Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av
Osmanvallo
Det där lät sjukt faktiskt. Jag brukar oftast vara skeptiskt till okända källor men det där får en och börja fundera. Är det möjligt att Atatürk var en
dönmeh på något sätt? Vad är bevisen på att han inte var det.
Blev lite mer chockad när jag läste detta:
Citat:
In 1911 in the Hotel Kamenetz in Jerusalem, Itamar Ben Avi, a newspaperman and writer who was the son of Eleazer Ben Yehudah (credited as the main proponent of the establishment of Modern Hebrew) met with a young Turkish Army officer. After enjoying a good quantity of Arak, the officer, Col. Mustafa Kemal, turned to his drinking partner and recited the “Shema” in fluent Hebrew and indicated that he came from a Doenmeh family. They met again on a few occasions and Kemal filled in more of his background. This man was of course to become General Kemal Ataturk, founder of modern Turkey.
Citat:
"Joachim Prinze (1902-1988), who was president of the American Jewish Congress from 1958 to 1966, writes:
“Among the leaders of the revolution which resulted in a more modern government in Turkey were Djavid Bey and Mustafa Kemal. Both were ardent doenmehs. Djavid Bey became minister of finance; Mustafa Kemal became the leader of the new regime and had adopted the name of Ataturk. His opponents tried to use his doenmeh background to unseat him, but without success. Too many of the Young Turks in the newly formed revolutionary Cabinet prayed to Allah, but had as their real prophet Shabtai Zvi, the Messiah of Smyrna”.