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Among the prominent statesmen of
the 20th Century few articulated the supreme importance of culture
as did Atatürk 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, Atatürk underlined the need for the
utilization of all the 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 the earlier civilizations of Anatolia
- including Hittite, Phrygian, Lydian, and others. Pre-Islamic
culture of the Turks became the subject of extensive research
which proved that, long before their Seljuk and Ottoman Empires,
the Turks had already created a civilization of their own. Atatürk
also stressed the folk arts of the countryside as the wellspring
of Turkish creativity.
The
visual and plastic arts (whose development had been arrested by
some bigoted Ottoman officials who claimed that the depiction of
the human form was idolatry) flourished during Atatürk's
Presidency. Many museums were opened. Architecture gained new
vigor. Classical Western music, opera and ballet as well as the
theater took impressive strides. Several hundred "People's
Houses" and the " People's Rooms" all over Turkey gave
local people and youngsters a wide variety of artistic activities,
sports, and other cultural affairs. Book and magazine publication
enjoyed a boom. Film industry started to grow. In all walks of
cultural life, Atatürk's inspiration created an upsurge.
Atatürk'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.
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