkish nationalists. Hearing the news that the Turks won the Battle of Sakarya, he and Enver Pasha parted ways.[17] Nazım then lived in Germany for a while with police protection due to his fellow Unionists Talat Pasha, Sait Halim Pasha, Bahattin Şakir, Cemal Azmi and Cemal Pasha, being assassinated by Armenian Dashnaks (see Operation Nemesis). He tried to have a bust of Talat Pasha made following his assassination.[17] With the help of his close friend, Nâzım Hikmet, he began to write his memoirs, but he could not complete them or publish them.

Last years

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After the recapture of Smyrna by the Turks, he was allowed to return to Turkey provided that he did not engage in political activities.[32] Returning in 1922, he continued meeting with former Unionists, especially with his brother-in-law the Foreign Minister Dr. Tevfik Rüştü Aras.

On 17 June 1926 Doctor Nazım was among the Unionists arrested for being accused of organizing a plot against Mustafa Kemal's life in Smyrna. He was brought to Ankara after he was arrested on 1 July, and was tried by the Ankara Independence Tribunal. He denied the allegations against him, saying that he had no knowledge or guilt about this incident. No questions were asked about his involvement in the alleged assassination, and he was questioned throughout the court only about his activities during the period of Unionist rule.[33][34] The following crimes were attributed to him by the court board and the prosecution's indictment:

He was sentenced to death for the third time of his life and was executed by hanging at Cebeci on Thursday night, 26 August 1926.

Personal life

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Mehmed Nazım met Beria Hanım, the daughter of Refik Bey of the Evliyazade family in Smyrna, and later married her in 1909.

References

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  1. ^ a b c Totten, Samuel; Bartrop, Paul R. (2008). Dictionary of genocide (1. publ. ed.). Westport, Conn. [u.a.]: Greenwood Press. pp. 303–304. ISBN 9780804768672. Retrieved 16 February 2013.
  2. ^ Miller, Donald E. Miller, Lorna Touryan (1993). Survivors an oral history of the Armenian genocide. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520923270. In addition to Nazim and Shakir, other physicians were involved in the genocide.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Dündar, Fuat (31 December 2011). Crime of Numbers. Transaction Publishers. p. 62. ISBN 9781412843416. Dr. Nazım Selanikli (1870–1926), one of the oldest members of the Committee (Istanbul 1899), was one of the responsible for the expulsion of the Ottoman Greeks from Western Anatolia.
  4. ^ "Dr. Nazım's political life {{in lang|tr}}". Archived from the original on 2012-03-23. Retrieved 2011-07-20.
  5. ^ Past Presidents
  6. ^ Baer, Marc David (2010). The Dönme: Jewish Converts, Muslim Revolutionaries, and Secular Turks (1st pbk. ed.). Stanford: Stanford University Press. pp. 91. ISBN 9780804768672. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
  7. ^ Ahmet Eyicil, Doktor Nazım Bey, Ankara 2004, pp. 24–26
  8. ^ Yahya Kemal Beyatlı, Siyâsî ve Edebî Portreler, Istanbul 1968, pp. 112–120
  9. ^ Kazım Karabekir, İttihat ve Terakki Cemiyeti, 1896–1909, Istanbul 1982, sy: 467
  10. ^ Yahya Kemal Beyatlı, Siyasi ve Edebi Portreler, Istanbul 1987, p. 8
  11. ^ Kâzım Nami Duru, İttihat ve Terakki Hatıraları, Istanbul 1957, p. 8
  12. ^ Ankara İstiklal Mahkemesi Zabıtnamesi, Doktor Nazım Bey'in Birinci Defteri, TBMM Arşivi, Dosya No: 239/31, Defter No: 1/8, sy: 1
  13. ^ Ahmet Bedevi Kuran, İnkılap Tarihimiz ve Jön Türkler, Istanbul 1945, p.31
  14. ^ Eşref Kuşçubaşı, Doktor Nazım ve Hizmetleri, Karakteri Hakkındaki Görüşlerim (El Yazması) sy.28
  15. ^ Mithat Şükrü Bleda, İmparatorluğun Çöküşü, Istanbul 1986, pp. 14–18, 24–25, 101–102, 157
  16. ^ Kâzım Karabekir, İstiklal Harbimizde Enver Paşa ve İttihat Terakki Erkanı, Istanbul 1990, pp. 318–319
  17. ^ a b c d Vahit İpekçi, Dr. Nâzım Bey’in Siyasal Yaşamı, Yeditepe Üniversitesi Atatürk İlkeleri ve İnkılap Tarihi Enstitüsü, Istanbul 2006]
  18. ^ a b c Üngör, Ugur Ümit (2012). The Making of Modern Turkey: Nation and State in Eastern Anatolia, 1913-1950 (1st pbk. ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 45–49. ISBN 9780199655229. Retrieved 16 February 2013.
  19. ^ Meşveret Gazetesi, 6 Kanun-i Sani 108, 10 Receb, 1313 Birinci sene numara 3, 5.1.
  20. ^ Eyicil, Ahmet. "NÂZIM BEY". İslâm Ansiklkopedisi. Archived from the original on 23 March 2021.
  21. ^ Melson, Robert (1996). Revolution and genocide : on the origins of the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust (1st pbk. ed.). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226519913. Retrieved 16 February 2013.
  22. ^ Taner Akçam, Türk Ulusal Kimliği ve Ermeni Sorunu, İletişim Yayınları, 1992, ISBN 9789754702897 p. 155.
  23. ^ Rıfat, Mevlânzade (1993). Metin Hasırcı (ed.). Türkiye inkılâbının içyüzü. Pınar Yayınları.
  24. ^ Cummins, Joseph (2009). The World's Bloodiest History: Massacre, Genocide, and The Scars They Left on Civilization (illustrated ed.). Fair Winds. pp. 132–133. ISBN 9781616734633. Retrieved 16 February 2013.
  25. ^ Lewy, Guenter (2005). The Armenian massacres in Ottoman Turkey : a disputed genocide ([Nachdr.]. ed.). Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. p. 51. ISBN 9780874808490. - access date 16 February 2013 Profile
  26. ^ Rifat, Türkiye, pp. 159–60, quoted in Sarkisian and Sahakian, Vital Issues in Modern Armenian History, p. 32. 40
  27. ^ "Verdict ("Kararname") of the Turkish Military Tribunal" (in Ottoman Turkish). Translated into English by Haigazn Kazarian. Published in the Official Gazette of Turkey(Takvimi Vekayi),no. 3604 (supplement), July 22, 1919. Retrieved 12 January 2013. In accordance therefore with the above mentioned paragraphs in the law code, Talaat, Enver, Djemal and Dr. Nazim are sentenced to death{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  28. ^ G. Hovannisian, Richard (2011). The Armenian Genocide: Cultural and Ethical Legacies. Transaction Publishers. p. 269. ISBN 978-1412835923. Retrieved 16 February 2013. During one of the secret meetings the Young Turkish ideologist Nazım said: "The massacre is necessary. All the non-Turkish elements, whatever nation they belong to, should be exterminated."
  29. ^ Payaslian, Simon (2005). United States policy toward the Armenian question and the Armenian genocide ([Online-Ausg.]. ed.). New York [u.a.]: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 60. ISBN 9781403970985. Nuri Bey quoted Nazim as stating that the CUP had decided to shoulder the responsibility of "freeing the fatherland of the aspirations of this cursed race."
  30. ^ Sevag, Grigoris Balakian ; translated by Peter Balakian with Aris (2010). Armenian Golgotha : a memoir of the Armenian genocide, 1915-1918 (1st Vintage Books ed.). New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 978-1400096770.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Profile
  31. ^ Dadrian, Vahakn N.; Akçam, Taner (2011). Judgment at Istanbul: The Armenian Genocide Trials. Berghahn Books. p. 196. ISBN 978-0-85745-251-1.
  32. ^ Ahmet Eyicil, “Doktor Nazım Bey”, Türkiye Cumhuriyeti Devleti’nin Kuruluş ve Gelişmesine Hizmeti Geçen Türk Dünyası Aydınları Sempozyumu Bildirileri (haz. Abdulkadir Yuvalı), Kayseri 1996, s. 197-206
  33. ^ Hâkimiyet-i Milliye, 3 Ağustos 1926, Sayı: 1821
  34. ^ Falih Rıfkı Atay, Zeytindağı, Istanbul 1981, p. 36
  35. ^ Falih Rıfkı Atay, "İddianame", "Hâkimiyet-i Milliye", 3 Ağustos 1926, Sayı: 1821