Ali Kemal Bey (7 September 1869 – 6 November 1922) was a Turkish journalist, writer, poet, and liberal politician. He was Minister of the Interior for some three months in the government of Damat Ferid Pasha, the Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire. In the weeks following the Turkish victory in the Greco-Turkish War, he was lynched by Nureddin Pasha's paramilitary officers for his opposition to the Turkish National Movement.

Ali Kemal
Minister of the Interior
In office
4 March 1919 (1919-03-04) – 20 June 1919 (1919-06-20)
MonarchMehmed VI
Prime MinisterDamat Ferid Pasha
Preceded byMehmed Ali Bey
Succeeded byAdil Bey
Personal details
Born(1869-09-07)7 September 1869
Istanbul, Ottoman Empire
Died6 November 1922(1922-11-06) (aged 53)
İzmit, Ottoman Empire
Resting placeİzmit, Turkey[1]
NationalityTurkish
Political partyFreedom and Accord Party
Liberty Party
Spouses
  • Winifred Brun
  • Sabiha Hanım
Children4, including Wilfred Johnson and Zeki Kuneralp
Relatives
Occupation
  • Journalist
  • Newspaper editor
  • Poet
  • Politician
  • Government official

Kemal is the father of Zeki Kuneralp, who was the former Turkish ambassador in Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and Spain. In addition, he is the paternal grandfather of both the Turkish diplomat Selim Kuneralp, and the British politician Stanley Johnson. Through Johnson, Ali Kemal is the great-grandfather of former British prime minister Boris Johnson and his siblings.

Early life and career

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Ali Kemal was born in 1867 in the Süleymaniye district of Istanbul. He was born Ali Rıza, but changed his second name due to his admiration of Namık Kemal. Kemal's father, Haci Ahmet Rıza Effendi, was a Turk from the village of Kalfat in Çankırı who ran a candle making enterprise.[2] His mother was a Circassian, reputedly of slave origin.[3]

He attended the Mekteb-i Mülkiye, the Civil Service School, in Istanbul. He left the institution in the last year of the four-year term and went to Paris in 1886 to improve his French. The following year he moved to Geneva and returned to Istanbul in 1888 to finish his education in the Mülkiye. This visit to Europe likely gave Kemal his liberal convictions which the autocratic government of Abdul Hamid II could not tolerate. Impressed by what he saw, he formed a student association which was forcefully dissolved by authorities.[4] Kemal again attempted to establish another association, but was caught and imprisoned for nine months. After being released from prison, he was exiled to Aleppo in July 1889.

Years of exile

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During his exile in Aleppo, he taught the Turkish language and literature at a high school. He could not stand the stagnant life in the city and returned to Istanbul without permission in 1895.[4] Thereupon, when another exile order was issued, he escaped to Paris, which had become a kind of headquarters of the Young Turks. In Paris, he followed a mediating line between the Young Turks and Yıldız Palace. However, when Mizancı Murat left the Young Turk movement to return to the Hamidian fold, Ali Kemal followed him.

While Ali Kemal was studying political sciences in Paris, he was also working as a journalist for the İkdam newspaper in Istanbul, publishing articles about his impressions of Paris and an admiration for western culture.[5] Hüseyin Cahit Yalçın later exposed that much of Kemal's work in the newspaper were actually translations from the French press, and this incident caused an enmity between the two that would last until the end of Ali Kemal's life.

In 1897, he was appointed as deputy secretary of the Ottoman Embassy in Brussels. He did not return to Istanbul because he was afraid of how the Committee of Union and Progress would react. After receiving his Political Sciences diploma in 1899, he lived in Egypt until the Young Turk Revolution. He managed a farm belonging to an Egyptian prince in Cairo, where he established and edited a weekly magazine, Türk, from 1903 and 1907.[6][4] In one of several visits to Switzerland, he fell in love with an Anglo-Swiss girl, Winifred Brun, the daughter of Frank Brun and Margaret Johnson.[7] They were married in Paddington, London, on 11 September 1903.[8] He returned to Istanbul the day before the declaration of the Second Constitutional Monarchy.

Second Constitutional Era

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Back in Istanbul, Kemal became one of the most prominent figures in Ottoman journalistic and political life. Because of his opposition to the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP), the group which had carried out the revolution, he spent most of the following decade opposed to the government. Upon his return, he appeared before the sultan and accepted Abdul Hamid's compliments and royal moneys; This was criticized by the Unionist press. He joined the Liberty Party, the CUP's main opposition.[9] Kemal, now editor-in-chief of the liberal İkdam newspaper while also teaching political history at the Faculty of Literature at the Darülfünun, began to write editorials heavily criticizing the CUP. In the classroom, he passionately praised French liberalism to students, violently attacking those who disagreed with him.[citation needed]

In The Times dated 9 March 1909, on speculating that he would contest the seat of the late Minister of Justice Refik Bey, Kemal was described as amongst the "leading men of letters in Turkey, an excellent speaker, and personally very popular".[10] Kemal was unanimously adopted as the Liberty Party's candidate for the 1909 Istanbul by-election at a party meeting on 9 March 1909,[11] though he lost to the CUP's candidate, Mehmed Rifat Pasha.

 
Ali Kemal in his middle age

After the murder of the editor-in-chief of the Serbestî newspaper, Hasan Fehmi, in April 1909, Kemal stated that he had warned Ismail Kemal and Rifsat, the assistant editor of Serbestî, that they had been condemned by Unionist extremists in Salonica.[12] A media storm between the liberal paper İkdam and the CUP organ Tanin followed, with İkdam accusing Ahmet Rıza Bey of having been in favour of enlightened absolutism, and Tanin, the organ of the CUP, accusing Liberty Party of being a subversive body, conspiring with Armenians. At that time Kemal accused Rahmi Bey and Doctor Nazım of the CUP of proposing his murder.[13] After a speech he gave to a crowd at the Darülfünun on 7 April 1909, the day after the murder of Hasan Fehmi, students and faculty marched to the Sublime Porte to demand the arrest of the murderers; These events began the 31 March Incident, a political crisis that served to almost dismantle the Ottoman constitutional order and restore it as an autocracy under Abdul Hamid II. Ali Kemal had to flee to Paris again as Unionist forces dispatched from Salonica were about to enter Istanbul to restore order. In the meantime, his duty at the Mülkiye was terminated. Abdul Hamid was deposed on 27 April 1909 and his brother Reshad Efendi was proclaimed as Sultan Mehmed V.

Kemal fled to exile in England, where in late 1909, his wife Winifred gave birth to a son, Osman Wilfred Kemal, in Bournemouth. Shortly after giving birth his wife died of puerperal fever. They already had a son Lancelot Beodar who died in Switzerland aged 18 months after contracting whooping cough, and a daughter named Celma. Kemal stayed with his mother-in-law Margaret Brun (née Johnson) and with his children, first in Christchurch, near Bournemouth, and then in Wimbledon, London, until 1912, when he returned to the Ottoman Empire after that year's anti-Unionist coup d'état.

On his return from exile, Kemal gave a speech in favour of a war against the Balkan League in Istanbul on 3 October 1912.[14] Montenegro started the First Balkan War by declaring war against the Ottomans five days later, and the Ottoman presence in the Balkans was reduced to a small part of Eastern Thrace. With the Unionists ascendant after the Raid of the Sublime Porte, Kemal was briefly arrested and again sent into exile, this time to Vienna, though he returned to the Empire three months later. He briefly published in a new newspaper that he founded as its editor-in-chief, Peyam, though it was shuttered under CUP pressure. He regained his teaching position in the Mülkiye. He also remarried during this time. His second wife was Sabiha Hanım, the daughter of the Minister of Schools, Zeki Pasha.[15] They had one son, Zeki Kuneralp, who was born in October 1914.

During World War I, Kemal kept a low profile and was not interested in politics, instead making a living as a teacher and merchant. This attitude continued until 1918, when the CUP leaders boarded a German submarine and escaped from Turkey.

Collapse of the Empire

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Ali Kemal and Damat Ferid Pasha

On a report dated 11 November 1918 (Armistice Day) speculating on the successor to Ahmed İzzet Pasha, The Times reported that Kemal was backing Ahmet Tevfik Pasha to be grand vizier, with the support of the Naval and Khoja parties.[16][clarification needed] Ali Kemal became the general secretary of the Freedom and Accord Party, which was reestablished on 14 January 1919. He was appointed Minister of Education in the first Damat Ferid Pasha government established on 4 March 1919, and as Minister of Interior in the second Damat Ferid Pasha government established immediately after his attempted resignation in May.[17] While Kemal was in this position, he issued orders against the National Forces of Mustafa Kemal Pasha (Atatürk). He resigned from the ministry on 26 June 1919 following a disagreement within the government.

As part of his campaigns against the Turkish national movement, along with other conservatives serving under the Sultan in Istanbul, Kemal set up an organisation known as the Friends of England Association (Turkish: İngiliz Muhipleri Cemiyeti), which advocated British protectorate status for the Ottoman Empire. Ali Kemal thought of Mustafa Kemal's movement as a continuation of the CUP. This, combined with his past opposition to the Unionists, made him anathema to the nationalist movement gathering strength in Ankara and fighting the Turkish War of Independence against the attempts between Greece and the Entente to partition Anatolia.

Kemal was a member of the Ottoman delegation to the Paris Peace Conference in June 1919.[18] In an article dated 25 June 1919, The Times reported that Kemal had accused agents of the CUP of impeding the restoration of order in the Ottoman provinces, specifically accusing Talaat Pasha of organising Albanian brigand bands in İzmit and Enver Pasha of doing the same in the Bandırma, Balıkesir, and Karasi districts. He also alleged that the CUP had £700,000 of party funds available for propaganda, as well as numerous fortunes made by profiteering during the Great War. In fact, Kemal had resigned between the filing of the report and its publication in The Times on 3 July 1919.[19]

After leaving the ministry, Ali Kemal returned to the editorship of Peyam-ı Sabah newspaper, whose editorship included Refik Halit (Karay) and Yahya Kemal (Beyatlı). This newspaper was founded in 1920 by merging Kemal's defunct Peyam newspaper and the Sabah newspaper owned by Mihran Efendi, where he continued his attacks against the nationalist movement. However, after the Great Offensive and the Liberation of İzmir, he wrote an article titled "Our Goals Were and Are One" (Turkish: Gayelerimiz Bir İdi ve Birdir) on 10 September 1922, and said that he was wrong for opposing the Nationalists.

Kemal condemned the events of the Armenian genocide and inveighed against the Unionist chieftains as the authors of that crime, relentlessly demanding their prosecution and punishment. In an 18 July 1919 issue of the Alemdar, Ali Kemal Bey wrote: "... our Minister of Justice has opened the doors of prisons. Don't let us try to throw the blame on the Armenians; we must not flatter ourselves that the world is filled with idiots. We have plundered the possessions of the men whom we deported and massacred; we have sanctioned theft in our Chamber and our Senate. Let us prove that we have sufficient national energy to put the law into force against the heads of these bands who have trampled justice underfoot and dragged our honour and our national life through the dust."[20] In a 28 January 1919 issue of the Sabah newspaper, Kemal Bey wrote, "Four or five years ago a historically singular crime has been perpetrated, a crime before which the world shudders. Given its dimensions and standards, its authors do not number in the fives, or tens, but in the hundreds of thousands. In fact, it has already been demonstrated that this tragedy was planned on the basis of a decision reached by the Central Committee of Union and Progres."[20]

Due to his opposition to the Turkish National Movement, Ali Kemal was among the four Darülfünun faculty members compelled to resign by students in March 1922 for being insufficiently patriotic. Kemal and Cenâb Şehâbeddîn were dismissed from their duties by a decision of the Council of Ministers on 3 September 1922.[21]

Lynching

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On 4 November 1922, Kemal was kidnapped from a barber shop at Tokatlıyan Hotel in Istanbul, and was carried to the Anatolian side of the city by a motorboat en route to Ankara for a trial on charges of treason. On 6 November 1922, the party was intercepted at İzmit by Nureddin Pasha, then the commander of the First Army, which was aligned with Mustafa Kemal Pasha. Ali Kemal was attacked and lynched, stoned to death by a group of paramilitary officers set up by Nureddin. As described by Nureddin personally to Rıza Nur, who with İsmet Pasha (İnönü) was on his way to Lausanne to negotiate peace with the Allies, his corpse was hanged with an epitaph across his chest which read, "Artin [an Armenian name] Kemal, traitor to religion and homeland".[22][23] Upon İsmet Pasha's anger at this situation, his body was hurriedly removed, and was buried in İzmit. For a long time, It was unknown where he was buried due to the lack of a tombstone or any sign on his grave, but the burial location was determined in 1950.[24][1]

Falih Rıfkı reported that Mustafa Kemal used to talk with disgust about his lynching.[25][1]

Ali Kemal's death was also memorialised in a poem by Nâzım Hikmet: "I saw the blood run down into his moustache. Someone yelled: 'Get him!' It rained sticks, stones and rotten vegetables. They hung his body from a branch over that bridge."[26]

Descendants and legacy

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During the First World War, the Ottoman Empire was one of the Central Powers allied with the German Empire, and Kemal's son and daughter living in England adopted their maternal grandmother's maiden name of Johnson. His son Osman also began to use his middle name of Wilfred as his first name. Wilfred Johnson later married Irene Williams (the daughter of Stanley F. Williams of Bromley, Kent, by his marriage to Marie Luise, Freiin von Pfeffel, born in 1882[27]) and their son Stanley Johnson became an expert on the environment and population studies and a Conservative member of the European Parliament. His son Boris Johnson, Kemal's great-grandson, became the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom on 24 July 2019.[28]

After the First World War, Kemal's half-English daughter Celma took Turkish nationality. The Surname Law of 1934 required her to adopt a Turkish surname, so she chose Kemal, her father's given name. She married Reginald St John Battersby. Their son Anthony Battersby served in the Royal Marines and became an architect and health planner, spending most of his career working as a public health consultant for various UN agencies.

Sabiha, Kemal's second wife, went into exile in Switzerland with their son Zeki Kuneralp. He returned to Turkey after the death of Atatürk and was admitted—with the personal approval of President İsmet İnönü—into the Turkish Diplomatic Service, serving twice as its Permanent Under-secretary in the 1960s and as ambassador to London from 1964 to 1966 and again from 1966 to 1972. His wife and her brother were killed when an unidentified ASALA militant opened fire on his car while he was serving as ambassador in Madrid in 1978.[29]

Zeki Kuneralp wrote an account of his father's life in English for the benefit of the British side of the family. Kuneralp's sons Sinan and Selim both live in Turkey. The former is a publisher in Istanbul and the latter followed his father into the diplomatic service.

References

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c Çetintaş, Cengiz (2022). CUMHURİYET'İN SEKİZİNCİ YILI 1931: TBMM Tutanakları Yıllığı [THE EIGHTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE REPUBLIC, 1931: GNAT Minutes Yearbook] (in Turkish). p. 308. Cesedi Lozan Konferansi'na giderken trenle Izmit'ten gececek olan İsmet Paşa görsün diye istasyonda bir sehpaya asıldı. İsmet İnönü'nün bu durum karşısında sinirlenmesi üzerine Ali Kemal'in bedeni apar topar kaldırıldı. İzmit'te defnedilen Ali Kemal'in mezarı başına bir mezar taşı veya herhangi bir işaret konulmaması sebebiyle zamanla ortadan kayboldu ve uzun araştırmalar sonunda 1950'lerde yeri tespit edilebildi. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Ali Kemal'in öldürülüş şeklinden tiksinerek bahsederdi.
  2. ^ "Boris Johnson: Kökeni Çankırı'ya uzanan, Brexit'te ısrarlı olan ve İngiltere'de başbakan olacak siyasetçi". BBC Turkish (in Turkish). 23 July 2019.
  3. ^ Gimson, Andrew (2012). Boris: The Rise of Boris Johnson (Revised & updated ed.). London: Simon & Schuster. p. 1957. ISBN 978-0-85720-738-8.
  4. ^ a b c Afyoncu, Erhan. "Dedesini linç ettik, torunu Londra Belediye Başkanı oldu". Bugün Gazetesi (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 14 February 2010. Retrieved 1 November 2010.
  5. ^ Hür, Ayşe (11 April 2008). "Resmi Tarihin Ünlü Haini: Ali Kemal". Taraf Gazetesi (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 1 November 2012. Retrieved 1 November 2010.
  6. ^ Mezili, Önder (2021). "Osmanlı Aydınlarından Ali Kemal'in Türk Gazetesi ve Gazetenin Yayın Anlayışına Dair Bir Değerlendirme". İçtimaiyat (in Turkish). 5 (2): 7. doi:10.33709/ictimaiyat.958739.
  7. ^ Kuneralp, Zeki (1993). Ali Kemal: (1869–1922): A Portrait for the Benefit of His English Speaking Progeny. Istanbul: Z. Kuneralp. p. 7.[self-published source]
  8. ^ Johnson, Stanley (2009). Stanley I Presume?. London: Fourth Estate. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-00729-672-9.
  9. ^ "Turkey. Banquet Of Ottoman Liberals". The Times. London. 27 January 1909. p. 5.
  10. ^ "Turkey. Refik Bey's Constituency". The Times. London. 9 March 1909. p. 5.
  11. ^ "The Turkish Parliament". The Times. London. 10 March 1909. p. 5.
  12. ^ "The Murder Of A Turkish Editor". The Times. London. 9 April 1909. p. 3.
  13. ^ "Turkish Internal Affairs. Parties And Politics". The Times. London. 13 April 1909. p. 3.
  14. ^ "War Demonstrations In Constantinople". The Times. London. 10 April 1912. p. 6.
  15. ^ Ekinci, Ekrem Buğra (7 May 2008). "Ali Kemal'in Acıklı Sonu". Turkiye Gazetesi. Archived from the original on 24 July 2024.
  16. ^ "Turkey's Internal Politics. Enver Pasha's Legacy". The Times. London. 19 November 1918. p. 5.
  17. ^ "New Turkish Cabinet". The Times. London. 26 May 1919. p. 11.
  18. ^ "Turk Mission Leaves For Paris". The Times. London. 11 June 1919. p. 14.
  19. ^ "C.U.P. Intrigue". The Times. London. 3 July 1919. p. 14.
  20. ^ a b Dadrian, Vahakn N. (1991). Documentation of the Armenian Genocide in Turkish Sources. Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide.
  21. ^ Çukurova, Bülent. "Büyük Taarruz Günlerinde Ali Kemal ve Siyasi Görüşleri" (PDF). Ankara Üniversitesi Türk İnkılap Tarihi Enstitüsü Atatürk Yolu Dergisi (in Turkish). 6 (23): 357–370.
  22. ^ Nur, Rıza (1967). Hayat ve Hatıratım, III. Cild (in Turkish). Altındağ Yayınevi. p. 975.
  23. ^ Cargas, Harry James (Fall 1987). Totten, Samuel (ed.). "An Interview with Vahakn N. Dadrian: An Expert on the Armenian Genocide". Social Science Record: The Journal of the New York State Council for the Social Studies. 24 (2): 24.
  24. ^ Yalman, Ahmet Emin. Gördüklerim ve Geçirdiklerim (in Turkish). Vol. IV (1945-1970). p. 203.
  25. ^ Atay, Falih Rıfkı (2004). Çankaya (in Turkish). Pozitif Yayınları. p. 396. ISBN 978-9756461051.
  26. ^ Callaghan, Louise (28 July 2019). "Village of blond Turks ready to kill a sheep for Boris Johnson, its famous son". The Sunday Times. ISSN 0956-1382. Retrieved 24 December 2019.
  27. ^ van de Pas, Leo. "Ancestors of Boris Johnson, Lord Mayor of London". Worldroots.com. Archived from the original on 15 May 2008.
  28. ^ Mason, Rowena (24 July 2019). "Boris Johnson becomes PM with promise of Brexit by 31 October". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
  29. ^ Genç, Kaya (3 September 2013). "Ali Kemal: Martyred Journalist and Iconic Traitor". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved 8 September 2013.

Primary sources

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  • Kemâl, Ali (2004). Özgül, M. Kayahan (ed.). Ömrüm (in Turkish). Ankara: Hece yayınları. ISBN 9789758988112.
  • Kemal, Ali (1985). Kuneralp, Zeki (ed.). Ömrüm (in Turkish). Istanbul: İsis Publications. OCLC 13011582.

Secondary sources

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