|
Turkish Culture
"We shall make
the expansion and rise of Turkish culture in every era the mainstay of
the Republic."
Among the
prominent statesmen of the 20th century, few articulated the supreme
importance of culture as did Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, founder of the
Turkish Republic, who stated: "Culture is the foundation of the Turkish
Republic." His view of culture encompassed the nation's creative legacy
as well as the best values of world civilization. It stressed personal
and universal humanism. "Culture," he said, " is a basic element in
being a person worthy of humanity," and described Turkey's ideological
thrust as "a creation of patriotism blended with a lofty humanist
ideal."
To create the
best synthesis, Ataturk underlined the need for the utilization of all
viable elements in the national heritage, including the ancient
indigenous cultures, and the arts and techniques of the entire world
civilization, past and present. He gave impetus to the study of
earlier
civilizations of Anatolia -- including Hittite, Phrygian, Lydian and
others. Pre-Islamic culture of theTurks became the subject of extensive
research which proved that, long before the Seljuk and Ottoman Empires,
the Turks had already created a civilization of their own. Ataturk also
stressed the folk arts and folklore of
the countryside as a wellspring of Turkish creativity.
The development
of painting, sculpture
and the decorative arts had been arrested by Ottoman officials, who claimed
thedepiction of the human form was idolatry, but these arts flourished
during Ataturk's presidency. Many museums were opened and architecture
gained new vigor. Classical Western music,
opera and
ballet, as well as theater
took impressive strides.Several hundred "People's Houses" and "People's
Rooms" all over Turkey gave local people and youngsters a wide variety
of artistic activities, sports and cultural affairs. Book and magazine
publication enjoyed a boom. The Film industry
started to grow. In all walks of cultural life, Ataturk's inspiration
created an upsurge.
Ataturk's Turkey
is living proof of this ideal -- a country rich in its own national
culture, open to the heritage of world civilization and at home in the
endowments of the modern technological age. |