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Peace at Home, Peace in the World "Mankind is a single body and each nation a
part of that body. We must never say 'What does it matter to me if some part of
the world is ailing?' If there is such an illness, we must concern ourselves
with it as though we were having that illness."
A military hero who had won victory after victory against many foreign
invaders, Atatürk knew the value of peace and, during his Presidency, did his
utmost to secure and strengthen it throughout the world. Few of the giants of
the modern times have spoken with Atatürk's eloquence on the vital need to
create a world order based on peace, on the dignity of all human beings, and on
the constructive interdependence of all nations.

He stated, immediately after the Turkish War of Independence, that "peace is
the most effective way for nations to attain prosperity and happiness." Later as
he concluded treaties of friendship and created regional ententes, he affirmed:
" Turks are the friends of all civilized nations." The new Turkey established
cordial relations with all countries, including those powers which had tried a
few years earlier to wipe the Turks off the map. She did not pursue a policy of
expansionism, and never engaged in any act contrary to peaceful co-existence.
Atatürk signed pacts with Greece, Rumania and Yugoslavia in the Balkans, and
with Iran, Iraq and Afghanistan in the East. He maintained friendly relations
with the Soviet Union, the United States, England, Germany, Italy, France, and
all other states. In the early 1930s, he and the Greek Premier Venizelos
initiated and signed a treaty of peace and cooperation. In 1932, the League of
Nations invited Turkey to become a member.
Many of Atatürk's ideas and ideals presaged the principles enshrined in the
League of Nations and the United Nations." As clearly as I see daybreak, I have
the vision of the rise of the oppressed nations to their independence... If
lasting peace is sought, it is essential to adopt international measures to
improve the lot of the masses. Mankind's well-being should take the place of
hunger and oppression... Citizens of the world should be educated in such a way
that they shall no longer feel envy, avarice and vengefulness." In recognition
of Atatürk's untiring efforts to build peace, the League of Nations paid tribute
to him at his death in November 1938 as " a genius international peacemaker".
In 1981, on the occasion of the Centennial of his birth, the United Nations
and UNESCO honored the memory of the great Turkish Statesman who abhorred war -
" Unless the life of the nation faces peril, war is a crime," - and expressed
his faith in organized peace:" If war were to break out, nations would rush to
join their armed forces and national resources.
The swiftest and most effective measure is to establish an international
organization which would prove to the aggressor that its aggression cannot
pay."His creation of modern Turkey and his contribution to the world have made
Atatürk an historic figure of enduring influence. |