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Nihal Atsız

Hüseyin Nihâl Atsız (Ottoman Turkish: حسين نيهال آتسز; January 12, 1905 – December 11, 1975)[5] was a prominent Turkish ultranationalist writer, novelist, and poet. Nihâl Atsız self-identified as a racist, Pan-Turkist and Turanist.[6][7][8][a] He later became a critic of Islam, calling it "a religion created by Arabs, for Arabs".[11][12] He was the author of over 30 books and numerous articles and was in strong opposition to the government of İsmet İnönü, which he criticized for co-operating with the communists.[13] He was accused of being a sympathizer of the Nazi government[6][14] and plotting to overthrow the Turkish government.[15]

Nihâl Atsız
BornMehmet Nail oğlu Hüseyin Nihâl
January 12, 1905
Kadıköy, Istanbul, Ottoman Empire[1][2][3][4]
DiedDecember 11, 1975(1975-12-11) (aged 70)
İçerenköy, Istanbul, Turkey
Resting placeKaracaahmet Cemetery, Istanbul
OccupationWriter, novelist, poet and philosopher
EducationHistory of literature
Alma materIstanbul High School
Notable worksBozkurtların Ölümü (Death of the Grey Wolves)
Deli Kurt (Mad Wolf)
SpouseMehpare Hanım (1931–35)
Bedriye Atsız (1936–75)
Children3 (one adopted)
Signature

Personal life Edit

Nihâl Atsız was born on January 12, 1905, at Kasımpaşa, Istanbul. His father was navy commander Mehmet Nail Bey, from the Çiftçioğlu family of Torul, Gümüşhane; and his mother was Fatma Zehra, daughter of navy commander Osman Fevzi Bey, from the Kadıoğlu family of Trabzon. Nihâl Atsız had two sons from his second wife Bedriye Atsız, who he married in 1935.[16] Yağmur Atsız, a left-wing journalist and writer, and Dr. Buğra Atsız, academician and nationalist writer; he also had an adopted daughter: Kaniye Atsız. The marriage was divorced in 1975.[16] Atsız had a younger brother, Nejdet Sançar, also a prominent personality of the pan-Turkist ideology.[17] The surname he adopted following the enforcement of the Surname Law by Atatürk means 'nameless' or 'one who has not yet made himself a name'. Because in Old Turkic Culture you should be successful to deserve a name. Atsız name was also the name of at least two Seljuk emirs, Atsiz (1098 – 1156) and Atsiz ibn Uwaq (died 1078 or 1079).[18]

Education and professional life Edit

He attended two French (one of them was in Egypt), one German and one Turkish secondary schools and Kadıköy High School[19][20] before he began to study at the Military School of Medicine in 1922 but was expelled due to his ultra-nationalist views and activities as he declined to salute an officer of Arab origin who was of a superior rank than his in 1925.[21] He then began to study at the Teachers College in Istanbul and the Istanbul University School of Literature and graduated from both in 1930. Following he became assistant to Professor Fuat Köprülü at the Istanbul University.[22] He challenged the Turkish History Thesis and following this incident he was dismissed from the university in 1932.[23] After he worked in high schools in Malatya and Edirne as a teacher but due to his persistent challenge of the Turkish History Thesis he often faced difficulties in his career.[24] Following his imprisonment due to the Racism-Turanism Trials in 1944–1945 he wasn't rehired as a teacher and only in 1949 he was employed at the Süleymaniye Library. He returned to teaching for several years, ultimately to return the Library in 1952. He was active there until 1969.[25][26] After his retirement in 1969 he kept publishing Ötüken.[27]

Politics Edit

 
Early portrait

Nihâl Atsız was an important ideologue who lived during the early years of the Republic of Turkey. His circle attacked Atatürk's leadership, condemned Turkey's foreign policy, and particularly the appeasement policy vis-a-vis the Soviet Union. Most importantly, his supporters ridiculed Kemalist attempts at connecting Turks with early Anatolian and Mesopotamian civilizations in the Atatürk era. His views on Atatürk became more positive after the military coup against the Democrat Party in 1960 and he stressed Atatürk's nationalism in his writings.[28] By the Justice Party, he was offered to be candidate for parliamentary election in 1961 for Kütahya, but he did not accept.[29]

 
Nihâl Atsız in the 1930s

He was foremost known for his nationalist views, his active campaign against Turkish communists, and his embracing of Tengriistic ancient Turkic traditions. Atsız viewed racism and pan-Turkism as the two main components of Turkish nationalism and disputed the ideologues of the likes of Ziya Gökalp or Hamdullah Suphi Tanriöver who didn't share his views regarding racism,[30] however, according to him, racism "is not about measuring head, analysing blood or counting seven ancestors as a couple of phony zanies claimed"[31] and during the Racism-Turanism trials, he stated he counts partly non-Turks who served Turkishness a lot (e.g. Bayezid I) and don't have any feeling of another race Turks as well.[32] He was among the authors that influenced a type of Turkish nationalism known as Ülkücü movement (translated as "idealist"), a nationalist movement later associated to Alparslan Türkeş (and which eventually led to a break with Atsız's previous ideology of Pan-Turkism, on the grounds that it reconciles with Islam instead of denouncing it as "Arab religion", which Atsız previously stated).[33] He wrote that the Kipchaks in Lithuania and Kirghiz are from the same blood and therefore Turks, but "alien people" living in Turkey like Jews or Negroes are not Turks even if they speak Turkish.[34]

Kemalism, which had been condemned so harshly in his novel "Dalkavuklar Gecesi" (The Night of the Sycophants) is the founding ideology of the Republic of Turkey. The nature and the type of Atatürk's nationalism during the Early Republican Period (1923–50) had since 1923 have interpreted Turkish identity under the guiding light of constitutional principles which equated ‘Turkishness’ with being a Turkish citizen. Identifying all Turkish citizens as Turks proper, the three constitutions of the Republican Era were completely and positively blind to ethnic, and religious differences between Turkish citizens and disassociated ‘Turkishness’ from its popular meaning: that is, the name of an ethnic group. Supporters of this view argue that Republican statesmen rejected the German model of ethnic nationalism and emulated the French model of civic nationalism by reducing ‘Turkishness’ to a legal category only. In other words, citizens of Turkey who happened to be of Kurdish, Greek, Armenian, Jewish or Assyrian descent had only to accept a plebiscite, according to this view, to take advantage of the opportunity of Turkification, as far as their citizenship status was concerned, and gaining full equality with ethnic Turks, provided that they remained faithful to their side of the bargain.[35]

In 1934, he had written that "the Jew" was among "the internal enemies of Turkey" but in 1947, he praised the Jewish people for setting an example of strong nationalism (Zionism): indeed, the Jews managed "to get back the land they had lost 2,000 years ago and to revive Hebrew which has remained only in the books and turn into a spoken language."[36]

He thought Turks and non-Turks should not intermarry and love has not the same value as nationalist feelings. He further believed nationalism was superior than religion and Islam was a manifestation of the struggle of the Arabs to form a nation.[37]

He granted Islam as a "national religion",[38] but he criticized Islam in his later life.[33][39] He also opposed Pan-Islamism and stressed that Turks were already a great nation before they accepted Islam.[40]

Legal prosecution Edit

 
Nihâl Atsız goes to trial

Atsız was prosecuted twice in 1944. Once he was prosecuted on the initiative of Sabahattin Ali for accusing him (and 3 other communists) of being a traitor and warning Prime Minister Şükrü Saracoğlu about them, who established important positions in high schools and universities, which Atsız believed was with the help of the Minister of National Education.[41][42] Atsız knew Ali from before as they shared a room with him in the 1920s,[43] when Sabahattin Ali was a nationalist.[44] He was given a sentence of 6 months in the trial against Sabahattin Ali, which was later reduced to a suspended sentence of 4 months.[45] During the Atsız-Ali trial, rallies by adherents to the political right-wing spectrum in support of Atsız were held on both court hearings on the 26 April and 3 May 1944.[46] Many of the attendants of these rallies were arrested and later prosecuted during the so-called Racism Turanism trial.[46] During this trial Atsız and 22 others, amongst them also Reha Oğuz Türkkan, Alparslan Türkeş, were prosecuted for inciting racism and Turanism.[47][48] He first got sentenced to 6 years and 6 months in prison, after the sentence was lowered to 1 year and 6 months and at the end he (along with the other nationalists) received an amnesty.[49] In 1973, despite his health problems, he received a prison sentence of 15 months because of his writings against Kurdish separatists, after 6 years of trials. He wrote Kurds should leave Turkey (if they insist on keeping the pro-Kurdish propaganda) and learn from the Armenians what happens to the people who challenge the Turkish nation. Many people; including mayors, journalists, writers, university lecturers and students; requested president Fahri Korutürk to release Atsız from prison. After 2+12 months, he was pardoned.[50][51]

Controversies Edit

In the Orhun, Atsız wrote in support for the establishment of a Greater Turkish Empire spanning from the Mediterranean Sea to the Pacific Ocean. Corry Guttstadt mentioned: "His Turkism was based on ties of blood and race; he advocated a return to pre-Islamic Turkish beliefs."[8]

According to Jacob M. Landau, he was a sympathizer of the Nazi government.[6][14] Landau in his book Exploring Ottoman and Turkish History states: "Atsiz was a great admirer of the race theories of Nazi Germany, expressing some of them repeatedly in his own works during the 1930s and 1940s (with the Turks labelled as the 'master race'). His articles insisted, again and again, that Pan-Turkism could – and should – be achieved by war."[52] Aside from favoring Nazi Germany for their war with Soviet Union,[53] he denied these claims[54] as he started to publish his ideas even before Hitler was well-known in Turkey.[55]

His legacy Edit

During his lifetime, many scholars and authors who were influenced by Atsız decided to give a "present" to him by writing an honorary book. However, he died before receiving the present, which was published in 1976.[56][57]

Nineteen young academicians and authors, assembled under a nationalist association "Siyah Beyaz Kültür ve Sanat Platformu", published a book on him, "Vaktiyle Bir Atsız Varmış",[58] consisted of articles and comparative studies on his works, life and views. In the Maltepe district in Istanbul, a park is named after him.[59]

Political groups Edit

In Turkey in 2012 a nationalist group calling itself the Atsız Youth emerged, participating in anti-Armenian demonstrations in Istanbul, carrying banners stating "You are all Armenians, You are all bastards", in response to the slogan "We are all Hrant Dink, We are all Armenians".[60][61] In February 2015, in response to the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, Anti-Armenian banners of the Atsız Youth appeared in cities around Turkey, including banners in İstanbul condemning the Khojaly Genocide, and a banner in Muğla proclaiming "We celebrate the 100th anniversary of our country being cleared of Armenians".[62]

 
The grave of Nihal Atsız

Turkism Day Edit

On the 3 May 1945, Atsız, Alparslan Türkeş, Reha Oğuz Türkkan, Nejdet Sançar and others, all imprisoned in the Tophane military prison, held a meeting in memory of the rallies held on the 3 May 1944 in support of Atsız during the trial between Atsız and Sabahattin Ali. This meeting was the beginning of the annual celebrations of the Turkism Day.[47]

Literary work Edit

His essays about history are gathered and published as a book under the name of Türk Tarihinde Meseleler (Issues in Turkic History). He also served as a literature teacher for a number of years. During his lifetime he wrote thirty-eight poems, six novels.[63]

Magazines Edit

Atsız published several academic essays about Ottoman literature and history. He began to publish magazines in 1931, which he kept doing until 1975. Atsız Mecmua was the first Pan-Turk magazine, which was published from 15 May 1931 to 25 September 1932.[64] He also published Orhun from 1933 to 1934 and again from 1943 to 1944.[34] Orkun, as a successor of Orhun, was first published in 1950 and later in 1962-63.[65] His last magazine Ötüken was published from 1964 to 1975.[66]

Poetry and novels Edit

During his lifetime he wrote thirty-eight poems and six novels.[63] A famous politicised novel of his was Dalkavuklar Gecesi (The Night of the Sycophants), a historical allegory and critique of Kemalism.[35] Published in 1941, it tells the story of political corruption during the Hittite era but actually referring (in a roman a clef fashion) to the injustices and arbitrariness of Atatürk's rule during the 1930s, especially the Turkish History Thesis, and the sycophants around him.

His historical epic novel Bozkurtların Ölümü (Death of the Grey Wolves) is one of the most popular historical novels in Turkish literature.[63] The book concerns the last days of the first Gök Türk Empire and the impossible rebellion of Prince Kür-Şad and his forty warriors against the Chinese invaders, referring to the attempt to kidnap the Chinese emperor by Ashina Jiesheshuai in 639. His original Turkic name is unknown, Kürşad is a made-up name by Atsız. Its sequel Bozkurtlar Diriliyor (Revival of the Grey Wolves) tells the story of Urungu (the unknown son of Kür-Şad) and the beginning of the second Gök Türk Empire. Both novels were very popular in the Turkish society, İsmet Hürmüzlü wrote a theater play on the subject and passages of the books were an optional part in literary classes.[63]

His third novel, Deli Kurt (Mad Wolf), is about the mystic romance between a Sipahi warrior (who was actually an unknown member of the Ottoman dynasty) and a mysterious shamanist nomad woman in the early Ottoman Empire.

Atsız wrote a satirical political comedy about the İnönü government, Z Vitamini (Vitamin Z), which was about a fictional special vitamin which gives immortality to the dictator and his government. It was published in 1959 containing eleven pages.[63]

His last novel, Ruh Adam (Soul Man), is quite a complex psychological novel. The book has a spiritual and mystical atmosphere, full with surrealistic, allegorical figures such as Yek (who symbolizes Satan) and Captain Şeref (who symbolizes Honour). It has a complex story, which is generally about the forbidden platonic love affair between an alcoholic ex-army officer and a diabolical, mysterious young high school student. The plot develops on the reincarnation of two lovers, which was a warrior banned from the army because of his love to the girl was greater than his love to his country in ancient nomad times. It was inspired by Atsız's own life.[67]

His poems are in the style of Pre-Islamic literature and his common themes are idealism, honour, forbidden love, war and history. His complete poetic works (except for a few) have been published under the name of Yolların Sonu ("End of Roads").

Works Edit

Novels Edit

  • Dalkavuklar Gecesi (The Night of the Sycophants), İstanbul 1941. ISBN 978-975-437-804-7
  • Bozkurtların Ölümü (Death of the Grey Wolves), İstanbul 1946. ISBN 978-975-437-800-9
  • Bozkurtlar Diriliyor (Revival of the Grey Wolves), İstanbul 1949. ISBN 978-975-437-800-9
  • Deli Kurt (Mad Wolf), İstanbul 1958. ISBN 978-975-437-801-6
  • Z Vitamini (Vitamin Z), İstanbul 1959. ISBN 978-975-437-804-7
  • Ruh Adam (Soul Man), İstanbul 1972. ISBN 978-975-437-802-3

Stories Edit

  • 'Dönüş' (The Return), In Atsız Mecmua, sayı.2 (1931), Orhun, Sayı.10 (1943)
  • 'Şehidlerin Duası' (Prayer of Martyrs), In Atsız Mecmua, Sayı.3 (1931), Orhun, Sayı.12 (1943)
  • 'Erkek, Kız' (Boy, Girl), In Atsız Mecmua, Sayı.4 (1931)
  • 'İki Onbaşı, Galiçiya...1917...' (Two Corporals, Galicia...1917...), In Atsız Mecmua, Sayı.6 (1931), Çınaraltı, Sayı.67 (1942), Ötüken, Sayı.30 (1966)
  • 'Her Çağın Masalı: Boz Doğan ve Sarı Yılan' (Tale of All Ages: Grey Hawk and Yellow Snake), In Ötüken, Sayı.28 (1966)

Poems Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ He used the word Turanism as a synonym of Pan-Turkism and didn't have the ideology of uniting all Ural-Altaic peoples.[9][10]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Hüseyin Nihal Atsız'ın hakkında".
  2. ^ "Nihal Atsız Kimdir? Hayatı, Edebi Kişiliği, Eserleri".
  3. ^ "Hüseyin Nihal Atsız - Türkçe Bilgi".
  4. ^ "Eskişehir Milli İrade Gazetesi - Eskişehir Haberleri".
  5. ^ "Ölüm yıl dönümünde Hüseyin Nihal Atsız kimdir?". Haberler.com (in Turkish). December 11, 2019. Retrieved February 24, 2021.
  6. ^ a b c Landau, Jacob M. (1981). Pan-Turkism in Turkey. London: C. Hurst & Company. p. 94. ISBN 0905838572.
  7. ^ "İçimizdeki Şeytanlar (Hüseyin Nihal Arsiz)". bilgicik.com (in Turkish). October 22, 2007. Retrieved January 14, 2021.
  8. ^ a b Guttstadt, Corry (May 20, 2013). Turkey, the Jews, and the Holocaust. Cambridge University Press. p. 40. ISBN 978-0-521-76991-4.
  9. ^ "Veda (Hüseyin Nihal ATSIZ) | Bilgicik.Com - Bilgicik.Com".
  10. ^ Karabulak, Ozan (2018). Atsız ve Türkçülüğün Yarım Asrı - Süreli Yayınlarda Türk Milliyetçiliğinin Seyri (1931-1975) (in Turkish). Ötüken Neşriyat. p. 275. ISBN 9786051556307.
  11. ^ Cenk Saraçoğlu, Nihal Atsız's World-View and Its Influences on the Shared Symbols, Rituals, Myths and Practices of the Ülkücü Movement
  12. ^ "Yobazlık Bir Fikir Müstehasesidir (Hüseyin Nihal Atsiz)". bilgicik.com (in Turkish). October 22, 2007. Retrieved December 21, 2020.
  13. ^ Biography of Nihâl Atsız August 18, 2009, at the Wayback Machine (Turkish)
  14. ^ a b Guttstadt, Corry (2009). Turkey, the Jews and the Holocaust. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-76991-4.
  15. ^ Özkırımlı, Umut; Sofos, Spyros A (2008). Tormented by history: nationalism in Greece and Turkey. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 136. ISBN 9780231700528.
  16. ^ a b Uzer, Umut (2016),p.129
  17. ^ Uzer, Umut (2016). An Intellectual History of Turkish Nationalism. Utah: The University of Utah Press. p. 125. ISBN 9781607814658.
  18. ^ Landau, Jacob M. (April 2003). "Ultra-Nationalist Literature in the Turkish Republic: A Note on the Novels of Hüseyin Nihâl Atsiz". Middle Eastern Studies. Taylor & Francis, Ltd. 39 (2): 205. doi:10.1080/714004510. JSTOR 4284299. S2CID 144973696.
  19. ^ Ercilasun, Ahmet Bican (2018). Atsız, Türkçülüğün Mistik Önderi (in Turkish). pp. 25–27. ISBN 9786052221068.
  20. ^ Landau, Jacob M. (2003). "Ultra-Nationalist Literature in the Turkish Republic: A Note on the Novels of Hüseyin Nihâl Atsiz". Middle Eastern Studies. 39 (2): 209. doi:10.1080/714004510. ISSN 0026-3206. JSTOR 4284299. S2CID 144973696.
  21. ^ Aytürk, Ilker (April 2011). "The Racist Critics of Atatürk and Kemalism, from the 1930s to the 1960s". Journal of Contemporary History. Sage Publications. 46 (2): 314. doi:10.1177/0022009410392411. JSTOR 41305314. S2CID 159678425 – via JSTOR.
  22. ^ "Project MUSE - Antimodernism". muse.jhu.edu. Retrieved October 7, 2020.
  23. ^ Aytürk, Ilker (April 2011), p.316
  24. ^ Aytürk, Ilker (April 2011),p.316
  25. ^ Ercilasun, Ahmet Bican (2018). Atsız, Türkçülüğün Mistik Önderi (in Turkish). pp. 110–129. ISBN 9786052221068.
  26. ^ Aytürk, Ilker (April 2011),p.318
  27. ^ Uzer, Umut (2016), p.127
  28. ^ Karabulak, Ozan (2018). Atsız ve Türkçülüğün Yarım Asrı - Süreli Yayınlarda Türk Milliyetçiliğinin Seyri (1931-1975) (in Turkish). Ötüken Neşriyat. p. 184-207. ISBN 9786051556307.
  29. ^ Uzer, Umut (2016),pp.128–129
  30. ^ Uzer, Umut (2011). Identity and Turkish Foreign Policy : The Kemalist Influence in Cyprus and the Caucasus. Bloomsbury. pp. 48–49. ISBN 9781848855694.
  31. ^ "Ötüken – Şubat 1966". Issuu. Retrieved January 14, 2021.
  32. ^ Akgöz, Serkan; Sançar, Nejdet (2017). 1944 Irkçılık Turancılık Davası Mahkeme Günlükleri. ISBN 9786058359550.
  33. ^ a b Cenk Saraçoğlu, Nihal Atsız's World-View and Its Influences on the Shared Symbols, Rituals, Myths and Practices of the Ülkücü Movement
  34. ^ a b Landau, Jacob M. (1995). Pan-Turkism: From Irredentism to Cooperation. Indiana University Press. p. 88. ISBN 9780253328694.
  35. ^ a b The Racist Critics of Atatürk and Kemalism, from the 1930s to the 1960s, Ilker Aytürk (Bilkent University, Ankara), Journal of Contemporary History, SAGE Pub., 2011 [1]
  36. ^ Ofra Bengio, The Turkish-Israeli Relationship, New York-London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2009, p. 77.
  37. ^ Uzer, Umut (2016), pp.132–133
  38. ^ "Veda". January 11, 1952.
  39. ^ "Yobazlık Bir Fikir Müstehasesidir (Hüseyin Nihal ATSIZ)". bilgicik.com (in Turkish). October 22, 2007. Retrieved December 21, 2020.
  40. ^ Karabulak, Ozan (2018). Atsız ve Türkçülüğün Yarım Asrı - Süreli Yayınlarda Türk Milliyetçiliğinin Seyri (1931-1975) (in Turkish). Ötüken Neşriyat. p. 207-235. ISBN 9786051556307.
  41. ^ Dincsahin, Sakir (2015). State and Intellectuals in Turkey: The Life and Times of Niyazi Berkes, 1908–1988. Lexington Books. pp. 70–71. ISBN 978-0-7391-9132-3.
  42. ^ "Başvekil Saraçoğlu Şükrü'ye İkinci Açık Mektup". Hüseyin Nihal Atsız (in Turkish). April 1, 1944. Retrieved January 14, 2021.
  43. ^ Aytürk, Ilker (April 2011), p.318
  44. ^ "İçimizdeki Şeytanlar (Hüseyin Nihal ATSIZ) | Bilgicik.Com - Bilgicik.Com".
  45. ^ Göktuğ İpek (2016). "Basında Sabahattin Ali-Nihal Atsız davası". Akademik Bakış (in Turkish). 55.
  46. ^ a b Öztürkmen, Arzu (2005). "Folklore on Trial: Pertev Naili Boratav and the Denationalization of Turkish Folklore". Journal of Folklore Research. 42 (2): 185–216. doi:10.2979/JFR.2005.42.2.185. ISSN 0737-7037. JSTOR 3814600. S2CID 145810490.
  47. ^ a b "3 Mayıs Türkçülük Günü sözleri ve mesajları! Türkçülük Günü nasıl ortaya çıktı?". Sözcü (in Turkish). Retrieved December 6, 2020.
  48. ^ Ercilasun, Ahmet Bican (2018). Atsız, Türkçülüğün Mistik Önderi. ISBN 9786052221068.
  49. ^ De Tapia, Stephane (2011). Die völkisch-religiöse Bewegung im Nationalsozialismus: eine Beziehungs- und Konfliktgeschichte. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. p. 304. ISBN 9783525369227.
  50. ^ Uzer, Umut (2016). An Intellectual History of Turkish Nationalism. Utah: The University of Utah Press. p. 132. ISBN 9781607814658.
  51. ^ Ercilasun, Ahmet Bican (2018). Atsız, Türkçülüğün Mistik Önderi (in Turkish). ISBN 9786052221068.
  52. ^ Landau, Jacob M. (2004). Exploring Ottoman and Turkish History. Hurst & Company. p. 258. ISBN 978-1-85065-752-1.
  53. ^ Atsız (1959). Türkçülüğe Karşı Haçlı Seferi ve Çektiklerimiz (in Turkish).
  54. ^ "Yalan • Hüseyin Nihal Atsız". huseyinnihalatsiz.com. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
  55. ^ "En Sinsi Tehlike (Hüseyin Nihal ATSIZ)". bilgicik.com (in Turkish). October 20, 2007. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
  56. ^ Güngör, Erol; Kafalı, Mustafa; Sertkaya, Osman Fikri; Gömeç, Saadettin (2017). Atsız Armağanı I. ISBN 9786052028285.
  57. ^ Güngör, Erol; Kafalı, Mustafa; Sertkaya, Osman Fikri; Gömeç, Saadettin (2017). Atsız Armağanı II. ISBN 9786052028308.
  58. ^ (Once upon a time there was Atsız) inspired by his verses: "Vaktiyle bir Atsız varmış derlerse ne hoş / anılmakla hangi bir ruh olmaz ki sarhoş?" (If one day some say "once upon a time there was Atsız", I would be delighted / Whose soul would not be intoxicated by being remembered?) ISBN 978-605-86024-6-5
  59. ^ "Maltepe'de bir parka 'Nihal Atsız' adı verildi". www.hurriyet.com.tr (in Turkish). Retrieved January 14, 2021.
  60. ^ "Hocalı mitingini 'Genç Atsızlar' sabote etmiş", Radikal, 29-02-2012 [2].
  61. ^ "ANCA Condemns Anti-Armenian Protests in Turkey", Armenian Weekly, 26 February 2012 [3]
  62. ^ Nanore Barsoumian, "Banners Celebrating Genocide Displayed in Turkey", Armenian Weekly, 23 February 2015 [4].
  63. ^ a b c d e Landau, Jacob M. (2003). "Ultra-Nationalist Literature in the Turkish Republic: A Note on the Novels of Hüseyin Nihâl Atsiz". Middle Eastern Studies. 39 (2): 206. doi:10.1080/714004510. ISSN 0026-3206. JSTOR 4284299. S2CID 144973696 – via JSTOR.
  64. ^ Landau, Jacob M. (1981). Pan-Turkism in Turkey. London: C. Hurst & Company. p. 76. ISBN 0905838572.
  65. ^ Ercilasun, Ahmet Bican (2018). Atsız, Türkçülüğün Mistik Önderi. ISBN 9786052221068.
  66. ^ Uzer, Umut (2016), p.137
  67. ^ Ercilasun, Ahmet Bican (2018). Atsız, Türkçülüğün Mistik Önderi (in Turkish). ISBN 9786052221068.

External links Edit

  • Nihal ATSIZ (in Turkish)
  • Hüseyin Nihal ATSIZ (in Turkish)
  •   Media related to Nihal Atsız at Wikimedia Commons

nihal, atsız, hüseyin, nihâl, atsız, ottoman, turkish, حسين, نيهال, آتسز, january, 1905, december, 1975, prominent, turkish, ultranationalist, writer, novelist, poet, nihâl, atsız, self, identified, racist, turkist, turanist, later, became, critic, islam, call. Huseyin Nihal Atsiz Ottoman Turkish حسين نيهال آتسز January 12 1905 December 11 1975 5 was a prominent Turkish ultranationalist writer novelist and poet Nihal Atsiz self identified as a racist Pan Turkist and Turanist 6 7 8 a He later became a critic of Islam calling it a religion created by Arabs for Arabs 11 12 He was the author of over 30 books and numerous articles and was in strong opposition to the government of Ismet Inonu which he criticized for co operating with the communists 13 He was accused of being a sympathizer of the Nazi government 6 14 and plotting to overthrow the Turkish government 15 Nihal AtsizBornMehmet Nail oglu Huseyin NihalJanuary 12 1905Kadikoy Istanbul Ottoman Empire 1 2 3 4 DiedDecember 11 1975 1975 12 11 aged 70 Icerenkoy Istanbul TurkeyResting placeKaracaahmet Cemetery IstanbulOccupationWriter novelist poet and philosopherEducationHistory of literatureAlma materIstanbul High SchoolNotable worksBozkurtlarin Olumu Death of the Grey Wolves Deli Kurt Mad Wolf SpouseMehpare Hanim 1931 35 Bedriye Atsiz 1936 75 Children3 one adopted Signature Contents 1 Personal life 2 Education and professional life 3 Politics 4 Legal prosecution 5 Controversies 6 His legacy 6 1 Political groups 6 2 Turkism Day 7 Literary work 7 1 Magazines 7 2 Poetry and novels 8 Works 8 1 Novels 8 2 Stories 8 3 Poems 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksPersonal life EditNihal Atsiz was born on January 12 1905 at Kasimpasa Istanbul His father was navy commander Mehmet Nail Bey from the Ciftcioglu family of Torul Gumushane and his mother was Fatma Zehra daughter of navy commander Osman Fevzi Bey from the Kadioglu family of Trabzon Nihal Atsiz had two sons from his second wife Bedriye Atsiz who he married in 1935 16 Yagmur Atsiz a left wing journalist and writer and Dr Bugra Atsiz academician and nationalist writer he also had an adopted daughter Kaniye Atsiz The marriage was divorced in 1975 16 Atsiz had a younger brother Nejdet Sancar also a prominent personality of the pan Turkist ideology 17 The surname he adopted following the enforcement of the Surname Law by Ataturk means nameless or one who has not yet made himself a name Because in Old Turkic Culture you should be successful to deserve a name Atsiz name was also the name of at least two Seljuk emirs Atsiz 1098 1156 and Atsiz ibn Uwaq died 1078 or 1079 18 Education and professional life EditHe attended two French one of them was in Egypt one German and one Turkish secondary schools and Kadikoy High School 19 20 before he began to study at the Military School of Medicine in 1922 but was expelled due to his ultra nationalist views and activities as he declined to salute an officer of Arab origin who was of a superior rank than his in 1925 21 He then began to study at the Teachers College in Istanbul and the Istanbul University School of Literature and graduated from both in 1930 Following he became assistant to Professor Fuat Koprulu at the Istanbul University 22 He challenged the Turkish History Thesis and following this incident he was dismissed from the university in 1932 23 After he worked in high schools in Malatya and Edirne as a teacher but due to his persistent challenge of the Turkish History Thesis he often faced difficulties in his career 24 Following his imprisonment due to the Racism Turanism Trials in 1944 1945 he wasn t rehired as a teacher and only in 1949 he was employed at the Suleymaniye Library He returned to teaching for several years ultimately to return the Library in 1952 He was active there until 1969 25 26 After his retirement in 1969 he kept publishing Otuken 27 Politics Edit Early portraitNihal Atsiz was an important ideologue who lived during the early years of the Republic of Turkey His circle attacked Ataturk s leadership condemned Turkey s foreign policy and particularly the appeasement policy vis a vis the Soviet Union Most importantly his supporters ridiculed Kemalist attempts at connecting Turks with early Anatolian and Mesopotamian civilizations in the Ataturk era His views on Ataturk became more positive after the military coup against the Democrat Party in 1960 and he stressed Ataturk s nationalism in his writings 28 By the Justice Party he was offered to be candidate for parliamentary election in 1961 for Kutahya but he did not accept 29 Nihal Atsiz in the 1930sHe was foremost known for his nationalist views his active campaign against Turkish communists and his embracing of Tengriistic ancient Turkic traditions Atsiz viewed racism and pan Turkism as the two main components of Turkish nationalism and disputed the ideologues of the likes of Ziya Gokalp or Hamdullah Suphi Tanriover who didn t share his views regarding racism 30 however according to him racism is not about measuring head analysing blood or counting seven ancestors as a couple of phony zanies claimed 31 and during the Racism Turanism trials he stated he counts partly non Turks who served Turkishness a lot e g Bayezid I and don t have any feeling of another race Turks as well 32 He was among the authors that influenced a type of Turkish nationalism known as Ulkucu movement translated as idealist a nationalist movement later associated to Alparslan Turkes and which eventually led to a break with Atsiz s previous ideology of Pan Turkism on the grounds that it reconciles with Islam instead of denouncing it as Arab religion which Atsiz previously stated 33 He wrote that the Kipchaks in Lithuania and Kirghiz are from the same blood and therefore Turks but alien people living in Turkey like Jews or Negroes are not Turks even if they speak Turkish 34 Kemalism which had been condemned so harshly in his novel Dalkavuklar Gecesi The Night of the Sycophants is the founding ideology of the Republic of Turkey The nature and the type of Ataturk s nationalism during the Early Republican Period 1923 50 had since 1923 have interpreted Turkish identity under the guiding light of constitutional principles which equated Turkishness with being a Turkish citizen Identifying all Turkish citizens as Turks proper the three constitutions of the Republican Era were completely and positively blind to ethnic and religious differences between Turkish citizens and disassociated Turkishness from its popular meaning that is the name of an ethnic group Supporters of this view argue that Republican statesmen rejected the German model of ethnic nationalism and emulated the French model of civic nationalism by reducing Turkishness to a legal category only In other words citizens of Turkey who happened to be of Kurdish Greek Armenian Jewish or Assyrian descent had only to accept a plebiscite according to this view to take advantage of the opportunity of Turkification as far as their citizenship status was concerned and gaining full equality with ethnic Turks provided that they remained faithful to their side of the bargain 35 In 1934 he had written that the Jew was among the internal enemies of Turkey but in 1947 he praised the Jewish people for setting an example of strong nationalism Zionism indeed the Jews managed to get back the land they had lost 2 000 years ago and to revive Hebrew which has remained only in the books and turn into a spoken language 36 He thought Turks and non Turks should not intermarry and love has not the same value as nationalist feelings He further believed nationalism was superior than religion and Islam was a manifestation of the struggle of the Arabs to form a nation 37 He granted Islam as a national religion 38 but he criticized Islam in his later life 33 39 He also opposed Pan Islamism and stressed that Turks were already a great nation before they accepted Islam 40 Legal prosecution Edit Nihal Atsiz goes to trialAtsiz was prosecuted twice in 1944 Once he was prosecuted on the initiative of Sabahattin Ali for accusing him and 3 other communists of being a traitor and warning Prime Minister Sukru Saracoglu about them who established important positions in high schools and universities which Atsiz believed was with the help of the Minister of National Education 41 42 Atsiz knew Ali from before as they shared a room with him in the 1920s 43 when Sabahattin Ali was a nationalist 44 He was given a sentence of 6 months in the trial against Sabahattin Ali which was later reduced to a suspended sentence of 4 months 45 During the Atsiz Ali trial rallies by adherents to the political right wing spectrum in support of Atsiz were held on both court hearings on the 26 April and 3 May 1944 46 Many of the attendants of these rallies were arrested and later prosecuted during the so called Racism Turanism trial 46 During this trial Atsiz and 22 others amongst them also Reha Oguz Turkkan Alparslan Turkes were prosecuted for inciting racism and Turanism 47 48 He first got sentenced to 6 years and 6 months in prison after the sentence was lowered to 1 year and 6 months and at the end he along with the other nationalists received an amnesty 49 In 1973 despite his health problems he received a prison sentence of 15 months because of his writings against Kurdish separatists after 6 years of trials He wrote Kurds should leave Turkey if they insist on keeping the pro Kurdish propaganda and learn from the Armenians what happens to the people who challenge the Turkish nation Many people including mayors journalists writers university lecturers and students requested president Fahri Koruturk to release Atsiz from prison After 2 1 2 months he was pardoned 50 51 Controversies EditIn the Orhun Atsiz wrote in support for the establishment of a Greater Turkish Empire spanning from the Mediterranean Sea to the Pacific Ocean Corry Guttstadt mentioned His Turkism was based on ties of blood and race he advocated a return to pre Islamic Turkish beliefs 8 According to Jacob M Landau he was a sympathizer of the Nazi government 6 14 Landau in his book Exploring Ottoman and Turkish History states Atsiz was a great admirer of the race theories of Nazi Germany expressing some of them repeatedly in his own works during the 1930s and 1940s with the Turks labelled as the master race His articles insisted again and again that Pan Turkism could and should be achieved by war 52 Aside from favoring Nazi Germany for their war with Soviet Union 53 he denied these claims 54 as he started to publish his ideas even before Hitler was well known in Turkey 55 His legacy EditDuring his lifetime many scholars and authors who were influenced by Atsiz decided to give a present to him by writing an honorary book However he died before receiving the present which was published in 1976 56 57 Nineteen young academicians and authors assembled under a nationalist association Siyah Beyaz Kultur ve Sanat Platformu published a book on him Vaktiyle Bir Atsiz Varmis 58 consisted of articles and comparative studies on his works life and views In the Maltepe district in Istanbul a park is named after him 59 Political groups Edit In Turkey in 2012 a nationalist group calling itself the Atsiz Youth emerged participating in anti Armenian demonstrations in Istanbul carrying banners stating You are all Armenians You are all bastards in response to the slogan We are all Hrant Dink We are all Armenians 60 61 In February 2015 in response to the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide Anti Armenian banners of the Atsiz Youth appeared in cities around Turkey including banners in Istanbul condemning the Khojaly Genocide and a banner in Mugla proclaiming We celebrate the 100th anniversary of our country being cleared of Armenians 62 The grave of Nihal AtsizTurkism Day Edit On the 3 May 1945 Atsiz Alparslan Turkes Reha Oguz Turkkan Nejdet Sancar and others all imprisoned in the Tophane military prison held a meeting in memory of the rallies held on the 3 May 1944 in support of Atsiz during the trial between Atsiz and Sabahattin Ali This meeting was the beginning of the annual celebrations of the Turkism Day 47 Literary work EditHis essays about history are gathered and published as a book under the name of Turk Tarihinde Meseleler Issues in Turkic History He also served as a literature teacher for a number of years During his lifetime he wrote thirty eight poems six novels 63 Magazines Edit Atsiz published several academic essays about Ottoman literature and history He began to publish magazines in 1931 which he kept doing until 1975 Atsiz Mecmua was the first Pan Turk magazine which was published from 15 May 1931 to 25 September 1932 64 He also published Orhun from 1933 to 1934 and again from 1943 to 1944 34 Orkun as a successor of Orhun was first published in 1950 and later in 1962 63 65 His last magazine Otuken was published from 1964 to 1975 66 Poetry and novels Edit During his lifetime he wrote thirty eight poems and six novels 63 A famous politicised novel of his was Dalkavuklar Gecesi The Night of the Sycophants a historical allegory and critique of Kemalism 35 Published in 1941 it tells the story of political corruption during the Hittite era but actually referring in a roman a clef fashion to the injustices and arbitrariness of Ataturk s rule during the 1930s especially the Turkish History Thesis and the sycophants around him His historical epic novel Bozkurtlarin Olumu Death of the Grey Wolves is one of the most popular historical novels in Turkish literature 63 The book concerns the last days of the first Gok Turk Empire and the impossible rebellion of Prince Kur Sad and his forty warriors against the Chinese invaders referring to the attempt to kidnap the Chinese emperor by Ashina Jiesheshuai in 639 His original Turkic name is unknown Kursad is a made up name by Atsiz Its sequel Bozkurtlar Diriliyor Revival of the Grey Wolves tells the story of Urungu the unknown son of Kur Sad and the beginning of the second Gok Turk Empire Both novels were very popular in the Turkish society Ismet Hurmuzlu wrote a theater play on the subject and passages of the books were an optional part in literary classes 63 His third novel Deli Kurt Mad Wolf is about the mystic romance between a Sipahi warrior who was actually an unknown member of the Ottoman dynasty and a mysterious shamanist nomad woman in the early Ottoman Empire Atsiz wrote a satirical political comedy about the Inonu government Z Vitamini Vitamin Z which was about a fictional special vitamin which gives immortality to the dictator and his government It was published in 1959 containing eleven pages 63 His last novel Ruh Adam Soul Man is quite a complex psychological novel The book has a spiritual and mystical atmosphere full with surrealistic allegorical figures such as Yek who symbolizes Satan and Captain Seref who symbolizes Honour It has a complex story which is generally about the forbidden platonic love affair between an alcoholic ex army officer and a diabolical mysterious young high school student The plot develops on the reincarnation of two lovers which was a warrior banned from the army because of his love to the girl was greater than his love to his country in ancient nomad times It was inspired by Atsiz s own life 67 His poems are in the style of Pre Islamic literature and his common themes are idealism honour forbidden love war and history His complete poetic works except for a few have been published under the name of Yollarin Sonu End of Roads Works EditNovels Edit Dalkavuklar Gecesi The Night of the Sycophants Istanbul 1941 ISBN 978 975 437 804 7 Bozkurtlarin Olumu Death of the Grey Wolves Istanbul 1946 ISBN 978 975 437 800 9 Bozkurtlar Diriliyor Revival of the Grey Wolves Istanbul 1949 ISBN 978 975 437 800 9 Deli Kurt Mad Wolf Istanbul 1958 ISBN 978 975 437 801 6 Z Vitamini Vitamin Z Istanbul 1959 ISBN 978 975 437 804 7 Ruh Adam Soul Man Istanbul 1972 ISBN 978 975 437 802 3Stories Edit Donus The Return In Atsiz Mecmua sayi 2 1931 Orhun Sayi 10 1943 Sehidlerin Duasi Prayer of Martyrs In Atsiz Mecmua Sayi 3 1931 Orhun Sayi 12 1943 Erkek Kiz Boy Girl In Atsiz Mecmua Sayi 4 1931 Iki Onbasi Galiciya 1917 Two Corporals Galicia 1917 In Atsiz Mecmua Sayi 6 1931 Cinaralti Sayi 67 1942 Otuken Sayi 30 1966 Her Cagin Masali Boz Dogan ve Sari Yilan Tale of All Ages Grey Hawk and Yellow Snake In Otuken Sayi 28 1966 Poems Edit Yollarin Sonu End of Roads Istanbul 1946 ISBN 978 975 437 806 1Notes Edit He used the word Turanism as a synonym of Pan Turkism and didn t have the ideology of uniting all Ural Altaic peoples 9 10 References Edit Huseyin Nihal Atsiz in hakkinda Nihal Atsiz Kimdir Hayati Edebi Kisiligi Eserleri Huseyin Nihal Atsiz Turkce Bilgi Eskisehir Milli Irade Gazetesi Eskisehir Haberleri Olum yil donumunde Huseyin Nihal Atsiz kimdir Haberler com in Turkish December 11 2019 Retrieved February 24 2021 a b c Landau Jacob M 1981 Pan Turkism in Turkey London C Hurst amp Company p 94 ISBN 0905838572 Icimizdeki Seytanlar Huseyin Nihal Arsiz bilgicik com in Turkish October 22 2007 Retrieved January 14 2021 a b Guttstadt Corry May 20 2013 Turkey the Jews and the Holocaust Cambridge University Press p 40 ISBN 978 0 521 76991 4 Veda Huseyin Nihal ATSIZ Bilgicik Com Bilgicik Com Karabulak Ozan 2018 Atsiz ve Turkculugun Yarim Asri Sureli Yayinlarda Turk Milliyetciliginin Seyri 1931 1975 in Turkish Otuken Nesriyat p 275 ISBN 9786051556307 Cenk Saracoglu Nihal Atsiz s World View and Its Influences on the Shared Symbols Rituals Myths and Practices of the Ulkucu Movement Yobazlik Bir Fikir Mustehasesidir Huseyin Nihal Atsiz bilgicik com in Turkish October 22 2007 Retrieved December 21 2020 Biography of Nihal Atsiz Archived August 18 2009 at the Wayback Machine Turkish a b Guttstadt Corry 2009 Turkey the Jews and the Holocaust Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 76991 4 Ozkirimli Umut Sofos Spyros A 2008 Tormented by history nationalism in Greece and Turkey New York Columbia University Press p 136 ISBN 9780231700528 a b Uzer Umut 2016 p 129 Uzer Umut 2016 An Intellectual History of Turkish Nationalism Utah The University of Utah Press p 125 ISBN 9781607814658 Landau Jacob M April 2003 Ultra Nationalist Literature in the Turkish Republic A Note on the Novels of Huseyin Nihal Atsiz Middle Eastern Studies Taylor amp Francis Ltd 39 2 205 doi 10 1080 714004510 JSTOR 4284299 S2CID 144973696 Ercilasun Ahmet Bican 2018 Atsiz Turkculugun Mistik Onderi in Turkish pp 25 27 ISBN 9786052221068 Landau Jacob M 2003 Ultra Nationalist Literature in the Turkish Republic A Note on the Novels of Huseyin Nihal Atsiz Middle Eastern Studies 39 2 209 doi 10 1080 714004510 ISSN 0026 3206 JSTOR 4284299 S2CID 144973696 Ayturk Ilker April 2011 The Racist Critics of Ataturk and Kemalism from the 1930s to the 1960s Journal of Contemporary History Sage Publications 46 2 314 doi 10 1177 0022009410392411 JSTOR 41305314 S2CID 159678425 via JSTOR Project MUSE Antimodernism muse jhu edu Retrieved October 7 2020 Ayturk Ilker April 2011 p 316 Ayturk Ilker April 2011 p 316 Ercilasun Ahmet Bican 2018 Atsiz Turkculugun Mistik Onderi in Turkish pp 110 129 ISBN 9786052221068 Ayturk Ilker April 2011 p 318 Uzer Umut 2016 p 127 Karabulak Ozan 2018 Atsiz ve Turkculugun Yarim Asri Sureli Yayinlarda Turk Milliyetciliginin Seyri 1931 1975 in Turkish Otuken Nesriyat p 184 207 ISBN 9786051556307 Uzer Umut 2016 pp 128 129 Uzer Umut 2011 Identity and Turkish Foreign Policy The Kemalist Influence in Cyprus and the Caucasus Bloomsbury pp 48 49 ISBN 9781848855694 Otuken Subat 1966 Issuu Retrieved January 14 2021 Akgoz Serkan Sancar Nejdet 2017 1944 Irkcilik Turancilik Davasi Mahkeme Gunlukleri ISBN 9786058359550 a b Cenk Saracoglu Nihal Atsiz s World View and Its Influences on the Shared Symbols Rituals Myths and Practices of the Ulkucu Movement a b Landau Jacob M 1995 Pan Turkism From Irredentism to Cooperation Indiana University Press p 88 ISBN 9780253328694 a b The Racist Critics of Ataturk and Kemalism from the 1930s to the 1960s Ilker Ayturk Bilkent University Ankara Journal of Contemporary History SAGE Pub 2011 1 Ofra Bengio The Turkish Israeli Relationship New York London Palgrave MacMillan 2009 p 77 Uzer Umut 2016 pp 132 133 Veda January 11 1952 Yobazlik Bir Fikir Mustehasesidir Huseyin Nihal ATSIZ bilgicik com in Turkish October 22 2007 Retrieved December 21 2020 Karabulak Ozan 2018 Atsiz ve Turkculugun Yarim Asri Sureli Yayinlarda Turk Milliyetciliginin Seyri 1931 1975 in Turkish Otuken Nesriyat p 207 235 ISBN 9786051556307 Dincsahin Sakir 2015 State and Intellectuals in Turkey The Life and Times of Niyazi Berkes 1908 1988 Lexington Books pp 70 71 ISBN 978 0 7391 9132 3 Basvekil Saracoglu Sukru ye Ikinci Acik Mektup Huseyin Nihal Atsiz in Turkish April 1 1944 Retrieved January 14 2021 Ayturk Ilker April 2011 p 318 Icimizdeki Seytanlar Huseyin Nihal ATSIZ Bilgicik Com Bilgicik Com Goktug Ipek 2016 Basinda Sabahattin Ali Nihal Atsiz davasi Akademik Bakis in Turkish 55 a b Ozturkmen Arzu 2005 Folklore on Trial Pertev Naili Boratav and the Denationalization of Turkish Folklore Journal of Folklore Research 42 2 185 216 doi 10 2979 JFR 2005 42 2 185 ISSN 0737 7037 JSTOR 3814600 S2CID 145810490 a b 3 Mayis Turkculuk Gunu sozleri ve mesajlari Turkculuk Gunu nasil ortaya cikti Sozcu in Turkish Retrieved December 6 2020 Ercilasun Ahmet Bican 2018 Atsiz Turkculugun Mistik Onderi ISBN 9786052221068 De Tapia Stephane 2011 Die volkisch religiose Bewegung im Nationalsozialismus eine Beziehungs und Konfliktgeschichte Gottingen Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht p 304 ISBN 9783525369227 Uzer Umut 2016 An Intellectual History of Turkish Nationalism Utah The University of Utah Press p 132 ISBN 9781607814658 Ercilasun Ahmet Bican 2018 Atsiz Turkculugun Mistik Onderi in Turkish ISBN 9786052221068 Landau Jacob M 2004 Exploring Ottoman and Turkish History Hurst amp Company p 258 ISBN 978 1 85065 752 1 Atsiz 1959 Turkculuge Karsi Hacli Seferi ve Cektiklerimiz in Turkish Yalan Huseyin Nihal Atsiz huseyinnihalatsiz com Retrieved December 6 2020 En Sinsi Tehlike Huseyin Nihal ATSIZ bilgicik com in Turkish October 20 2007 Retrieved December 6 2020 Gungor Erol Kafali Mustafa Sertkaya Osman Fikri Gomec Saadettin 2017 Atsiz Armagani I ISBN 9786052028285 Gungor Erol Kafali Mustafa Sertkaya Osman Fikri Gomec Saadettin 2017 Atsiz Armagani II ISBN 9786052028308 Once upon a time there was Atsiz inspired by his verses Vaktiyle bir Atsiz varmis derlerse ne hos anilmakla hangi bir ruh olmaz ki sarhos If one day some say once upon a time there was Atsiz I would be delighted Whose soul would not be intoxicated by being remembered ISBN 978 605 86024 6 5 Maltepe de bir parka Nihal Atsiz adi verildi www hurriyet com tr in Turkish Retrieved January 14 2021 Hocali mitingini Genc Atsizlar sabote etmis Radikal 29 02 2012 2 ANCA Condemns Anti Armenian Protests in Turkey Armenian Weekly 26 February 2012 3 Nanore Barsoumian Banners Celebrating Genocide Displayed in Turkey Armenian Weekly 23 February 2015 4 a b c d e Landau Jacob M 2003 Ultra Nationalist Literature in the Turkish Republic A Note on the Novels of Huseyin Nihal Atsiz Middle Eastern Studies 39 2 206 doi 10 1080 714004510 ISSN 0026 3206 JSTOR 4284299 S2CID 144973696 via JSTOR Landau Jacob M 1981 Pan Turkism in Turkey London C Hurst amp Company p 76 ISBN 0905838572 Ercilasun Ahmet Bican 2018 Atsiz Turkculugun Mistik Onderi ISBN 9786052221068 Uzer Umut 2016 p 137 Ercilasun Ahmet Bican 2018 Atsiz Turkculugun Mistik Onderi in Turkish ISBN 9786052221068 External links EditNihal ATSIZ in Turkish Huseyin Nihal ATSIZ in Turkish Media related to Nihal Atsiz at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nihal Atsiz amp oldid 1171830907, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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