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Turkiye Commemorates the Canakkale (Gallipoli) Victory

TheCommander

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Turkiye has been commemorating the 98th anniversary of the victory against the attack by allied fleets on the Dardanelles Straits during World War I. The Canakkale War has a very special place in turkish hearts. My deepest respects and prays for those brave soldiers and great commanders who fought against enemies who intended to destroy and slave our great nation. May Allah all bless you and grand you his best place in the heaven.

Canakkale is a symbol of the independent Turkish nation.

When it comes to the integrity of the land and national independence, the Çanakkale Victory is the best proof of what a nation can do. Deprived of modern weapons of any kind, the people of Anatolia fought in unison against the best-equipped armies of the day to forge an unforgettable and glorious history. This victory also serves as a symbol and a source of inspiration for other nations waging a struggle for their independence and liberty.

Inspired by the Çanakkale Victory, our ancestors displayed another heroic struggle in the War of Independence in which they were surrounded on all sides by the enemy. This nation of ours which was handed down to us from our ancestors was founded on solid principles of unity and solidarity. No one should have any doubt that this spirit of unity and solidarity will be with us forever. Our crescent and star flag will forever wave on this sacred land that our ancestors gave their lives for.

Spirit of Canakkale

The greatest lesson that the Çanakkale Victory has given us is that nothing is unattainable when there is unity, solidarity and fraternity. Those who visit our martyrs' burial site, those who have read what is written on their tombstones can easily comprehend how this nation joined together. Our greatest responsibility to our martyrs and veterans is to understand the spirit of Çanakkale which unifies us as a single nation with a joint destiny and shared ideals. As Turkey embraces a happier and brighter future, the nation's greatest security is in fact this sense of responsibility, spirit and consciousness.


Walking Gallipoli

We would be right to understand “leafing through the pages of history and reading” as being synonymous with walking the Gallipoli Peninsula while consciously reflecting on it.
One feels the nature and nuances of Turkey’s desperate battle for survival along while walking here.

“Bastığın yerleri toprak diyerek geçme tanı, düşün altında binlerce kefensiz yatanı” “Don’t underestimate the ground where you step. Know. Think of all those lying shroudless below.”

Whether the writer of these lines, Mehmet Akif Ersoy, also the author of the Turkish national anthem, wrote them while thinking of Gallipoli is unknown. However we must appreciate the truth of Gallipoli, called Çanakkale in Turkish, to be able to recognize our yesterdays and foresee our tomorrows. If you are ready and want to find out what was experienced in those lands less than a century ago we invite you to accompany us on this journey.

Our first stop is the Kilitbahir Castle built by Sultan Mehmet II the Conqueror a few kilometers away from Eceabat. It was built immediately after the conquest of İstanbul to prevent any attempts to cross the strait toward the city. As a matter of fact it has been protecting the strait against enemies for centuries. If we continue from the castle we come across the Namazgah Fort. Though it appears quite normal when viewed from the sea, the hills themselves act as concealed shelters and arsenals hidden by an astounding natural camouflage.

Walking a few kilometers northwards takes us to the Mecidiye Fort, which was where the famous Corporal Seyit served during the sea campaign of March 18. This is where he fired the shot that sank the HMS Ocean. His statue, showing him hefting aloft the 250-kilogram projectile, is still there as a reminder of those days. Perhaps if you step on the place he managed a superhuman act, perhaps with divine help, and take a look at the strait you to may sense how the “invincible” fleet was defeated.

A little further away from the Rumeli Mecidiye Fort we come to another cemetery for martyrs named Havuzlar. We offer humble prayers for the spirit of Captain Kemal and his martyr friends and leaving the coastal area, advance toward the cape of the Gallipoli Peninsula. Immediately to our right is the Martyrs Cemetery of Soğanlıdere where lie the venerable martyrs who perished in the Kerevizdere combat. Now we are standing next to a promontory. Here is Alçıtepe, once known as Kirte. The ANZAC troops made painstaking endeavors to take this fortified hill. We suffered three major combats to protect it. Eight-thousand Turkish soldiers gave their lives to protect it during the first encounter, 10,000 during the second and 15,000 during the third; but the Turkish soldiers did not falter.

We turn right from the square of the village and go to the field hospital. This was to be Çanakkale’s greatest field hospital. It was so big that at times up to 50,000 wounded men were laid out here. However, it had one fatal setback; it was only around two kilometers inland. The enemy fleet shelled this place remorselessly with long range cannons on the night of June 28, 1915 until the dawn, though they knew very well that it was a hospital. This led some 18,000 injured Turkish soldiers to die.

A kilometer closer to the sea from the famous field hospital we see the Nuri Yamut Memorial. In the 1940s heaps of the bones of our fallen were still visible on the hills. Nuri Pasha could not stand this view and collected all of them and buried them underneath a memorial he built with his personal financial means. This memorial today sits atop around 10,000 interred bones.

Now we head back to Seddülbahir where just 67 Turkish soldiers endeavored to stop the advancement of 3,000 enemy troops backed by the cannon fire from the River Clayt and Albiom. They were so firm that they did not take even one step back. The enemy had to kill all of them to capture the place. While the British warplanes were flying over this village they wrote a report: “The landing bay looks like a lake of blood for 50 meters inward from the coastline.”

The next stop is Morto Bay where the French landed their troops. They had so many casualties during the landing campaign that they came to call this spot “morte” (dead). One can still find shrapnel fragments in the water.

map.jpg


We now look at the precipitous scenery before us: This is where the enemy got stuck. We remember that Winston Churchill, then first lord of the Admiralty, made plans for employing poisonous gas to surmount these steep rocks. It was July and there was a stiff landward breeze, making the conditions perfect for the employment of such a weapon. But when they brought the gas to Gallipoli the wind changed direction and began blowing seawards. Upon witnessing many extraordinary events like this, Churchill wrote this sentence in his chronicle of events, “In Gallipoli, we did not fight the Ottomans, we fought God, and were naturally defeated.”

We climb the Bloody Ridge which was attacked many times by the enemy ANZAC troops; hills that overnight turned crimson red. Just ahead of us lies the Martyrs Cemetery of the 57th Regiment. This is where Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, while still serving as a colonel, sent the regiment to face the enemy -- each and every soldier of the regiment died. The tomb of the commander of the regiment, Huseyin Avni Pasha, is a little above this point on the edge of a cliff. We pray for their souls.

We come across Atatürk’s monument on the ridge of the Conkbayırı -- where a shrapnel piece hit the watch in his breast pocket. This battle was of high importance for both Atatürk and our coming War of Independence. Atatürk, who made a name for himself in the Libyan city of Tripoli, proved to be an excellent leader at Gallipoli and would soon take the task of organizing the War of Independence.

Now the Anafartalar Plain is lying before us. This place reminds us of the combats that took place in the heat of August. One recalls those days, when the ANZAC troops attacked with all their power from Anzac Bay and Suvla Bay. When the age limit for recruits dropped to as low as 14 and when Hamilton begged Britain to send him one more unit. Britain was so obsessed with taking İstanbul that they responded positively and the Norfolk Royal Regiment, which was otherwise tasked with protecting the British Royal family, was sent. They were not going to hear from that regiment again, whose soldiers disappeared amidst a gray cloud, as the eyewitnesses say.

Conkbayırı is a hill of heroes that acted as a wall preventing the enemy from advancing toward İstanbul. After all the long years that have passed we stand here on this hill and pay homage to all those brave men who lived in trenches for months during the one-year Çanakkale battle and who did not hesitate for a second to give their lives for their country.

http://www.todayszaman.com/newsDeta...245313EECB6D1DDD0?newsId=105969&columnistId=0

Note: Please discuss and post related articles, pictures, and videos. DO NOT TURN THIS THREAD INTO A FLAME WAR AND TROLL FEST CONTEST.
 
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Arkadaslar, video'lar 10 dakikadan fazla, ama mutlaka izleyin.

The video's are Turkish, sorry to all non-Turkish speaking members.
 
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Arkadaslar, video'lar 10 dakikadan fazla, ama mutlaka izleyin.

The video's are Turkish, sorry to all non-Turkish speaking members.

Bi git ya ,ne alaka ,tam kazik bu Kanal ,hic sevmem ,tek baktigim TRT.
 
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Arkadaslar, video'lar 10 dakikadan fazla, ama mutlaka izleyin.

The video's are Turkish, sorry to all non-Turkish speaking members.

Thank you bro, both are great and touched my heart. Our religion is the biggest source to make us strong. Because of our faith, we beat the invaders.

Let`s listen a mother who was sending his son to the front;

A mother in the Bilecik station,

She was sending his son to the front.

Ooo my son I lost your father in Didymoteicho, your uncle in Shipka,

And your brother in Canakkale.

You're the last one I have.

If you do not come back, I will be entrusted to Allah.

However, go you also go.

If minarets will not have Azan

and if mosques will be without Qur'an, then you go, too...
 
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Have you ever heard about Otto Hersing?

First Time hearing his name, I did a quick Wiki to read about him. It isn't in the mainstream information what they teach in schools. maybe for history or military historians, but besides that no.
 
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I love how we are trolling Armenia with the celebration dates of our epic victory :enjoy:
 
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Turkiye has been commemorating the 98th anniversary of the victory against the attack by allied fleets on the Dardanelles Straits during World War I. The Canakkale War has a very special place in turkish hearts. My deepest respects and prays for those brave soldiers and great commanders who fought against enemies who intended to destroy and slave our great nation. May Allah all bless you and grand you his best place in the heaven.

Canakkale is a symbol of the independent Turkish nation.

When it comes to the integrity of the land and national independence, the Çanakkale Victory is the best proof of what a nation can do. Deprived of modern weapons of any kind, the people of Anatolia fought in unison against the best-equipped armies of the day to forge an unforgettable and glorious history. This victory also serves as a symbol and a source of inspiration for other nations waging a struggle for their independence and liberty.

Inspired by the Çanakkale Victory, our ancestors displayed another heroic struggle in the War of Independence in which they were surrounded on all sides by the enemy. This nation of ours which was handed down to us from our ancestors was founded on solid principles of unity and solidarity. No one should have any doubt that this spirit of unity and solidarity will be with us forever. Our crescent and star flag will forever wave on this sacred land that our ancestors gave their lives for.

Spirit of Canakkale

The greatest lesson that the Çanakkale Victory has given us is that nothing is unattainable when there is unity, solidarity and fraternity. Those who visit our martyrs' burial site, those who have read what is written on their tombstones can easily comprehend how this nation joined together. Our greatest responsibility to our martyrs and veterans is to understand the spirit of Çanakkale which unifies us as a single nation with a joint destiny and shared ideals. As Turkey embraces a happier and brighter future, the nation's greatest security is in fact this sense of responsibility, spirit and consciousness.


Walking Gallipoli

We would be right to understand “leafing through the pages of history and reading” as being synonymous with walking the Gallipoli Peninsula while consciously reflecting on it.
One feels the nature and nuances of Turkey’s desperate battle for survival along while walking here.

“Bastığın yerleri toprak diyerek geçme tanı, düşün altında binlerce kefensiz yatanı” “Don’t underestimate the ground where you step. Know. Think of all those lying shroudless below.”

Whether the writer of these lines, Mehmet Akif Ersoy, also the author of the Turkish national anthem, wrote them while thinking of Gallipoli is unknown. However we must appreciate the truth of Gallipoli, called Çanakkale in Turkish, to be able to recognize our yesterdays and foresee our tomorrows. If you are ready and want to find out what was experienced in those lands less than a century ago we invite you to accompany us on this journey.

Our first stop is the Kilitbahir Castle built by Sultan Mehmet II the Conqueror a few kilometers away from Eceabat. It was built immediately after the conquest of İstanbul to prevent any attempts to cross the strait toward the city. As a matter of fact it has been protecting the strait against enemies for centuries. If we continue from the castle we come across the Namazgah Fort. Though it appears quite normal when viewed from the sea, the hills themselves act as concealed shelters and arsenals hidden by an astounding natural camouflage.

Walking a few kilometers northwards takes us to the Mecidiye Fort, which was where the famous Corporal Seyit served during the sea campaign of March 18. This is where he fired the shot that sank the HMS Ocean. His statue, showing him hefting aloft the 250-kilogram projectile, is still there as a reminder of those days. Perhaps if you step on the place he managed a superhuman act, perhaps with divine help, and take a look at the strait you to may sense how the “invincible” fleet was defeated.

A little further away from the Rumeli Mecidiye Fort we come to another cemetery for martyrs named Havuzlar. We offer humble prayers for the spirit of Captain Kemal and his martyr friends and leaving the coastal area, advance toward the cape of the Gallipoli Peninsula. Immediately to our right is the Martyrs Cemetery of Soğanlıdere where lie the venerable martyrs who perished in the Kerevizdere combat. Now we are standing next to a promontory. Here is Alçıtepe, once known as Kirte. The ANZAC troops made painstaking endeavors to take this fortified hill. We suffered three major combats to protect it. Eight-thousand Turkish soldiers gave their lives to protect it during the first encounter, 10,000 during the second and 15,000 during the third; but the Turkish soldiers did not falter.

We turn right from the square of the village and go to the field hospital. This was to be Çanakkale’s greatest field hospital. It was so big that at times up to 50,000 wounded men were laid out here. However, it had one fatal setback; it was only around two kilometers inland. The enemy fleet shelled this place remorselessly with long range cannons on the night of June 28, 1915 until the dawn, though they knew very well that it was a hospital. This led some 18,000 injured Turkish soldiers to die.

A kilometer closer to the sea from the famous field hospital we see the Nuri Yamut Memorial. In the 1940s heaps of the bones of our fallen were still visible on the hills. Nuri Pasha could not stand this view and collected all of them and buried them underneath a memorial he built with his personal financial means. This memorial today sits atop around 10,000 interred bones.

Now we head back to Seddülbahir where just 67 Turkish soldiers endeavored to stop the advancement of 3,000 enemy troops backed by the cannon fire from the River Clayt and Albiom. They were so firm that they did not take even one step back. The enemy had to kill all of them to capture the place. While the British warplanes were flying over this village they wrote a report: “The landing bay looks like a lake of blood for 50 meters inward from the coastline.”

The next stop is Morto Bay where the French landed their troops. They had so many casualties during the landing campaign that they came to call this spot “morte” (dead). One can still find shrapnel fragments in the water.

map.jpg


We now look at the precipitous scenery before us: This is where the enemy got stuck. We remember that Winston Churchill, then first lord of the Admiralty, made plans for employing poisonous gas to surmount these steep rocks. It was July and there was a stiff landward breeze, making the conditions perfect for the employment of such a weapon. But when they brought the gas to Gallipoli the wind changed direction and began blowing seawards. Upon witnessing many extraordinary events like this, Churchill wrote this sentence in his chronicle of events, “In Gallipoli, we did not fight the Ottomans, we fought God, and were naturally defeated.”

We climb the Bloody Ridge which was attacked many times by the enemy ANZAC troops; hills that overnight turned crimson red. Just ahead of us lies the Martyrs Cemetery of the 57th Regiment. This is where Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, while still serving as a colonel, sent the regiment to face the enemy -- each and every soldier of the regiment died. The tomb of the commander of the regiment, Huseyin Avni Pasha, is a little above this point on the edge of a cliff. We pray for their souls.

We come across Atatürk’s monument on the ridge of the Conkbayırı -- where a shrapnel piece hit the watch in his breast pocket. This battle was of high importance for both Atatürk and our coming War of Independence. Atatürk, who made a name for himself in the Libyan city of Tripoli, proved to be an excellent leader at Gallipoli and would soon take the task of organizing the War of Independence.

Now the Anafartalar Plain is lying before us. This place reminds us of the combats that took place in the heat of August. One recalls those days, when the ANZAC troops attacked with all their power from Anzac Bay and Suvla Bay. When the age limit for recruits dropped to as low as 14 and when Hamilton begged Britain to send him one more unit. Britain was so obsessed with taking İstanbul that they responded positively and the Norfolk Royal Regiment, which was otherwise tasked with protecting the British Royal family, was sent. They were not going to hear from that regiment again, whose soldiers disappeared amidst a gray cloud, as the eyewitnesses say.

Conkbayırı is a hill of heroes that acted as a wall preventing the enemy from advancing toward İstanbul. After all the long years that have passed we stand here on this hill and pay homage to all those brave men who lived in trenches for months during the one-year Çanakkale battle and who did not hesitate for a second to give their lives for their country.

http://www.todayszaman.com/newsDetail_getNewsById.action;jsessionid=6B1CD7CD5 3D749F245313EECB6D1DDD0?newsId=105969&columnistId=0

Note: Please discuss and post related articles, pictures, and videos. DO NOT TURN THIS THREAD INTO A FLAME WAR AND TROLL FEST CONTEST.
I recently watched a movie 'Water Diviner' which was also made in the background of this war ...but can you give me a link for a movie truly based on this war ....it should have english subtitles as well !
 
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First Time hearing his name, I did a quick Wiki to read about him. It isn't in the mainstream information what they teach in schools. maybe for history or military historians, but besides that no.

He close (as a Submarine Commander) the Bosporus for Ally war ships and sinks many of them! He was one of the most reason why Ally can't get Gallipoli!
 
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