THE ROLE OF THE YOUNG OTTOMANS IN THE TRANSFORMATION OF
MENTALITY IN THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE
THE THESIS SUMBITTED TO
THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES
OF
MIDDLE EAST TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY
I hereby declare that all information in this document has been obtained and
presented in accordance with academic rules and ethical conduct. I also
declare that, as required by these rules and conduct, I have fully cited and
referenced all material and results that are not original to this work.
ABSTRACT
THE ROLE OF THE YOUNG OTTOMANS IN THE TRANSFORMATION OF
MENTALITY IN THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE
May 2007, 85 pages
The main topic of this study is determining the role of the Young Ottomans in
mentality transformation in the Ottoman Empire from the traditional one to a
modern one. Their proposals aim to change three patterns of the Ottoman state and
society. The relation between state and the individual is the first issue. They tried to
create an Ottoman citizenry, enhanced with freedom and political rights, from a
reaya. In the second step they imagined a modern society. Their proposals, which
imply a secular system, aim to secure the people from the yoke of the tradition and
some religious bonds. Nationalism is also important for the abolition of the
traditional stratification of the Ottoman society. As a last point, the individual,
himself, is tried to be changed into an active, enthusiastic, this-worldly, and rational
being. However what is interesting is that while their main concern had been the
survival of the Ottoman Empire and the Islamic order, their proposals had the
potential to undermine these very institutions. This study will try to find the traces
of these contradictions and the beginning of a mental transformation.
Keywords: Mentality, Ottoman Ideal, Mental Transformation, Freedom.
v
ÖZ
OSMANLI MPARATORLUGU’NDAK ZHNYET DEGSMNDE GENÇ
OSMANLILAR’IN OYNADIGI ROL
Ferhat Kaplan
Yüksek Lisans, Siyaset Bilimi ve Kamu Yönetimi Bölümü
Tez Yöneticisi: Yrd. Doç. Dr. Kürsad Ertugrul
Mayıs 2006, 85 Sayfa
Bu çalısmanın ana baslıgı Osmanlı mparatorlugu’ndaki geleneksel zihniyetin
modern zihniyete dönüsümünde Genç Osmanlılar hareketinin oynadıgı rolü tespit
etmektir. Bu hareketin önerilerinin amacı Osmanlı’daki üç temel ögeyi degistirmek
üzerine kurulmustur. Devlet ile birey arasındaki iliski ilk konudur. Bunlar reayadan
hürriyet mevhumu ve siyasi haklarla güçlendirilmis bir birey yaratmaya
çalısmıslardır. kinci asamada modern bir toplum hayali kurmuslardır. Laikligi ima
eden önerilerinin amacı toplumu önünü tıkayan geleneksel ve bir takım dini
baglardan kurtarmayı hedeflemistir. Milliyetçilik vurguları ise Osmanlı geleneksel
toplum yapılanmasının sonunu hazırlaması açısından önemlidir. Son bir nokta
olarak ise aktif, bu dünya konusunda istekli ve aklıyla hareket eden bir birey
yaratma konusundaki çabaları sayılabilir. Ancak ilginç olan su ki temel kaygılarının
Osmanlı devletini ve slami düzeni korumak ve yasatmak olmasına ragmen
getirdikleri önerilerin tam da bu kurumların altını oyuyor olmasıdır. Bu çalısma iste
bu çeliskileri ve bir zihniyet dönüsümünün baslangıcının izlerini bulmaya
çalısacaktır.
Anahtar kelimeler: Zihniyet, Osmanlı deali, Zihniyet Dönüsümü, Hürriyet.
vi
To family but especially my brother and his family.
vii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I would like to thank my supervisor for his patience and support. I am also grateful
to the instructors whose courses offered me wide and different perspectives during
my Master program.
I would like to express my special thanks to the members of examining committee
Prof. Dr. Eyüp Özveren and Assist. Prof Dr. Necmi Erdogan because of their
patience and care. Their critics helped me too much to complete the study.
I have to mention both financial and moral support of my brother lhan Kaplan, his
wife Aslı Kaplan and my nephew Zeynep Kaplan. Also the support of my family is
unforgettable during my education. I thank them all for helping me realize a dream.
I am sure I forget many to mention here. This study could not be shaped without the
existence of all the people in my life.
viii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PLAGIARISM…………………………………………………………………..iii
ABSTRACT……………………………………………………………………..iv
ÖZ………………………………………………………………………………..v
DEDICATION…………………………………………………………………..vi
ACKOWLEDGEMENT………………………………………………………...vii
TABLE OF CONTENTS………………………………………………………..vii
INTRODUCTION………………………………………………………………..1
CHAPTER
1.ON METHODOLOGY………………………………………………………..14
2.THE HISTORICAL CONTEXT………………………………………………24
3.THE OTTOMAN IDEAL……………………………………………………..32
4.THE MAN AND THE STATE………………………………………………..44
5.THE SOCIETY (OR THE COMMUNITY)…………………………………..57
5.1.Secularism…………………………………………………………………58
5.2.Nationalism………………………………………………………………...62
6.THE MENTALITY OF THE ORDINARY MAN……………………….……68
CONCLUSSION……………………………………………………………..…..78
REFERENCES………………………………………………………………..….82
1
INTRODUCTION
There have been different theories on the causes of the “decline” and demise
of the Ottoman Empire1; some argue that the lives of the states or civilizations
resemble the life of human, so the civilizations have had a common and inevitable
fate that they disappear at the end of their natural lives. In this respect the Ottoman
Empire, as a civilization with a long life, encountered its inevitable fate and
demised; the First World War only accelerated this process. This theory is derived
from the study of Ibn Khaldun, the Mukkadimma.
According to another theory, the Empire could not make necessary moves
and transformations in the face of technological and scientific developments of the
European states because of the clumsiness of the administrators and the
conservatism of the ulama. As a result, the effectiveness and power of the Ottoman
Empire declined against the European powers and it became a semi-colonial country
at the disposal of Western capitalism. According to the proponents of this theory, the
Empire could have survived and might have been a part of the Western capitalism if
it only had made necessary reforms at the right time.
It is certain that both theories have brought important contributions for the
understanding of the “decline” and demise of the Ottoman Empire, but they also
ignore some important points: while first one depends highly on fate, the second one
ignores the social stratification of the Ottoman Empire. It requires the Empire to
make quick adaptations to the changing conditions in order to survive. Besides, it
does not pay enough attention to the mentality of the Ottoman people for the success
of such an adaptation.
However it can be argued that the main reason behind the disappearance of
the Ottoman Empire from the political arena is the mentality imposed by both
1 We should state at the beginning that, we do not think it is a demise of decline but decay. As will be
expressed, the main system of the Empire worked till its disappearance, however the effectiveness of
this system could not resist against the changing conditions.
2
Islamic doctrines and traditional order on the state, society and the ordinary people.
This mentality did not stimulate the “elements”2 of the Empire to act in the same
way as the elements of European capitalist states.
First of all, this mentality did not let the state apply mercantilist policies
because the main duty of the administrators was the satisfaction of the basic needs of
their subjects. Also the state could not pull away the subjects from their lands by
force to create cheap labor for a probable capitalist class. Secondly, this mentality
did not let the society challenge the state to obtain certain rights. Lastly, it did not let
ordinary man concentrate on worldly affairs.
When the elements of the Western countries were considered, a different
picture would be seen. In those countries the state could use their subjects to satisfy
the needs of the bourgeoisie. They also had colonial lands for the exchange of
commodities and the supply of labor. Their societies were also dynamic and had the
power to get political rights from the state. The individualism was also dominant;
there have been furious, selfish and eager beings living for themselves in that
particular geography.
The comparison of these two different mentalities has been one of the main
determinants of the analysis and understanding of the Ottoman and Turkish
modernization. This is also true for this study, but we will try to avoid two main
tendencies while approaching the issue. First one is the glorification and
mystification of this mentality like both some Turkish nationalists and Islamists do.
Such a tendency naturally bears its antithesis, because, first of all, the Ottoman
Empire was not a state of Islam as Islamists praised, but an Islamic state. This means
that it used Islam to legalize and legitimize its existence. The state has always been
prior to religion. Second, the Ottoman Empire never let the dominance of one ethnic
group or Millet in the society. To this effect, it even tried to keep the Turks away
from politics. In addition to these the mentality of the Ottoman Empire and society
2 Subjects of the Empire, the rulers and society (millets, communities, traditional orgnizations…etc.)
3
do not represent any ideal type which should be applied today. It has many
deficiencies and contradictions.
The other tendency, which should be avoided, accepts the mentality of the
Empire as essentially inferior. It is a determinist and positivist approach to the
historical facts.3 In this tendency, it is supposed that the mentality of the Empire was
inferior compared to European liberalism and capitalism. However, if it were, the
Empire could not stand against the assaults of the European powers. Besides, this
tendency bears a belief that accepts the European culture and mentality as superior
and ideal. However, such a tendency means the denial of the massacres and disasters
caused by the European states all around the world.
Anyway, in this study one of the issues focused on will be the mentality
dominant in the Ottoman Empire. The ideal mentality imposed by the fundamental
sources (Canonic and traditional) will be important for this study. It is well known
that the realities had been different from theories, just as the abundance of the texts,
written for advice to both administrators and ordinary man, are the proofs of the
deviations from the ideal. Yet, the need for modernization of the Ottoman Empire
started when the deviations could not be contained by the traditional and religious
sources.
The studies about the modernization of the Ottoman Empire fall into two
main streams. In the first group the reform attempts of the Ottoman state are focused
and the modernization of the Empire is attempted to be understood in terms of the
effects of these reforms. The main tendency of these studies is to start the
modernization of the Empire by the reform attempts of Selim III. Enver Ziya Karal
(1995) follows the traces of the reforms and tries to show the repercussions of these
3 This approach was dominant during the early period of Turkish Republic.According to the belief of
the intellectuals and administrators of this period, Turkish nation could prosper if correct methods,
which were not adapted by the Ottoman Empire at the right time, are applied. The criticism of the
Ottoman Empire had been the main determinant of their methodology. The Empire collapsed because
it could not adopt the mentality of the West. There have always been the represantatives of this
philosophy until present day. The studies of Taner Timur (1998) can be given as examples of this
tendency.
4
reforms in Ottoman state and in its international relations. However the social
dimension of these reforms is omitted by his studies: the effects of the reforms on
the lives of the Ottoman people are ignored by him. Berkes (1964) also follows such
a methodology. But his focus is wider than Karal. Berkes inspects the changes in the
institutions of the Empire with the reforms promulgated by the state. He also tries to
reveal the effects of the reforms on the society of the Empire through his focus on
the institutional changes. However he does not pay enough attention to the effects of
the modernization on micro lives. He is concerned with wider groups and
institutions.
The proponents of the second group claim that the research on modernization
phenomenon needs wider perspective. It can be neither constrained within the period
starting with the reform attempt of Selim III, nor understood only focusing on
institutional changes. The Empire always adopted innovations of the Europe within
its philosophy and mentality (Grant 2006). The scope of the effects of modernization
was also wider than what the first group focused (Ortaylı 1995). Individuals felt the
changing conditions in their micro life. This study will also try to use this wider
perspective.
The nineteenth century had been the period in which the Ottoman Empire
tried to change its character; the society and subjects experienced on dilemma
between the traditional and religious order and the success and influence of the
West. The traditional sources started to be ineffective against the challenge of the
European penetration, and a new voice represented by a certain group of intellectual
and bureaucratic cadre was attempted to respond to the social and political problems.
The rapid and multiple losses of lands in Europe and military failures caused
Ottomans drop the belief in their superiority and forced them to observe and
understand their European counterparts. The Empire started to see her survival in
alliance with one or more European states. This led to the increasing influence of
foreign office bureaucrats. These bureaucrats had contacts with Europe thanks to
5
either being an official in the Translation Bureau or being appointed to the
embassies. They were influenced by the European civilization and prosperity of
these states. They aspired their state to take part in modern civilization.
Though they could not give up some basic notions of the Ottoman culture,
they were different from the classic Ottoman bureaucrat and intelligentsia. What
they tried to do was the synthesis of the concepts and mentalities of two cultures.
Namely, they tried to remain Ottoman, but, at the same time, become modern and
prosper as a European. We can see the members of this class while offering or
applying reforms in the Ottoman state administration or while writing books and
articles in newspapers expressing their proposals about the transformation of state
and society.
As is just said, this new type of intelligentsia tried to harmonize the concepts
of the European Enlightenment with the concepts of the Ottoman tradition and
Islam. However while bringing the European traditions they could not understand
that they undermined the very bases of the institutions on which they themselves and
the Ottoman culture stand. The aspects of the European culture contained the
abandonment of the basic institutions and mentality of the Ottoman society and
state.
Of course it was impossible for them to realize the probable consequences of
their ideal in that time, but we may now see this transformation in retrospect. They
tried to bring a different look to time, property, individual, nature, world…etc., and
make the Ottoman Empire a member of the civilized world.
The members of this class of intelligentsia either held official posts or tried
to express their views outside the governmental circle. In this study a group of
intelligentsia, which can be considered in both categories4, will be the main actors to
4 The Young Ottomans were officials in origin. Their experience of publishing, for some time, went
hand in hand with their official posts. The period, in which they were out of administrative circle,
was their most productive times for the name of political agitation.
6
be focused on. They are called the Young Ottomans in the history of Turkish
modernization. We will try to evaluate their role in the transformation of the
Ottoman traditional mentality towards a modernist one.
There are, of course, some certain reasons why we choose the Young
Ottomans. First of all, they can be considered as the first modern systematic
opposition movement in the Ottoman Empire. The Empire did ever experience
before such a systematic opposition movement because the head of the state had
been the Sultan. The Sultanate was adorned with traditional and religious sublimity.
The Sultan was the shadow of God on earth, so the objection towards him meant the
opposition against the religion and örf5. The Sultan could immediately execute any
opposition attempt. Beside this, the administration of the state could be handled by
the kul6 of the Sultan; there were no vacuum left for others to express their views.
Because both financial and intellectual sources concentrated at the center, no one or
no group managed to challenge the center. In this respect, the members of the Young
Ottoman movement did not face with, at least, one of these obstacles, because with
the Tanzimat and the increasing influence of bureaucracy, the administration of the
state was transferred from the Palace to the Sublime Porte; that’s the control of the
administration was passed to the bureaucrats. Thanks to this, the Young Ottomans
could target the administration by excluding the Sultan from their opposition.
Second, the members of this movement left behind important material for the
researchers, so that one can understand their position, ideology and mood from their
writings. Today we have articles poems, novels, etc. from which we can drive
important information about them. Because they used their literary skills as an
instrument to express their views and ideologies, the aspects of their standings can
still be seen in their works. However two points should be clarified: First they did
not concentrate on one field; they did not have thorough knowledge in specific
fields; instead they dealt with every problem of the Empire. So they approached the
5 The traditions driven from Turkish state and society heritage.
6 The subjects of the Sultan. They were also called reaya (the flock)
7
science and philosophy pragmatically and learnt them superficially. Namely, they
had an encyclopedic knowledge. They could not offer thorough information about
economy, sociology, philosophy, politics, etc. and second, because they used mainly
newspapers to inform the public, there had been controversies in their writings. The
daily events sometimes affected their perspective. Nevertheless, thanks to their
effort to inform the public, they left behind voluminous textual material.
The last reason is also the main reason in our choice. As we have already
mentioned above, they were also the members of the new type of intelligentsia who
lived between the old and the new. They were neither as conservative as the
intelligentsia of the earlier periods nor as radical as the following generations, but
they were crucial intermediaries for the transfer of new ideas. They were the
initiators of the adaptation of the concepts of European philosophical heritage in the
Ottoman soil. The “Young Turks” of the latter period became more radical and
braver thanks to the license provided by the Young Ottomans (especially Namık
Kemal). They were the individuals who lived the duality of the Tanzimat in their
own existence and reflected this duality with their ideologies; the duality which
would end in favor of the new. The Young Ottomans expressed Seriat and the
Ottoman culture and identity as the bases of their ideology but the proposals they
brought undermined these institutions, and opened new vistas.
A last point is that they were the first Islamist ideologists. What do we mean?
As is well known, the Ottoman Empire always showed itself as the banner holder of
Islam. The Empire exploited religion to legitimize itself. The main ideology of the
Empire and all Muslims was Islam, but not Islamism. There was no challenge
against Islam, so no need to be an Islamist. The glory and effectiveness of the
religion filled every sphere of the community. However when the superiority of the
Empire had been lost, the early proposals suggested a return to the order of the
classical age. The basic institutions, the understanding of state, the society and the
subject were not changed. But these new bureaucrats had a different attitude. They
also accepted the superiority of Islam and Ottoman culture but at the same time they
8
tried to find the corollaries for European prosperity and development in the Islamic
and traditional sources. This was in keeping with the common reflex of the
communities outside the Western world. They could not see that their ideology
would lead to a different mentality contrary to the one they tried to preserve.
Shortly, they generated an Islamist ideology. They tried to reconcile Islamic doctrine
with the Western concepts. However, because they took a defensive position against
Europe, what they did became the adaptation of Islam to European philosophy. They
created a hybrid philosophy which is not Islam anymore. While Islam has been a
different ideology than capitalism and Western liberalism, this Islamism became an
auxiliary ideology of capitalism.
When we talk about the Young Ottomans, mainly, three figures are
prominent: Namık Kemal, Ziya Pasha and Ali Suavi. They were the most active and
productive members of the movement, and made important contributions to the
opposition movement with their literary skills. In fact there are important differences
in their ideologies, and these differences increased in time, but they can be
considered as a group of individuals gathered for the same purpose. In our analysis,
Namık Kemal will be mentioned more because of his literary talent and, relatively,
more thorough knowledge.
This group has always attracted the interest of the scholars studying on the
modernization of the Ottoman Empire. The first study about the Young Ottomans
belongs to an ex-member of the movement, Ebuzziya Tevfik (1973). However, the
historical facts are, sometimes, sacrificed for a romantic description, and his
sympathy towards Namık Kemal. The analysis of their ideology is also not the
interest of this study. There are also studies focusing on only the most famous
member of the movement, Namık Kemal. Mithat Cemal Kuntay (1946) is the
prominent example in this trend. However his study gives the life of Namık Kemal
like a heroic story. It is hard also in this study to find a through analysis. There are
articles published by the scholars about Namık Kemal at the anniversaries of birth
and death of him. They were the studies focusing on one dimension of the ideology
9
of Namık Kemal7. Besides, the sympathy towards Namık Kemal is apparent in all
these studies. (Buradaki son cümle çıkarıldı)
The article of hsan Sungu (1999) is another study in the field. In his study,
Sungu deals with the objections of the Young Ottomans towards the Tanzimat
administration. The study is mainly composed of the quotations of the members of
the Young Ottoman movement. Their criticisms are represented by the study. We
cannot find the analysis of the ideology of the Young Ottomans.
The scholars studying on the modernization of the Empire, inevitably,
mentioned the movement. We can find important and illuminating ideas about the
movement in these studies. For instances, Berkes (1964) names it as an important
opposition movement against the authority of the Tanzimat administration. Bernard
Lewis (1972) also emphasizes their importance in the modernization of the Ottoman
Empire8. However these studies focus rather on a wider picture, so it is not proper to
expect more thorough analysis from these studies.
There are also studies which try to understand the modernization of the
Ottoman Empire by analyzing the standings of the prominent figures in the Turkish
philosophical history. Also the ideology of the Young Ottomans attracted the
interest of these studies. Ülken (1966, 1999) is an important scholar in this trend. He
sketches out the ideological standings of each member of the movement. His critical
position is illuminative. He tries to reveal the philosophical perspective of the
members with reference to the effects of the European thought on their ideologies.
The main difference between Ülken’s studies and this study is that Ülken does not
mention the effects of the ideologies of the Young Ottomans on society and on the
following generations. Also his study is not a mentality inspection. The aim is to
analyze the ideology of the prominent figures in the movement.
7 see Gökçün (1955), Fındıkoglu (1939), Boran (1942), Berkes (1942), Banarlı (1947), Aksin (1988)
and Aktas (1936)
8 Also see Ortaylı (1995), Carter (1980), Karpat (2001, 2006), Mardin (2002) and Shaw (1985)
10
In addition, Tanpınar (1985) evaluates the members of the movement not
only from the perspective of their positions in the literature but also in terms of their
ideological standpoints. His ingenious claims about the members of the Young
Ottomans are beyond the history of 19th century Turkish literature. His interest on
the mentality of the societies and comparison between the mentalities of the East
and West gives his work an outstanding value. He tries to reveal the traces of the
mentality changes implied in the studies of the Young Ottomans. In fact what we
will do in this study is to enlarge these allusions and try to see the traces of them on
the state, society, individual and economy.
The most important and thorough study in this field belongs to Serif Mardin
(2000). This study specifically focuses on the Young Ottoman movement. He
analyzes both the philosophical background inherited by the members of the
movement and the intellectual atmosphere in which their ideologies flourished. The
analysis of the ideology of each member of the movement consists of the main body
of this study. He uses a critical methodology for his analysis. The study gives also
the cultural background of the members. We can see how the members of the
movement tried to match the traditional and religious institutions and beliefs of the
Ottoman Empire with the philosophical notions of the West. Their contradictions
and deficiencies are also shown in this study. However the aim of Mardin’s study is
not to show the repercussions of this contradictions and deficiencies for the
mentality of the Ottoman state and society. As will be shown in this study, this
contradictions and deficiencies meant some open ended claims which would be the
bases for the ideologies of the following generations.
In this study, the historical realities (or context) will be the base on which the
ideological analysis of these figures stands. We will try to show their effects and the
importance of their activities and declarations within the period they occurred.
As is mentioned above, the aim of the study is to show the contributions of
the Young Ottomans in the transformation of Ottoman mind from Ottoman ideal
11
type to more individualist, liberal and somehow capitalist type. Their attempt for
generating Ottoman-Turkish modernity will be brought under scrutiny. But it
should be stated that we do not claim that this transformation was initiated,
accelerated or completed by these men. All we want to show is in what points these
men opened ways for further changes. It is known that the latter Young Turks tried
to legalize their movement with the arguments already used and introduced by
Namık Kemal and his friends.
The body of this study will be composed of six chapters. In the first chapter
the methodology of this study will be given. The Weberian approach of social
sciences will be mentioned in order to clarify the two concepts; mentality and
morality. They will be accepted as the main determinants in the behavior of the
social actors. Besides, the similar studies in the field will also be mentioned in this
chapter, and the difference of this study will be clarified.
Just after, the historical context of the period, between 1865 and 1876, will
be given briefly. This period may rightly be labeled as the longest decade of “the
longest century of the Ottoman Empire” (Ortaylı 1995). The repercussions of the
two edicts (Gulhane and Islahat) mixed with the turmoil in European history and the
Ottoman social harmony. The real face of the agitations of the Young Ottomans can
be understood clearly under this atmosphere.
What is meant by Ottoman ideal must be explained properly; so in the third
chapter the worldviews of the elements of Ottoman society will be the described.
The atmosphere in which the mentality is shaped will be illuminated. This chapter
also bears the phenomenon which implies that the transformation of the institutions
mentioned prepares the disappearance of their essence in micro and macro levels.
In the following chapter, the attempt of the Young Ottomans to create a
citizenry from reaya will be evaluated. They hoped that the emergence of free
individuals with political rights would undermine the despotism of the Sublime
12
Porte and they would become proponents of the reforms in the Ottoman Empire. In
this respect, they conceptualized ‘freedom’ and emphasized personal rights. Their
social contract theories also determine the scope of the state which was too norrow
for the Ottoman Empire. They also questioned the basic institutions of the Ottoman
Empire such as the Sultanate and the Caliphate. It will be seen that their proposals
prepared the eventual dissolution of both institutions.
There will be two related concepts in the title of chapter five; secularism and
nationalism. It will be seen that the main tool which led the Young Ottomans to
secular notions was their emphasis on reason. When they suggested that the state
must be administrated by reason, science and technology, they also criticized the
traditional state understanding of the Ottoman Empire. Besides, their clear proposals
about the distinction between worldly affairs and moral dimension contradict the
unlimited scope of Islam. On the other side, the legal dimension of the secular
proposals prepared the end of the millet system which had been the guarantee of the
stability in the classical period of the Ottoman Empire.
The nationalism of the Young Ottomans also bore notions which
contradicted the prevailing social structure of the Ottoman society. They claimed
they are Ottoman nationalists and tried to gather the Ottoman nations under a
common identity and flag. However, because of the lack of an Ottoman nation as
such, they praised the Turks. This tendency helped the agitators of the communities
in the way of dissolution from the Empire.
In the last chapter, the traces of the mentality transformation of the ordinary
people will be analyzed. The changing conditions which affected the daily life of the
people forced them to adapt new rules. They tried to reconcile their beliefs and
traditions. In this respect the Young Ottomans had been their voice in this
reconciliation. However, as will be seen, this reconciliation in favor of modernism
and capitalism led to depreciation of Islamic belief and traditional understanding.
13
Also as a result of this reconciliation, the world view of the people of the Empire
was exposed to dramatic changes.
In this thesis, it is going to be argued that the ideational values of the Young
Ottomans expressed a project for modernizing the Ottoman political and social
structures while preserving their essence. However, this project, historically,
represented the formidable contradictions between the project of modernization and
the traditional Ottoman establishment.
14
CHAPTER 1. ON METHODOLOGY
The main aim of this study is to analyze the role and contribution of “a few
men” in the transformation of the mentality of the Ottomans. Or, to be clear, it can
be said that we will try to unearth how they tried to legalize a mental transformation
by using both Islamic doctrines and Ottoman traditional concepts and
understandings. In other words, the aim is to show how they tried to make the
Empire accept the mental transformation. They addressed ordinary people,
administrators and the Sultan to show the necessity of a mental transformation.
In order to handle such a study, two crucial concepts and their
interrelationships must be explained properly. These are mentality and morality.
Mentality is the actual beliefs and attitudes towards the outside world in a
society. It is the total description of the perceptions of the people. It is shaped by the
political, social, economic, legal, religious, etc. institutions. There can be different
mentalities in a given period in a society both colliding and conflicting among
themselves. On the other hand, morality is the ideal beliefs and attitudes supported
by norms, rules, sanctions. It is the determinant according to which the attitudes and
beliefs (mentality) of the people can be legalized. It is mainly shaped by traditions
and religious rules. Moralists (they can be clergies, intellectuals or the state itself)
set the standards that every element of society is expected to obey. These moral
values and norms, sometimes, are more effective than legal codes. The more
mentality matches with morality, the more is it effective9.
Whereas mentality is the actual beliefs and attitudes morality is the ideal, or
expected, beliefs and attitudes. It is impossible to expect that both match any time.
We can even say that because of the nature of man, there has not been a time in
which the mentality and morality matched completely; there have always been
deviations. In order to be effective, morality should be supported by the authority.
9 mostly composed from the study of Ülgener (1981)
15
The political body can either base its legal structure on moral values and norms10 or
regard morality as one of the stabilizers of society. Some moral norms and values
can be put among legal codes.
However such supports from the authorities do not always suffice to
maintain the effectiveness of the moral norms and values. The most important
condition is the suitability of the moral norms with contemporary atmosphere.
Because of their conservative nature, it is hard for these norms and values to adopt
themselves to the changing conditions. In this case the deviations increase, namely
the mentality and morality follow different paths. However, as soon as the standards
are set by morality, the people feel oblige to legalize their attitudes according to
predetermined norms and values. This situation leads, first, to the acceleration of
hypocrisy, and second, to the depreciation in morality. The former is obvious, but
the latter needs further explanation: When the people could not arrange their
attitudes according to actual moral values anymore11, they try to adopt moral norms
and values to their attitudes. Their relative flexibility permits such adaptations.12
After this point a new and different morality starts to be shaped.
To sum up our thoughts, it can be said that mentality is more open to changes
than morality. As soon as mentality, expected by morality, is dominant in a society,
the effectiveness of the values and norms, proposed by mentality, will be safe. In
this study the mentality, expected by morality, will be important, because it is
mentality, which is a mixture of Islamic (both orthodox and heterodox) doctrines
and Turco-Mungol traditions, which the Young Ottomans tried to transform.
10 Mostly in traditional and charismatic authorities.
11 We do not mention religious values separately when we state moral ones, because religion is stated
as one component of morality in the explanations. Of course, we do not mean that atheism does not
have morality, but we thought that the subject and the society under investigation permit such
negligence.
12 “For this reason, Islam has been exposed to different approaches and used to legalize both
monarchy, dictatorship, democracy and republic” (Esposito 2002, 111)
16
In fact there were two different and complementary mentalities in the
Ottoman social structure: above is the mentality of the protectionist, traditional ruler
and administrators, and below is the mentality of the subjects. Although the former
was exposed to some dramatic changes in 19th and 20th centuries, the latter had
continued with little changes whose traces can even be seen today.
Because our concern is directed to ideal beliefs and attitudes, proposed by
morality, more than the actual situation, we should construct ideal types in order to
clarify what we mean about the mentality of two sectors of the Ottoman Empire.
…it is necessary for the sociologist to formulate pure ideal types of the
corresponding forms of actions which in case involve the highest possible
degree of logical integration by virtue of their complete adequacy on the
level of meaning. (Weber 1978, 20)
In order to construct such ideal types properly, the legal codes, moral values
and norms, and the political applications of the Empire should be examined
carefully. Such an examination can provide our ideal types with reflections in
reality. Also because the Young Ottomans put these ideal types on their target
boards, using such a method seem to be illuminative.
When we think about the Ottoman state and society, it can be observed that
values and traditions played important roles. These values and traditions reflected in
the attitude and behavior of the subjects, administrators and the Sultan himself.
Because values and traditions were shared and owned by every element of the
society, any attitude and behavior was performed with the expectation of certain
repercussions or feedback from the others. For instance, when a wealthy person
establishes a pious endowment or helps the poor, he/she expects prestige and
appreciation in turn. Every action, performed by any member of the society, is
attached a subjective meaning by that member. (Weber (1978, 4)
17
According to Weber action is social insofar as its subjective meaning takes
account of the behavior of others, and is thereby oriented in its course. He divides
social action into four:
i) instrumentally rational, that is determined by expectations as to the
behavior of objects in the environment of other human beings; these
expectations are used as conditions or means for the attainment of the actors
own rationally pursued and calculated ends.
ii) value oriented, that is determined by a conscious belief in the value for its
own sake of some ethical, ascetic, religious or other form of behavior,
independently of its prospects of success.
iii) effectual (especially emotional) that is determined by the actor’s specific
affects and feeling states.
iv) traditional, that is, determined by ingrained habituation. (Weber 1978,
24-25)
Weber states that first one can only be seen in Occident as a result of
Protestant asceticism which perceives the order in the world as an important
religious doctrine for the salvation. The importance of work and ethic in Protestant
sect leads the demand for a rational and legal order.
As a consequence, and although the enjoyment of wealth is forbidden to the
ascetic, it becomes his vacation to engage in economic activity which is
faithful to rationalized ethical requirements and which conforms to strict
legality. (Weber 1978, 257)
According to him, the rational order is the uniqueness of the Occident.
Although he believes that the asceticism also exists in the East, the difference
between dervish asceticism and Protestant asceticism hinders the former to reach
same results like the latter (Weber 1978, 556). The difference lies in their
approaches to this world and worldly affairs. While the asceticism of Occident
(Protestant asceticism) seeks the salvation in this world, the other seeks it in
isolation from the world and worldly affairs. The members of this type of asceticism
(Dervish asceticism) have a loose touch with this world. This difference makes the
former to engage himself in this world that this leads to the desire for world
domination (Weber 1976).
18
The other social actions are common in a pre-capitalist social formation.
Weber puts the Ottoman Empire in patrimonial administration category (Weber
1978, 228). For him, the two reasons of the irrationality of the Orient are oriental
and Asiatic types of salvation religion and patrimonialism. Like the former, the latter
(patrimonialism) does not base on rational thinking. Values and traditions play key
role in the institutions of the administration. Instead of rational thinking and logical
applications, rituals symbols, status and honor direct the social action. Because of
the lack of any tendency toward rationality in the Eastern cultures, the Orient lagged
behind in industrialization and capitalism. The lack of tendency towards world
domination, for Weber, is the main obstacle for the Orient. Weber makes clear
distinction between Oriental religions and Occidental (especially Protestantism)
ones
The decisive historical difference between predominantly Oriental and
Asiatic types of salvation religion and those found primarily in the Occident
is that, the former usually culminate in contemplation, the latter in
asceticism. (Weber 1978, 551)
He claims that Oriental religions are based on mystical and magical beliefs
and rituals, ignore worldly affairs and mostly look for salvation in the other world.
On the other hand, asceticism of the Occident considers this world crucial and looks
for salvation within the order of this world, it is important for the ascetics to work
over and dominate the world. If we say the difference in one sentence, while the
Oriental religions see the salvation out of this world, the asceticism of the Occident
sees it through this world.
However Weber looks at Islam from a different perspective. He states that
the early Islam contained some puritan notions, no individual request for salvation,
and no mysticism. The religious promises of it pertained to this world (Weber 1978,
625). However, after the warrior type appeared and took the control of the religion,
this notion has changed; martyrdom, war and conquest became the most important
rhetoric of the Muslims. With the advent of the cult of the saints and finally magic,
19
Islam was completely diverted from any real methodological control of life (Weber
1978, 627)
Weber’s perception of Islam contains an allusion that if Islam had preserved
its early form, it would have adapted to capitalism and industrialization.13 But it
should be noted that it is impossible to disagree with Bryan S. Turner (1998) that
Weber was affected by the atmosphere of 19th century Western intellectual circles
regarding his views about Islam. The details of Weber’s views about Islam are not
the subject of this study, but some important clarifications must be here.
As mentioned above, the claims of Weber about Islam contain an allusion
that Islam, in its original form, bears suitable notions for a perception like Protestant
asceticism, or in other words, it could have been conducive to modernism and
capitalism. In Economy and Society he states:
Industrialization was not impeded by the Islam as the religion of individuals,
but by the religiously determined structure of the Islamic states, their
officialdom and their jurisprudence. (Weber 1978, 1095)
Weber was wrong in his perception of the Orient, but especially Islam,
according to two important points. These are the main determinants of capitalism
and modernism: individualism and domination of nature. Actually these two
concepts, especially the latter, are fundamentally contrary to Eastern beliefs, not
rationalism. In Islam there is obvious stress on reason and rational man. Belief is
valid as soon as it is supported by reason. Stress on science is also the case in Islam.
We can see same notions in Confucianism and Taoism. In these beliefs rational
thinking is a gift given to human to understand the world and its order. However the
notion of rationality in these beliefs does not lead to same consequences like in the
West even if had they preserved their original form. Shortly, it is not the mere matter
13 which is claimed directly by Maxime Radinson (1968): “Islam is not a hinderance for the
development of capitalism”
20
of rationality; we should search for some other reasons behind the modernization
and capitalism seen in the West.
Selfish and particularized individual has played a key role in the
accumulation of wealth. The accumulated capital has been reinvested to get more
capital. The mentality of the individuals in Western societies became totally
different from the Eastern ones and all ties between the individual and feudal
relations were swept away. Private property, political rights and economic freedom
provided the realm of individual autonomy. As liberal tradition claims, individuals
are worthy and successful as soon as they gain profit in the economic struggle.
Protestant belief and its ethic also accelerated the process.
However the individualization owes much more to the Enlightenment,
because most of the Enlightenment ideologies put the societies shaped by particular
individuals as the main object of their philosophies. In Eastern societies and beliefs,
the community has always been more important than the individuals. The interest of
individual has been seen as sacrificial for the stability and confidence of the
community. The wealth has also been accepted as the common property of the
community and wealthy persons have always been expected to contribute to charity,
found pious endowment, help the poor, etc. The wealthy persons also used their
wealth as a social mean to gain appreciation and confidence of the people or as an
‘investment’ for the other world. Individuals have not been particularized in Islam
(even in its original form) as the supporter of these relations. In this respect, Islam
could not lead to capitalism. It may have some ascetic characteristics like the
Protestant sect such as the prohibition of luxury, condemnation of extravagance and
the appreciation of the property gained as a result of one’s own labor, but the wealth,
according to doctrine, must be spent in the name of Allah, distributed among needy
and shared with others.
Beside individualism, Enlightenment and developments in technology and
science have led the emergence of a belief in people’s mind that human can
21
overcome nature and in fact dominate over it. With the Enlightenment, the Western
people could be rescued from the domination of the Church. The rationality
provided them to save themselves from further burdens. They thought that rational
thinking could solve all human problems. Beside this moral domination of the
Church and moral values, nature was another obstacle to be overcome.14 Every
scientific and technological progress has been announced as another victory over
nature. The exploitation of nature has been legalized and seen necessary for the
development of humanity. The natural objects reshaped, changed, deformed, etc. in
order to make them usable for the people. This freedom of action led to the
abundance of the products and accelerated the spread of capitalism. On the other
hand, in the Orient, nature and human being have been seen inseparable. As a part of
the nature, man should respect it and benefit from it without extravagance. For
instance in Islam, the nature is accepted as given in trust to the human by God.
Shortly, the Orient could not find the right to exploit the nature: “Orient accepts the
object as it is …. Occident always changes its form.” (Tanpınar 1961, 132)
Under the light of these points, it can be seen that any attempt in the name of
“modernization” of the non-European societies is an Occidentalization process. In
this respect, the aim of the Young Ottomans, directed towards the modernization of
the Ottoman Empire, was not a return to the original form of Islam and the classic
age of the Ottoman Empire as they claimed, but a new perspective, a new vision, or
actually, a new mentality for the Empire. In other words, it was, unintentionally, the
Occidentalization of the Ottoman people. It was a process which demanded
fundamental changes in the perspective of every subject of the Empire. Shortly, it is
not a simple rationalization process but a different look at time, space, nature and the
world. In this respect, our methodology will be unearthing the traces of this
projected mentality transformation.
14 In fact, fight with nature has been the main subject in Western mind starting with Homer. West has
always faught with nature and searched ways to dominate it.
22
Of course this study is not the first in this field. It owes much to the studies
of Ülgener (1981) and Mardin (2000). It can be said that Ülgener dedicated his
academic career to understand the mentality of the Ottoman people. His studies give
a different perspective about the Ottoman world. His studies cover a broad period of
the Empire and he uses poems to understand the mentality hidden behind the words.
He analyzes the mentality of the people with a Weberian methodology. Ülgener
determines two different mentalities as it is proposed in this study, but he puts to the
stage a good and evil play. While he evaluates lower stratum, the subjects,
sympathetic and sees them all the time exploited, he evaluates the upper one as
extravagant and exploiter. However this is a misleading approach to the Ottoman
state apparatus. As nalcık (1973) states, and will be discussed in the following
chapter, the Ottoman state philosophy is a mixture of Islamic, Turco-Mungol and
Byzantine state traditions. According to this philosophy the state is responsible for
the maintenance of the basic needs of the subjects, and the Sultan is the protector of
the subjects against any abuse. He is also the provider of justice. Because of this, the
Ottoman Empire could not follow mercantilist or despotic policies. Namely
mentality of both strata was a result of the basic structures that shaped the Ottoman
state and society. Lastly, the periods investigated in this study and in the studies of
Ülgener are very different. He is, as if, surfing in time. One can find the poem of a
14th century poet in one page while a 19th poem was mentioned in the following one.
Mardin (2000) has an important study on the Young Ottomans: The Genesis
of the Young Ottoman Thought. As the title implies, this study analyzes the ideology
of the Young Ottomans in the intellectual tradition of the Empire; the intellectual
sources they utilize and main points of their ideologies are the main topics of it.
However for our study, not every single thought of the Young Ottomans is as
important, but the ones which reflected their concern with the transformation in the
mentality of the Ottoman elements.
In addition the study of Nevin Yazıcı (2002) should also be mentioned. The
content of the book, unfortunately, does not provide what the title promises:
23
Osmanlılık Fikri ve Genç Osmanlılar Cemiyeti (The Idea of Ottomanism and the
Young Turks Organization). The book was composed of the quotations from the
eminent scholars of the field and the Young Ottomans. It is hard to find thoughts of
Nevin Yazıcı from these quotations.
Tanpınar (1961, 1985), Ülken (1966) and Berkes (1942) also notice such a
mentality transformation, but they either do not give further details, or prefer to
study more concrete data. In the following chapter the characteristics of the two
mentalities will be analyzed for the two sectors of the Ottoman Empire.
In conclusion, the methodology of the study is given in this chapter. In the
next chapter the historical context of the period, in which the effects of the Young
Ottoman movement were seen clearly, will be discussed.
24
CHAPTER 2. THE HISTORICAL CONTEXT
This chapter will focus on the period between 1865 and 1876. Before 1865
the main incidences in the Ottoman Empire were the promulgation of Gülhane Edict
(Tanzimat Fermanı) and the Reform Edict (Islahat Fermanı). The Gülhane Edict
was promulgated in 1839. With this Edict the protection of life, property and honor
of the subjects was guaranteed by the Sultan. The scope of the Edict covered all
subjects, disregarding their religion, millet and sect. This Edict was the first shock in
the eyes of the Ottoman millets which threatened the harmony in the Empire. The
process accelerated the dissolution of the social bonds in the Empire contrary to the
expectations.
After sixteen years from the promulgation of the Gulhane Edict, the Reform
Edict was promulgated in 1856. This Edict expanded the scope of rights given by
the Tanzimat. As a result of this Edict the position of the “minorities” had been
strengthened. The Embassies in the capital shouldered the protection of each of these
minorities. As soon as the members of these minorities obtained the passport of a
foreign state (which is not that difficult), they became exempted from many taxes,
arrestment...etc. Shortly, they could obtain the same rights given to the citizens of
the states concerned.
The aim of the rulers while they promulgated these reforms was to give an
end to the economic backwardness of the Empire. However, despite these reforms
the economic condition of the Empire worsened year by year. The loss of lands also
did not stop. First foreign debt, borrowed under the reign of Abdulmecid,
accelerated the discomfort among the Ottoman subjects (but especially among the
Muslims).
The administration of the Empire was held by two leading figures, Ali and
Fuad Pashas, from 1843 to 1871 (excluding short interruptions). In this period it was
these figures, but not the Sultans, who were in charge of the administration. It was
25
the time of the Sublime Porte. The two pashas administered the state without
accepting any interference in their affairs. This situation led both the jealousy
against the pashas and also fawning for them. This two edged sword always kept the
tension high in the politics of the Empire.
On the other hand, the economic penetration of European capitalism
increased day by day and the local producers of the Empire started to suffer from the
unfair competition of European products. The Ottoman administration in lacked
enough economic and political power and ability to challenge these assaults on its
domestic market. The regime of the two Pashas was also insufficient to suppress the
revolts all around the country and the Empire lost many lands under their rule.
Because their positions depended on the atmosphere of the international relations of
the Empire, they could not take necessary measures against these revolts. This
“poor” situation of the Empire and the submissive attitude of the rulers inevitably
led to some opposition. The Kuleli Revolt15 (1859) was the first signal of the
impending danger. The conspiracy was not successful but the attempt itself showed
the discomfort among the intellectuals, some bureaucrats and military officials.
Probably after the failure of this attempt the opposition became more cautious. In
this respect the meeting of some young intellectuals, who were sad and mad about
the situation of the country in a picnic in the Forest of Belgrade (which is even
further away from the city center) in 1865 to discuss the ways to bring remedies for
the recent problems of the Empire, is interesting. According to Ebuzziya, who is the
first author to write about the Young Ottoman movement, first fire of the Young
Ottoman movement was ignited in this picnic.16
15 It was a conspiracy against the Sublime Porte. It is an interesting conspiracy because of the
composition of the men involved in it. There were the members of ulema, military and bureaucracy.
There are not clear documents about the revolt but what is known is the members were arrested
before they took any action. One thing interesting in this revolt is that the men involved were
forgiven by Sultan Abdulmecid.
16 We have to trust Ebuzziya (1978) about the picnic incidence but we have further information about
the following circumstances.
26
The organization of the movement was imitated from the Italian nationalist
movement Carbonari. According to this cell type organization, every cell would be
composed of seven members. The ordinary members would only know the other
members of his cell. According to allegations many high ranked officials were
among the members of the movement besides some low ranked ones, military
personnel and intellectuals. The active members of the so-called movement were
Namık Kemal, Ziya Pasha and Ali Suavi. They were, mainly, seen as columnists in
the newspapers of the capital during this period. They led the opposition against Ali
and Fuad Pashas from their columns. The newspaper of Namık Kemal was Tasvir-i
Efkar17. Ali Suavi used the Muhbir18 for his agitations. However these two
newspapers have always been under threat of Ali Pasha government. Because of this
reason they had to be cautious in their criticism.
The year 1867 was a turning point for both editors of these newspapers (we
mean Namık Kemal and Ali Suavi) as well as the movement. The Cretan crisis and
the insolvency of the government against it were highly criticized by the
newspapers. However the most effective attempt was Ali Suavi’s private charity
organization for the Cretans who had been driven out of their homes. Such a private
organization meant the declaration of the insolvency of the government in public
eye. Ali Pasha noted this move as a minus grade for Ali Suavi. After one month Ali
Suavi wrote a bitter criticism about the Porte’s relinquishment of the fortress of
Belgrade. It was the right time for Ali Pasha to close the Muhbir and exile Ali Suavi.
Tasvir-i Efkar responded to this measure of the government by printing the
order closing Muhbir and a protesting commentary of the Filip Efendi (the owner of
the Muhbir). When the article of Namık Kemal, protesting the European interference
in the Cretan revolt, was added to this protest, the inevitable end came for Tasvir-i
Efkar. Now the leading figures of the movement were deactivated by the
17Tasvir-i Efkar (The description of the thoughts): It was a private newspaper in the capital city. The
owner of the newspaper was Agah Efendi.
18 Muhbir (informer, news reporter): It was owned by Ali Suavi. It was famous for its harsh criticism
against Sublime Porte.
27
government; Ali Suavi was arrested and exiled to Kastamonu and the newspaper,
which Namık Kemal and Ziya Pasha expressed their views, was closed. It seemed
that the political atmosphere of the capital calmed down in favor of the government.
However the opposition was already beginning.
Mustafa Fazıl Pasha (then would be the financier of the movement) was the
descendant of Mehmet Ali Pasha who captured the administrative hold of Egypt
from the Ottoman Empire. The governors of the Egypt were called khedive. The
administrative right of Egypt passed to the elder member of the family. At that
period the governor of Egypt was the brother of Mustafa Fazıl Pasha, Khedive
Ismail. Mustafa Fazıl was raised in Istanbul and held important posts. However his
ultimate goal was to ascend to the throne of Egypt. Being in the capital and
obtaining important posts were only means for this goal.
While he was holding one of these important posts, he committed a “crime”
which was totally contrary to his aim: criticizing the financial policies of Fuad
Pasha. As a result of his this criticism he was asked to leave the capital within
twenty four hours. He left the capital for Paris. He was further away from reaching
goal. On the other hand, Ismail, now, became advantageous against his brother. His
plan was getting approval of the Sultan in order to transfer the administration of
Egypt to his own descendents. There was only one solution for Mustafa Fazıl:
degrading the government which left the door open for Ismail to realize his plans.
His first attempt was the declaration of his leadership of the movement
named the Young Ottomans. It was criticized, even mockered, by some European
newspapers like Nord. According to this newspaper, Mustafa Fazıl was a forger who
uses people to reach his ultimate goal of obtaining the throne of the Egypt. First
Namık Kemal responded bitterly to this criticism, and then Mustafa Fazıl replied the
allegations. In the following period Mustafa Fazıl issued a letter addressed to the
Sultan about the reform proposals of the Young Ottomans. The arrival of the letter
coincided with the closing of the Muhbir and Tasvir-i Efkar.
28
The letter was immediately translated and 50.000 copies of it were
distributed in the capital. The turmoil, accelerated by this letter, caused the exile of
the opposition movement. Ali Suavi was already exiled and he was forced to go
Kastamonu. Namık Kemal was appointed to Erzurum as assistant governor while
Ziya Pasha to Cyprus as the Council of Judicial Ordinances. However thanks to their
good connections Namık Kemal and Ziya Pasha managed to postpone their
appointment.
At this time Mustafa Fazıl invited them to Paris to generate an opposition
front. Namık Kemal, Ziya Pasha and Ali Suavi accepted the invitation and fled to
Paris secretly to organize the opposition. The figures, gathered in the residence of
Mustafa Fazıl Pasha, were promised the financing of their activities. Mustafa Fazıl
deposited a certain amount of money to the bank in the name of Ziya Pasha and their
salaries were paid by the Pasha. At the first meeting Ali Suavi demanded to publish
Muhbir in London. They agreed on this proposal, but they decided to initiate the
publication of a new one in the near future.
However the visit of Abdulaziz to the European countries changed the fate of
the movement. In Abdulaziz’s visit to Paris, Mustafa Fazıl was invited to the
presence of the Sultan and he was advised to return to Istanbul. He was also
promised a post. He accepted this offer and returned to Istanbul even before the first
issue of Muhbir. He told the members that he accepted to return to Istanbul in order
to make the necessary reforms. However his main intention was different. When it
was realized that his return did not bring any progress the tone of the Muhbir in its
approach to the government, in which Mustafa Pasha was involved, became harsher.
This was a break between Ali Suavi and the other members of the movement.
When Muhbir took a different side, Mustafa Fazıl ordered Namık Kemal to
establish a newspaper urgently. As a result the famous Hürriyet emerged in 1868.
However, the more Mustafa Fazıl got involved in the politics of the Sublime Porte,
29
the more distanced he became from the critical stand of Hürriyet about the policies
of the government. He demanded smoother criticism from Namık Kemal and Ziya
Pasha. Such orders inevitably led the members to question their positions. In
addition to these, the financial support of the Pasha shrunk in time to such an extent
that Namık Kemal could not meet the publication costs.
In the following period, the leading figures of the movement, Namık Kemal
and Ziya Pasha, diverged into different camps because of the ongoing orders of
Mustafa Pasha to Namık Kemal to dissociate himself from Ziya Pasha. Namık
Kemal obeyed the order at the end, and left Hürriyet and declared his dissociation
from the newspaper. Now Ziya Pasha was left alone. He wanted to continue
publishing but he had no financial sources. But there appeared one who needed such
a platform to use for his aims: Ismail, the khedive of Egypt.
Meanwhile, Mustafa Fazıl was back in Istanbul and founded good relations
with the Porte. He had only one goal in his mind which inevitably disturbed his
brother Ismail. Ismail feared the probable circumstances in the Porte and saw Ali
Pasha and his brother in alliance. In order to abolish this alliance and hinder his
brother capturing the throne of Egypt after him, he decided to use Ziya Pasha and
Hürriyet for an anti-Ali Pasha propaganda. Ziya accepted the offer and followed the
order of his new financier.
However the continuity of financial support of Ismail depended on his
relations with the Porte. Just when he reached his goal in 1870, he cut off his
support. Now Ziya Pasha was deprived of both money and staff. In addition to this
the British authorities started a lawsuit against him for the article of Suavi
advocating the assassination of Ali Pasha. Under these conditions he fled to Geneva
and continued the publication of Hürriyet under difficult conditions.
On the other hand, Namık Kemal stayed in London for a while then returned
to capital in 1870. He was promised to be safe in capital by the government. In 1871
30
Ali Pasha died. The Young Ottomans always thought the most important obstacle
for the modernization of the Empire had been Ali and Fuad Pashas. Now the last
member of this coalition had died19 and was succeeded by Mahmud Nedim Pasha.
The other members of the Movement came back to the capital with great hopes after
the general amnesty of the Grand Vizier. But the coherence of the Movement almost
disappeared. Ziya Pasha, also returned to Istanbul and took and important political
post in the government. Namık Kemal and his friends started to publish the
newspaper bret20.
To sum up, the Young Ottomans could not find what they expected from the
new government. The despotic reign of Abdulaziz was completed with the
clumsiness of the Grand Vizier soon after. They remembered the regime of Ali and
Fuad Pashas with yearning. The freedom promised was not delivered; the
publication of their newspapers was suspended many times.
However the worst was yet to come. As a result of a conspiracy, the bret,
the leading voice of the opposition, was closed and its stuff was exiled to different
ends of the Empire. Although their enthusiasm and expectations were refreshed in
1876 by the deposition of Abdulaziz and promulgation of the constitution, new
Sultan Abdulhamid, soon found a way to close the parliament and suspend the
constitution.
In the following years the last ashes of the Young Ottoman Movement
disappeared. Abdulhamid II was keen to eliminate any opposition against his
regime. He first exiled and executed Ahmet Mithat Pasha. After a while Namık
Kemal and Ziya Pasha were exiled for official posts in rural areas of the Empire.
The autocracy of the Sultanate was built up by Abdulhamid II and the first
opposition movement of the Empire came to an end under his rule.
19 Fuad Pahsa died earlier.
20 bret (lesson learnt through a misfortune)
31
At the end, none of the opponents reached their goals; Ismail got approval
from the Sultan to transfer the throne of Egypt to his own descendants. Mustafa
Fazıl was forced to content himself with money which was enough for his
extravagant life and gambling habit. Ali Suavi was killed in a coup attempt to bring
Prince Murad to the Sultanate. Namık Kemal and Ziya Pasha died in great poverty
where they were exiled.
In fact this complex set of occurrences was the reflection of their standings.
They were not autonomous like European intellectuals. They were bureaucrats and
stayed as such till the end of their lives. As we said above, they lived the duality of
the Tanzimat through their lives. They neither totally rejected the past nor accepted
the whole process of modernity and European civilization. However the door they
opened became a point of entry for the more radical movements.
The historical context is important to understand the philosophy of the
intellectuals. The atmosphere in which the intellectual thinking flourished should be
kept in mind to comprehend the real effects of their philosophy. In this sense, in this
chapter the history of the movement and the period mentioned has been given
briefly. In the following chapter, an ideal Ottoman type will be described in order to
be able to comprehend the effects of the aspired mentality transformation in the
Ottoman social body.
32
CHAPTER 3. THE OTTOMAN IDEAL
The Ottoman Empire is a synthesis between Turko-Mungol (including
Sasanid), Islamic and Byzantine state and social traditions. Despite similarities
between with either one of them, it’s hard to put it into one of these categories. Only
thanks to its cultural heritage, experiences and geographical position, it could create
a unique state and society model. Especially in its classical age, it strengthened its
state structure by avoiding the mistakes of previous Turkish and Islamic states, and
put the dynasty and the state above everything in order avoid any dissolution
attempt. In the Ottoman Empire there had been only one noble entity: the Ottoman
family. Although Sheria had been the main jurisdiction body, the Sultans and the
state did not abandon the jurisdiction power completely to it. In fact, many times the
jurisdiction power of the Sultans came over the Sheria. Shortly, the stability of the
state was over everything. As Ocak (1998) puts it correctly, that in the Ottoman
Empire everything was for the state; also the religion itself. Namely, here, what we
will do is to describe a unique state and society model, understand the main
characteristic of it, or in other words, “the official ideology” of the Ottoman Empire
will be examined in order to understand how the transformation of it into a modern
structure, to the extent that it could be transformed, had been a difficult process.
Before we proceed any further, it will be illuminative to cite Ocak’s
description of the official ideology of a state.
Official ideology of a state, shortly, is a completion of its manner of
perception and understanding of itself, the land it reigns, the people living on
this land and other states, and its world view, mentality, and the values it
praises. (Ocak, 1998, 72)
Under the light of this explanation we can detail our analysis. First of all, the
Ottoman Empire was a precapitalist traditional state and society. Because of this, the
division of ruler and the ruled was made carefully and the way, each should behave
and approach each other, is described in detail. The ruled, reaya, was expected to
stay in his compartment and not to interfere with the administration task. The rulers
33
created a different and high class and perceived themselves totally different from the
ruled. Given these, it is important to divide the Ottoman society into two main
sectors and analyze each of them separately. Firstly, the ruling class will be
discussed and later the reaya21.
As noted, the Ottomans avoided the main deficiencies of the past Turkish
states which caused the dissolution of them. It had been because of the preservation
of possession and sovereignty rights of the tribal chiefs (beys) and the warrior
leaders on the lands they conquer. This right caused the continuation of nobility in
society and an ongoing threat against the central authority. The first Ottoman rulers,
although they were one of the tribal chiefs under Seljuk state, ignored the right of
their warlords and gathered every piece of land under their suzerainty, with the
expansion of the state through Anatolia. They abolished the nobility of the tribal
chiefs and offered them only a rank in the Ottoman body of administration. Besides,
the Sultans paid attention to keep the members of these tribes away from the central
administration in case of any rebellion. With the dismissal and execution of Çandarlı
family by Mehmet II, the last remnants of high ranking Turkish administrators were
removed from the center. Their successors were the administrators educated and
trained through the slave system.
The “devsirme” system was used by all Near Eastern states, but reached its
zenith under the Ottoman control. Murat I was the initiator of the system. He used
the war captives and trained Christian boys in the Janissary corps. In latter period
the system was expanded and the periodic collection of Christian boys became the
main source of the system. These boys were divided into two main groups according
their appearance, talent and intelligence and the most able ones were taken for the
inner (Enderun) section of the Palace. Enderun was the education and training
institute of high–ranking administrators of the empire. The boys were raised with a
complete obedience to the Sultan. Their legal position was also different from the
subjects. They were the slaves (kuls) of the Sultan and their fate was depended on
21 the subjects of the Sultan. Its simple meaning is flock where the shepherd is the Sultan
34
the Sultan. They were also raised in complete isolation from the outside world. In
this close system their only duty was to serve the Sultan, and the state. When their
education was completed, they were either sent to provinces as governors or placed
to a post in the Palace.
Beside these, there was ulema class which was shaped by educated Muslims
under the supervision of Seyh'ul–Islam. They were mainly educated with religious
sciences and appointed as mufti22 and khadi23 to the provinces, müderris24 to the
medreses or official under the control of Seyh'ül–Islam. The last administrative unit
involved the provincial rulers. They were either leading figures (esraf) or
exgovernors of the region who were appointed by the central authority to collect the
tax as effectively as possible. Namely they were the ones who were essential to keep
the preferred status quo.
These are the men who were called the Ottomans. Namely the Ottoman
identity does not include all the people of the Empire but the rulers. “It is not an
ethnic but a political description of an identity transcending all ethnic social and
economic identities… the identity of the ruling class.” (Köprülü 1984, 39). The
members of this identity were expected to know Ottoman Turkish language which is
composed of Arabic Persian and Turkish language elements, and shared the same
values, perception, taste and culture; a high culture involving the most refined
elements of living, art and knowledge. They were aware of the same codes which
were important for the administration of such a large Empire. They were at the same
distance towards all ethnic communities of the Empire. The only aim of them was
the preservation of the ongoing order. The changes and innovations were perceived
suspiciously and the preservation of the exiting order was always preferred.
22 executive of the religious affairs in provinces.
23 responsible for the judicial affairs in provinces.
24 professor of the medresses
35
The preservation of the existing order highly depended on the preservation of
justice. Justice had been the main backbone of the Middle Eastern states. The
prestige of the Sultan was always related with the justice he set on his land. Ottoman
Sultans also saw justice as the main issue for the stability of their state. The main
function of the state was ruling its subjects justly. Justice is also the main element of
one of the most important doctrines of the Turkish states: the circle of justice.
“According to it, to control the state requires a large army, to support the troops
requires great wealth, to obtain wealth the people must be prosperous, for the people
to be prosperous the laws must be just.” (nalcık 1973, 14). Justice was so important
for the Ottoman state that the divan, main administrative organ of the state, was also
used as a court to deal with every application and complain made by ordinary
people.
As is expressed in circle of justice schema, justice is a must to obtain the
wealth. However wealth was not perceived by the Ottoman rulers in the same way as
was perceived by the mercantilist European states. To begin with the rulers, the
wealth came in the second place after obtaining a post in the higher administration
circle. The trade of post, as Mardin (2002, 210) states, was the distinguishing feature
of the Ottoman system. The officials used their wealth to distribute to the poor, or
found pious foundations to gain the confidence and sympathy of the people, or to
ascent to higher ranks. Both were related with obtaining power. Besides, the security
of the wealth they obtained depended on the preservation of their posts. Because
they were the slaves of Sultan, their properties were confiscated after their demise or
dismissal. They could not transfer the wealth to their heirs. Because of these reasons,
wealth was a temporary possession of something which can be dispensed for the
above goals. When we consider the Islamic notion (especially its humble form) the
unimportance of wealth and the people’s perception about it can be understood more
clearly. The picture, concerning the state (treasury) and the Sultan, appears different.
Muslim rulers were expected to be generous for their subjects. Their prestige
was mostly determined by their charity activities, distributing presents in ceremonies
36
and appointments, organizing feasts for everyone, etc. The accumulating and
keeping of wealth in the treasuries by the Sultans had been a shame for them and
condemned by both ancient sources of Turko-Islamic traditions such as
Siyasetname, Kutadgubilig, and by the numerous Ottoman chronicles. The
abundance of coin in circulation was also another indicator of the prestige of
Sultans. It is believed that the more coin in circulation, the wealthier the state and its
subjects. That is the mentality of the Ottoman treasury. As Immanuel Wallerstein
stresses, the Ottoman Empire was a world empire:
A world-empire and a world-economy are two very different kinds of social
systems in terms of their politics, their economics and their cultural
expressions. A world-empire is defined as a single social economy (division
of labor) with an overarching, political structure. A world-economy is
defined as a single social economy containing multiple state structures.
These two systems have different modes of production. A world-empire uses
a redistributive/ tributary mode in which capital accumulation is not
maximized, and in which the basic redistribution is a function of political
decisions. A world-economy uses a capitalist mode in which capital
accumulation perse is the controlling consideration of social action, and this
objective is pursued through the market, which is however at most only
partially free from political and social constraint. (Wallerstein 1981, 117)
This quotation summarizes why a world-empire, like the Ottoman Empire,
could not seek to achieve what the mercantilist states did. Besides, the attitude of the
Ottoman Empire against the export and the import trade was another indicator of
their traditionalist character. The Ottoman rulers paid attention to the abundance of
product in the market and satisfaction of basic needs of their subjects. In this respect,
they saw import positively and export negatively since the import provided the flow
of products and satisfaction of market, and export meant the withdrawal of products
from local bazaars.25 They did not seek the accumulation of silver and coin in state
treasury.
The other and most important tool of the Ottoman rulers for controlling the
local market was the “narh” system. According to this system, the prices of the basic
25 For further information see Faroqui (1997, 2003) and Pamuk (1988)
37
products (in fact it included almost everything except luxury products) were
determined and strictly controlled by the agents of the state. The products could only
be supplied between maximum and minimum prices determined by khadi in
provinces and central administration in capital by consulting with the merchants and
producers. The main aim of this system was the protection of the subjects from the
scarcity and abundance of the goods. The guild system is also a component of the
system. In addition to the price determination, the number of the artisans and
craftsmen deployed in every guild was also fixed by the agents of the state.
Besides, the increase in tax rates was disliked by the administrators and
chronicles of the Empire (Akdag, 1974). It was perceived as a setback for the
welfare of the subjects. In fact, all above measures and applications were done for
for the sake of a fair system, for justice. Justice is for the protection of the reaya
from abuses. In this respect, tyranny (zulüm) was a very important concept in the
Ottoman justice system. “’zulüm’ according to Ottoman law, is the application of the
bad innovations (bid'at), which are approved by neither örf nor Sheria, by the
officials on the reaya.” (Mumcu 1972, 9). The Sultan had to protect reaya from
such abuses of his kuls and provide the security and confidence of the subjects.
According to Near Eastern state tradition, the reaya is given in trust by God to the
Sultan (nalcık 1973, 67). In this respect, any subject had right to apply to the divan
in case of any abuse. Divan and the Sultan had to take these complaints into
consideration and listen to the reaya. In early times even the Sultan himself, was
called to the court as a defendant.
However, although the confidence of the subjects was essential for the
Ottoman administration, the subjects had no political commitment right to the
administration of the state. In fact all these measures were taken to keep them away
and avoid any discomfort which can turn into a political upheaval. According to
Ottoman official ideology, the ideal reaya is the one who:
i)is obedient to the order of the Sultan,
ii)does not demand any political right in the administration,
38
iii)does not resist in any condition against the state stability,
iv)does not leave his place and comportment be belong to, (Ocak 1998, 92)
v)does not change his reaya situation [For a man to pass from reaya to
military status was considered a breach of the fundamental principles of
state. (nalcık 1973, 69)]
The subjects were organized according to an order onto which the
protectionist, interventionist and absolute state notion could fit. On the economic
level, the state expected reaya to be contained with few and adopt the livelihood
economic conditions. The basic needs of the subjects were provided by the state, so
demanding more and luxury items were seen as a threat against the stability of the
society and the state. The taxation system of the Empire gives clear evidence about
this mentality such as surplus, from which the tax is taken, is accepted as the amount
above what the peasants needed to feed, cloth themselves and maintain production.
(Owen 1981, p.11)
These are the main features of the upper sector of the Empire. Some other
comments will be added in the end of this part after analyzing the situation of the
ruled, reaya.
The subjects were divided into communities on the basis of millet system
according to their religions. There were three main communities: the Christians the
Jews, and the Muslims. Each of them were applied their own religious laws and
directed by their own religious authorities. In the cities each community were
accommodated in their own compartment, in different regions of the city, but this
division had never caused any problem in their interrelations. In fact, as a traditional
society, this separate order was desired by each of them. Because in case of a
mixture, the non-Muslims could have faced the Sheria law and the Muslims could
have suspected about the religious character of their state. The administration
tolerated the religious beliefs and customs of the non-Muslims because the stability
and security had been the main concern of the rulers.
39
For the Muslims, the Sunni belief was the determinant; the other sects were
perceived as deviations from the Sunni orthodox tradition. However the members
other sects were categorized under the Muslim sector. There was not any national
sentiment among the subjects in the classical age but the religion was the critical
point in their perception of the other. The religion was not an obstacle to access the
sources (except for being ulema or joining the askeriyya class) of the Empire.
According to “the circle of justice” the state needs tax and this depends on the
welfare of the reaya. The reaya was very important for the state because he was the
main tax unit. The reaya was expected not to change this situation, for instance by
becoming a soldier. The main part of the subjects was composed of peasants
working on the arable lands. The other categories were the merchants and the
craftsmen. As the transfer of reaya from his status to military was not approved by
the administration, the transfer among these categories was also not approved and
the administration always tried to block ones who tried to change their economic
category; the peasants fleeing to the cities were forced to return, the craftsmen were
forced to preserve their position, etc. Even the members of these categories
complained about their colleagues changing their status. For instance the craftsmen
complained to the authorities many times about the ones who decided to be
merchants. Like the state, society itself was intolerant to the changes; the members
of society preferred the existing order.
In fact, the social mobility had been rare as soon as economic and political
stability set in the Empire. While the state expected certain manners from the
subjects, the ruled also had some expectations and demands from the ruler. Firstly,
the state should provide enough goods for the market, the raw materials should be
available for the craftsmen and the security must be set in the Empire. Apart from
these, the subjects were aware of their obligations to stay away from any demand
participating in the administration of the state. In Middle Eastern state tradition,
there is a hierarchical order. The subjects of these states saw the state as a sublime
power providing their needs in return for full obedience. It’s impossible to reach and
40
touch it. The ruler is the one chosen by God (zil’ullah fi’l-arz26) and administration
of the state was monopolized by the able and educated people; the cultural and
sociological position of the subjects was accepted as unfit for the administration.
Shortly, from both Islamic and traditional point of view, the subjects perceived the
state as a different notion from their daily lives, sublime and provider of the order.
We can exemplify it by expressing revolts resulting in the dethroning of some
Sultans: Although the Sultans, Grand Viziers and some high-ranking officials were
dismissed by the rebellions, any change in dynasty or the administration style never
came to the agenda. Another member of the Ottoman family was ascended to the
throne and let the ongoing administration style was continued.
The policy of the upper strata, ruler, and the mentality of the lower one, the
ruled, was complementary. Namely, while the state set and protected the order,
collected the taxes as much as it could, and impose a modest livelihood to the
subjects, the ruled, sure of his living and satisfaction of his basic needs, lived and
worked without endeavoring and forcing himself too much. One of the policies of
the state, to keep the subjects within the modest standards was leaving the moral and
religious area to the dervish order and heterodox beliefs (especially tassavuf) while
for itself the Sunni orthodox belief was the main doctrine. The state let the otherworldly
Sufi orders flourish in society in so far as they did not threaten the public
order. The ruler even supported them by donating lands to their pious endowments.
Some Sultans joined Sufi orders and conversed with their sheikhs.
With the penetration of these mystic orders into society, people became more
humble, other-worldly, inactive, etc. The Bayramiye, Mevleviye and Bektashi orders
were the main groups. These heterodox beliefs shaped the people’s perception of
time, place, property and material. The main doctrine of these beliefs was their
ignorance of property, material and this world for the moral happiness of the man.
For these, this world is a place to make preparation for the eternal life. The man
becomes wise (or human-beser becomes man-insan) if he suits out himself from
26 the shadow of God on earth.
41
material needs. Because of this, the Ottoman people put long distances between
them and the property, they did not think to evaluate it, or break into pieces or
analyze its component...etc. As Tanpınar states “the East accepts the material as it is
or as the changes it gave it at first contact.” (Tanpınar 1961, 132). Because of this,
the Ottoman craft made only partial changes on the raw materials.
Nature is another object which remains away from the heavy contact of the
Eastern people. In Eastern beliefs, the nature has never been an object with which
the people should fight and dominate. The big religions of the East like Buddhism,
Hinduism and Islam accepted the nature as an element of the world with which the
human shares life. In Islam, nature is given in trust to the man, and man’s obligation
is to save it in its original form. In Sufi orders every object in this world repeats
(zikir) the name of God, so their exploitation or damage is a sin.
These orders also recommend people a livelihood economy; working and
examining too much are wasteful activities which block the man thinking Allah. For
instance in Marifetname one advice is:
It’s wise to deal with worldly affairs as much as needed... the wise man is the
one who does not worry about his body (nefs) and life and work too much to
own the day and does not work too much to hinder himself from pray and
contemplation. [quoted from Ülgener (1981, 10-11)]
The scientific activity should also be dedicated to understand the order of God,
it’s a way to reach to the divinity. This order puts belief, moral values and
contemplation in the place of speculative and rational thinking (Sayar 1986).
Namely, every attention was diverted to the other world. In this respect, the wealth
was a social function. The money was a mean, not the object, to gain regard of the
people by giving charity and almsgiving and for a good investment for the other
world. The riches, even today, have been expected to build a mosque or contribute to
charity, and help the poor and needy. Famous expression “Shroud does not have
pocket” summarizes all above.
42
According to one of the main doctrines of Islam, every one has a
predetermined fate and it’s impossible to escape from the decisions of the creator.
Working too much and investing for the future are wasteful activities because the
future is only known by God. In this respect the earnings should be daily, and
tomorrow should be considered tomorrow. The word “rızk” which refers to earning
means earning of one day. It is unwise to demand more since one earns his rıık for
the day.
The guild organization of the Empire, also, sharpened the situation. Guilds are
the organization of the artisans and craftsmen in which the number of people
deployed, working conditions and regulations to be obeyed were determined strictly.
There was a hierarchical structure in the guilds and appointment to a higher rank and
establishing a new business were subject to ceremonies and approval of the masters.
The apprentice-master relation was the key element in appointments and apprentices
were expected to be in full obedience to their master’s personalities. Every guild was
headed by a spiritual sheikh and words were strictly obeyed by the guild members.
Futuwwaname is the constitution of the guilds and it contains the direction and
orders of the sheikh. “According to Futuwwa ethic, the perfect person is the one who
is generous, self-sacrificing and obedient to his superiors.” (nalcık 1973, 151). The
amount of product and which goods would be produced and sold by which artisans
or craftsmen were fixed carefully. Within the extent of protection of the reaya, the
abundance and scarcity in the market was avoided by the state and it is imposed on
guilds. Avarice and competition were considered as shameful behavior among the
guild members.
This is the general atmosphere in which the mentality of the Ottoman people
was shaped. It has really been a difficult task to transform this mentality into
modern, individualist and capitalist one. The endeavor is still going on, but we can
say about the Ottoman Empire that the lower strata almost preserved its traditionalist
character until the demise of the Ottoman Empire and transfer it to the Republican
43
Turkey. On the other hand, the upper strata achieved partial modernization, and
bifurcation in education and justice system went on until its disappearance.
The following three chapters involve the main body of the study. In these
chapters the traces of the transformation of the mentality within the Ottoman society
and the role of the Young Ottomans in this process will be discussed. In the next
chapter the interchanges in the citizenry and the notion of state of the Ottoman
subjects (ruled) and the administrators (ruler) will be given respectively.
44
CHAPTER 4. MAN AND THE STATE
When one starts to analyze the European Enlightenment and modernity, one
can easily see that the individual is put as the main actor of both processes. Unlike
the traditional orders, which evaluate the status of the individuals in the extent of
their belongings to a community or a class (not the class in the modern sense), the
new era needed individuals, enhanced with activism and enthusiasm, acting freely
and selfishly. Because the theory has been that the collection of such individuals will
automatically take the societies and humanity further on the way of prosperity and
freedom. In order to create such individuals ancient institutions and beliefs had to be
shaken, reformed and if they resisted, destroyed. Just as the monarchies were
shaken, the Christian beliefs were reformed, and the feudal system and bonds were
destroyed. The individuals, emancipated from these bonds, revealed the
incorrectness of the superstitions, traveled the world; got richer thanks to the inflow
of bullion and increasing commerce, and most importantly, stood against ancient
regimes for democratic rights.
In this side of the world, there had, both vertically and horizontally, been
different structures, but there were traditions and beliefs that classified the man
according to their membership to a community. As is described in the previous
chapter, being Muslim, member of a guild, sect or order put the individuals to
certain departments which cannot be changed by their personal efforts. In this
respect a Muslim is the worthiest creature of all. It is a blessing given to him by
God; he is worthy because of his belonging to Muslim community. (Aktas 1936)
However what the Young Ottomans had in mind was different. They were
aware of the importance of the term individualism. Especially for Namık Kemal, the
individual is very important, because of the political rights he must hold.27 In order
to create such men, they also put the ancient bonds under critical scrutiny, and tried
27 In fact what his aim is to create an identity for a simple Ottoman subject. He always addresses to
the Ottoman people and tries to activate them with his writings.
45
to free man from them: The guild system was criticized because it hindered the
personal improvement, the religious orders were criticized because they imposed
indolence and humble lifestyle to their members, and the Ottoman state system was
criticized which divided the society among the rulers and ruled and decrease the
ruled to a subordinated position (flocks of the Sultan) and applied slave system for
the officials. The common concept of all their criticism (especially Namık Kemal’s)
had been freedom (hürriyet).
If we name Namık Kemal as the first banner-holder of freedom in Turkish
political history, it will not be a wrong expression. As being a loyal libertarian, he
accepts the freedom as a natural right of every human being; it is not a gift granted
by a superior, nor can be correlated with a rank or duty. The man is free because of
his very existence.
In this respect, it can easily be grasped that for Namık Kemal, the individual
rights are more important than the public rights. The freedom of the individuals can
not be limited in the name of the safety of the public, because what is good for
society is the collection of the satisfactions of individual needs. Two quotations
from Namık Kemal will be helpful to illuminate this issue:
If the creature of the past and the future gathered and picked a hair from the
head of an Abyssinian boy without his consent, it would be cruelty like a
man committing homicide.28
No one has right to attack to the freedom for the sake of public benefit.
Everyone is the sultan of his world.29
Especially last quotation depicts the clear contrast between the standing of
Namık Kemal and the Ottoman traditional order, as well as Islam. Because, starting
28 “Alemde gelmis gelecek ne kadar mahluk var ise bir yere toplanarak en aciz bir Habes çocugunun
rızasını istihsal etmeksizin basından bir kıl koparmaya tesebbüs etseler hareketleri aynıyla bir
adamın ifnaya kalkısması gibi bir zulm-i sarh olur.” [Bazı Mulahazat-ı Devlet ve Millet, quoted from
Özön (1938)]
29 “Umum namına o istiklale taarruz etmekte hiçbir ferdin kat’a hakkı olamaz.
Her kimse kendi aleminin padisahıdır.” [quoted from Aktas (1936, 6)]
46
from the latter, in the history of Islam first war30 between two groups occurred
because of the disagreement about the priority of the individual rights or the public
rights, and the proponents of the latter won the battle and the Islamic state tradition
flourished on this philosophy. The Ottoman Empire, as the follower of this tradition,
put the safety of all as the main target, and did not hesitate to kill thousands for the
sake of public benefits. The right given to the Sultan to eliminate his brother is
another example of the understanding of the Ottoman administrators.
While the source of the freedom is the very existence of individuals, they can
realize this by way of their reason. From this point of view, reason becomes the
main tool in comprehending the world in contrast to a traditional Ottoman subject
who tries to open his “eye of the hearth” (kalp gözü) to realize allegedly the ‘real’
side of occurrences. Thanks to reason, the individual can attain knowledge of his
existence and freedom. Namely he brings down the Truth to the material world. This
is a “bit” too much in extending the limit of reason according to Islamic thought.
Anyway, his emphasis on freedom is clear:
Man is free because he has will to act, he has will to act because he has
reason…If one’s head is even smashed with stones, is it possible to change
his mind? Or his heart is cut into pieces with knives, is it possible to change
what he believes to be correct? So every idea is free and natural. If it is
changed, it won’t be accomplished by force but will of the person.31
Namık Kemal uses Western liberal tradition to support his idea and tries to
reconcile it with Islam to found his hybrid philosophy. However this natural right
30 Camel Incidence: It is the first big conflict between two Muslim groups. The main cause of this
was the assassination of Caliph Osman. The first group was led by the successor caliph Ali and the
other by the wife of Prophet Ayse. Ayse claimed that the right of Muslim is more important than the
community, so the murderer of Osman should be found urgently. On the other side Ali claimed that
the stability of the community is more important so the assassin should be found and executed after
the establishment of stability.
31“nsanın hürriyeti, muhtar oldugundan, ihtiyarı ise sahib-i fikir bulundugundan gelir….Bir adamın velev
taslarla beyni ezilsin, fikrince kanaat etiigi tasdikatı tagyir etmek kabil midir? Velev hançerle yüregi
paralansın, vicdanınca tasdik ettigi mu’tekadatı gönlünden çıkarmak mümkün olabilir mi? Demek ki nakli,
akli, hikemi, siyasi, ilmi, zevki her nev’i efkar zaten serbest, zaten tabiidir. Degisirse kimsenin icbarıyla degil,
tabiatın ilcasıyle degisir.” [Hürriyet-iEfkar, quoted from Kaplan (1974, 203)]
47
notion is problematic for the Islamic point of view. Firstly, Western thinkers attained
this notion by releasing political philosophy from association with theology (Mardin
2000, 316). Namely, they built another domain for their play. According to this
philosophy, which Namık Kemal aspires, the law of nature can be known by the
light of reason, and the reason can attain knowledge of the natural law through sense
experience. “This assumption automatically leads to the point that the binding force
of law of the matter does not lapse even at God’s own command.”(Mardin 2000,
318). As is seen, Namık Kemal, while supporting this philosophy, unintentionally,
gives the control of the occurrences to natural law. Furthermore, if reason can attain
the knowledge of it, it may also control it. This maybe what Namık Kemal was
looking for, but one thing is certain; he found it in a very different source. Because,
according to Islam, God is the main commander of the natural occurrences. The
kaza32 and kader33 understanding gives partial control and understanding to human.
There are always some points and distances which human reason cannot attain. They
are the hidden proofs of the glory of God.
Very shortly, Namık Kemal is a member of the individualist tradition. He
laments on the tradition and customs which hinder the freedom of people. The
freedom of every man, normally, brings the equality among individuals to the
agenda. Namık Kemal’s answer to the following question “How can an order be
founded among individuals who are equal and have same rights?” leads to the state
philosophy of the Young Ottomans.
Loyal to the libertarian tradition, Namık Kemal states that the scope of the
freedom of an individual is limited with another individual’s freedom. Individuals
can enjoy this right as long as they do not interfere with another’s scope of freedom.
Here, the reason is again at the stage to set the order among individuals.
32 destiny, predestination
33 fate
48
A power is needed for the sake of the individual benefit in order not to let
anyone go beyond his freedom and interfere with another’s scope of
freedom. The one that is responsible for setting this power is not the divinity
or any secret superior but reason.34
Freedom is very important for the Young Ottomans, because freedom will
give the Ottoman subject political rights against the Ottoman administration. In
order to understand the importance of freedom, social contract theories of both
Namık Kemal and Ziya Pasha should be analyzed.
For Namık Kemal, society is the collection of the individuals who hold
freedom and the will to act. As the above argument implies, at the very beginning
the individuals decided to found an order, in order to block any instability or chaos,
by their reason. Namely there was a peace (as Locke states) at the beginning among
individuals, and what they did was the preservation of the existing order.35 This
agreement neither abolished individual rights nor created a public law. Just as he
insists that “There is no public law but law of individuals.” [quoted from Fındıkoglu
(1941, 211)]
For him it is even absurd to state such a law. What society (or public)
consists of is only the individuals who have rights of their own. Namely, any law
that ignores personal rights is invalid.
In the following step, these individuals made a contract among themselves
and appointed a person as the administrator. But, this is not a transfer of sovereignty,
because the sovereignty belongs to each individual. In this respect, the Sultan, or
anyone, who is appointed by the agreement of these individuals, is only a trustee.
The agreement of the individuals can withdraw this appointment anytime in case of
any unjust administration. Again the transfer of administration does not create a
34 “hakk-ı hürriyetinin haricine çıkarmamak için cemiyet içinde bir kuvve-i galibenin vücudu,
selamet-i beserin levazım-ı zaruriyesindendir…kuvve-i galibe koymaya yetkili güç ne ilahidir, ne de
gizli bir güçtür. Akıldır.” [Namık Kemal, Hukuk, quoted from Aktas (1936, 6)]
35 This claim contradicts with Islamic theory which accepts the God as the order giver of the troublemaker
humanity.
49
different legal body. The right of the individuals always exists and there is no need
to create a different structure. According to him, such a distinction (individual rights
on one side and the public rights (hukuk-u siyasiye) on the opposite side) is the main
reason behind chaos in a society.
Firstly, what Namık Kemal does, which contradicts with Islamic philosophy,
is that, for the satisfaction of liberal understanding, he reverses the Islamic state
theory by changing the trusteeship notion. In Islam it is God that gives governor the
right to rule, not the individuals. According to the theory God appoints the wisest
person among believers, in order to continue the order set up. However Namık
Kemal omits God and gives the individuals the right to appoint whom they want.
Besides, sovereignty does not belong to all, in Islam, but to God only.
Second, the state is described as an invention of the people by him. It is an
artificial institution and the law exists to protect personal rights. However the state,
according to Islamic state philosophy, is the instrument to continue the divine order,
and the law, namely the Sheria, is not for the protection of the personal rights but for
he sake of preserving the divine order.
When the claims of Ziya Pasha about the origin of the society and state are
considered, it can be comprehended that he also labels the state as an artificial
institution. To understand the claims of Ziya Pasha, the following, long quotation is
needed,
If one ever brings the fashion in which society arise and which in turn gave
rise to tribal origin and governments, reason leads one to the following
explanation: at first a few families were roaming completely naked through
the mountains, remaining on an elevation in summer and living in lower
parts in the winter, inside caves and feeding on wild fruits. With the
establishment of contacts between families, this roaming was undertaken (by
a few families) at one time. The single families, who saw two or three
families gathered in one place, joined them, and a new form was evolved and
the community progressively came into being. However, ambition, greed and
the desire of the victories to subjugate the defeated being congenital
tendencies of human character, the result of daily intercourse between
50
families was the rise of dispute and enmity. To settle these disputes a
principle became necessary. Thus the wisest and oldest (man) among the
families was chosen and these words were said to him: ‘because of your
superior qualities, the members of the community have agreed that you be
brought to the office of government. You shall serve them by taking care of
such and such a matter. Since you consequently will not have time to gather
nourishment like others, as long as you occupy this function everybody or
every family shall give you this much victuals everyday. If you do not fulfill
your duty satisfactorily, they shall find somebody to replace you.’ In short he
was brought to this office with the words, ‘You shall be a paid servant of the
community.’ When with passing of the time, the community grew and
houses and villages were built and other families began to gather in various
places in a similar fashion and were shaped into a society, and when disputes
began to arise between them and the judge, who had been chosen to settle the
disputes, was not sufficient any longer, the need was felt for a superior chief
to protect the community from the attacks of the enemy and to enforce the
execution of the orders of the judge. Thus, again, the one person, who was
best known among all families for his ability and material spirit, was again
brought to the executive office of government with a salary.36
As is seen, unlike Namık Kemal, Ziya’s contract was made in case of a war
among people. But there were also similarities, such as: Ziya Pasha’s contract was
made between people and the administrator. But it is certain and a strict belief that
first contract was made between people and the God before the creation of the
world. Ziya Pasha also reverses this notion and creates an artificial contract between
man and the “judge”.
What is interesting in Ziya Pasha’s theory is the description of the ruler as
the paid servant of the community. Claiming such an argument means criticizing the
very existence of the Sultan as the ruler. His status is decreased to a position of an
officer appointed by the people with a payment, and the only way to preserve his
status is to rule fairly. However according to Ottoman state understanding, the
Sultan is a blessing of God for the community. The ruled are his flocks and they are
given to him by God.
36 quoted from Mardin (2000, 341-342)
51
When the arguments of both Young Ottomans are analyzed carefully, the
notion of the modern state theory can be found even though they try to stay loyal to
Islamic thought. Just as, Namık Kemal insists on a modern state understanding when
stating: “Never doubt that the state is neither the father, teacher, executor, nor the
tutor of the people.”37
When they tried to legitimize their liberal standings towards the state
concept, they emphasized on the purist form of the Islamic administration. They,
once again sounds the glory of the Era of Happiness (Asr-ı Saadet) where the
sovereignty belonged to God, and no rank or status made one superior over the
others. The administrator is responsible to God for the happiness of each citizen of
the community. Just as Caliph Omar states: “If a shepherd’s sheep dies in the Sinai
desert, God asks its explanation from me”
There should be a state, but the existence of this state must be dedicated to
the happiness of the citizens. According to the liberal tradition, the state should not
interfere with the freedom of citizens. Every one is equal before the law. In its purist
form, Islam accepts every one as equal in the application of the law of God. To be a
ruler or rich does not lead to a preferential treatment. Even to be a ruler is a burden
because he will be responsible not only for himself and family but also for every
citizen of the city. Shortly, the undermining of the monarchies by the liberal
tradition and the purist version of Islam provided the Young Ottomans with a means
to reconcile both in their ideologies.
However their emphasis on this issue shakes the very philosophical
foundation of the Islamic states, because from the time the control of the caliphate as
an institution passed to the control of dynasties, they “reformed” Islam to legalize
their sovereignty by reconciling it with their ancient philosophies of administration.
In this respect, the Sultan was given a superior position over his subjects, and his
37 “Hiç süphe edilmemek iktiza eder ki hükümet halkın ne babasıdır, ne hocasıdır, ne vasisidir, ne
lalasıdır.” [quoted from Ülken 1966, 151)]
52
position was enhanced with the dogma that he is the shadow of the God on earth.
But, this dogma (the superiority of one over the others) is the main criticism point of
the Young Ottomans. Just as Ali Suavi states:
There is no sovereign but God. There is no sovereign among people and no
Sultan either. Namely no one has the right to execute, assault on
others….namely no one is the slave of the Sultan. Yes there is a governor but
he is not the Sultan but only a trustee38
Ali Suavi goes further and investigates (frankly denies) the legality of the
caliphate institution. According to him there has never been such an institution, but
it is the invention of so-called Islamic states:
Isn’t it awkward to accept the Sultan as a Pope or Islamic state as the state of
divinity?
Now on, we can bravely and unhesitatingly claim that no one, even if he is
called caliph, imam, sultan, or whatever, is the successor of the Prophet. The
claim ‘The Sultan sits on the post’ is a kind of illiterate expression and has
no concrete proof. Even the first four successors (Hulefa-yı Rasidin) had
never used the term caliph for themselves, how could the other snotties use
it?39
Each of the leading Young Ottomans tried to decrease the status of the ruler
to improve their arguments that the sovereignty belongs to all and everyone is equal.
Anyone, whoever analyses the arguments of the Young Ottomans, probably cannot
hold himself from thinking that what they had in their subconscious was the idea of
a “Republican regime”. They were loyal to the sultan in the beginning, and thought
the Ottoman society was not ready for a Republic, but with the increasing
inconsistency of Abdulaziz and the despotism of the Bab-ı Ali, they started to praise
38“Hakim ancak Allahu tealadır. nsandan hiçbir ferd hakim degildir, insandan hiç fert sultan degildir. Yani
kimsenin kimse üzerinde tasallut ve kahr ve tegallübe hakkı yoktur... Evet bir padisah vardır, lakin padisah
emirdir, ecirdir, nazırdır.” [quoted from Çelik (1994, 557)]
39 “Padisaha hakim-i ruhani Papa gibi bakmak ve hükümeti slamiyeyi ahkamı ilahiy-i sırfa üzre müesses bir
hükümet-i ruhaniye gibi müteala etmek abes kalmaz mı?”
Artık kemal-i cesaretle ve bila-tereddüd hükmederiz ki halife, imam, padisah, hasılı her ne nam ve unvan ile
olursa olsun hiç biri Peygamberimizin kaimmakamı veya vekili degildir. (Padisah Peygamber postunda
oturuyor) makuli cahil sözüdür, bir asl-ı seriye müstenid degildir. Riyasete geçtik de Peygambere vekalet
manası Hulefay-ı Rasidin’in bile hatırlarına gelmedi: Nerede kaldı ki sonra gelen sümüklülere!” [quoted
from Danismend (1942, 25)]
53
the Republican regime by using mostly allusion in their writings. For instance
Namık Kemal states that: “It is a wrong belief among Europeans that the Monarchy
is peculiar to the East while the Republican regime is for the West”40
However, sometimes, they cannot avoid expressing themselves by going
beyond the allusions, and reveal what is in their subconscious. In these writings
they, unhesitatingly, express that in proper conditions the best regime is the
Republic:
Isn’t it a must to confess that the people have right to demand Republic when
it is approved that the sovereignty belongs to all? What does confession
mean? Who can deny that right? Was not Islam a kind of Republic at the
beginning?41
And Ziya Pasha argues:
In Republic, there is no sultan, emperor, Grand Vizier. The Sultan, the
Emperor, The Grand Vizier… of the country is the people
In Republic, no corvee is used for timber and rope needed for the dockyards.
If administration needs them it pays for them.
In Republic, the newspapers do not owe praise to the government, but have
right to criticize it within the limits of law.
In Republic, there is a National Assembly whose members are elected by the
people of that country42
40“Evellen: surasını bilmek lazımdır ki “suver-i hükümetten Cumhuriyet, ve hükümet-i ba’z suretlerine dair
efkar Garb’a mahsus olup, Sark mine’l evvwel ile’l-yevm hükümet-i vahid (monark) fikriyle yasardı” diye
Avrupa’da mevcud olan bahis yanlıs bir meseledir. Sark’da mine-kadim bu efkar malumdur.”
[quoted from Kaplan (1974, 535)]
41“ Halkın hakimiyete hakkı tasdik olundugu surette cumhur yapmaga da istihkakı ‘itiraf olunmak
lazım gelmez mi? Demek ne demek? O hakkı dünyada kim inkar edebilir? slam ibtida-i zuhurunda
bir nev-i cumhur degil miydi?” [Namık Kemal, Usul-u Mesveret Hakkında Mektuplar quoted from
Aktas (1936, 13)]
42“dare-i cumhuriyede padisah, imparator, sadrazam, hariciye nazırı falan yoktur. Memleketin padisahı,
imparatoru, kralı, sadrazamı hep ahali-yi memlekettir.
dare-icumhuriye’de Tersane’ye lüzum olan kereste ve halat için ahali angarya kullanılamaz. Eger idareye
kereste ve halat lazımsa, parasını verir, ahaliden satın alır.
dare-i cumhuriyede gazeteler hükümete müdahene etmege borçlu olmayıp hükm-i kanun dairesinde her
türlü ta’rize mezundurlar.
dare-i cumhuriyede bir Millet Meclisi olur. Bunun azasını ahali intihab eder.” [ quoted from Kaplan
(1974, 78-79)]
54
Shortly, it can be argued that, under proper conditions, the Young Ottomans
would be the prior banner-holders of the Republic. In this respect the tone of the
dreams of both Namık Kemal and Ziya Pasha is interesting and important. In their
writings both of them depicted the monarchy as dark and horrifying while freedom
and Republic as bright; a prosperous and happy life is promised to the people under
Republican regime.
A careful eye can also grasp some revolutionary notions in the writings of
each Young Ottomans. Except for Ali Suavi, even though they said they were
against any coup d’etat attempt, they sometimes used some provocative words. For
instance in Namık Kemal’s play, Gülnihal, the dialog between the servant of Muhtar
Bey, Zülfikar, who arrange a flight for his master and Muhtar Bey, who is jailed as a
result of a fake allegation, and decided to kill his half-brother who is responsible for
this allegation, is interesting:
Zülfikar – My Lord, murdering is not a punishment for the cruel, a state
cannot be saved by killing a man! My Lord, people are fed of and want to get
rid of the trouble.
Muhtar Bey – If they want why do they not do it? Why are three hundred
thousand men trembling from a man like the insane who is afraid of his own
shadow?43
Ali Suavi, as the most active member of the Young Ottomans, uses clearer
words:
O people! How long are you still going to believe that a Mahdi shall appear
and save you?
….do you think that emirs, who are in charge and who are free of question
and responsibility, will abandon what profits they draw out of you and begin
favor you?44
43 Zülfikar – Zalime katillikle ceza olunmaz. Beyim, bir adam öldürülmekle bir memleket kurtulmaz! Efendim,
halk canından bizar olmus, halk üzerindeki belanın defini istiyor.
Muhtar Bey – stiyor da niçin def etmiyor? Niçin üç yüz bin kisi, gölgesinden korkan deliler gibi, bir
adamdan titriyor! Benim neme lazım?” [Namık Kemal, quoted from Kaplan (1974, 422)]
44 quoted from Mardin (2000, 378)
55
Lastly, the Young Ottomans have things to say for the officials of the
Ottoman Empire. It is clear that they are against the slave system which contradicts
their strongest claim that everyone is equal. As is noted above, the Sultan as being
only the governor of the state does not have the right to have slaves. The Young
Ottomans demanded that the officials, in modern sense, serve the citizens of the
country with the reason. Besides their main aim must not be the satisfaction of the
Sultan’s demand but the satisfaction of the era’s and people’s need.
In this respect they accept the officials as the servant of people:
Just as the official is the servant not the tutor of the people, the criteria for
his appointment should be talent, not his sect or identity. [Namık Kemal, ,
mtizac-ı Akvam; quoted from Kaplan (1974, 214)]
The second part of the sentence reveals another, different standing of the
Young Ottomans. When they propose to change the criteria for appointment, they
are also changing the main condition of Islam which describes the one who is to be
obeyed. In Islam, the Muslims are ordered to obey to the one who is also a Muslim.
In this respect, a non-Muslim governor, attorney…etc. is totally out of a Muslim’s
mind.
The main evaluations are saved for the last chapter (conclusion), but the
below arguments for Ali Suavi and Namık Kemal, respectively, will give clear
indications about their impact on the following generations:
This creature from fire (Ali Suavi) dreamed about secularism during
theocratic era, republic during the Monarchic era, Turkish nationalism in the
era of Ottomanism, he tried to interpret them and lastly died while trying to
realize them.45
The dominant thesis of that Era was theocratic and monarchic. Kemal stated
an antithesis, against monarchy with the idea of freedom and against
45“….bu atesten mahluk (Ali Suavi) Teokrasi devrinde Laiklik, Mutlakiyet devrinde, Cumhuriyet ve
Osmanlılık devrinde Türklük ve Türkçülük rüyaları görmüs, bu rüyalarını tabire çalısmıs ve nihayet
gene bu rüyalar ugrunda sehit olmustur.”( Danismend 1942, 5)
56
theocracy with the idea of motherland, which will reach to a synthesis with
the foundation of the Turkish Republic.46
In this chapter we tried to reveal the efforts of the Young Ottomans for the
transformation of the mentality of the Ottoman subjects. This projected
transformation encompassed both the subjects as individuals, and the Ottoman state
apparatus (including the Sultan and the officials). There was a clear tendency
towards the modernization of the state administration. In the following chapter we
will try to go a step further and discuss their thoughts on the social stratification of
the Ottoman Empire.
46 “O devirde henüz Türk cemiyetinde sekil bakımından konulmus olan tez monarsik ve teokratik
mahiyetteki idare idi. Kemal hürriyet fikri ile monarsiye, vatan fikri ile de teokratik idareye karsı bir
antitez vazetmis böylece, ancak istiklal harbinden sonra kati bir sentez haline gelebilen demokratik
cereyana suurunu vermis oluyordu.” (Karatay 1941, 11)
57
CHAPTER 5. THE SOCIETY (or THE COMMUNITY)
In this chapter two concepts will be emphasized; these are secularism and
nationalism. It is necessary to point out that the Young Ottomans brought new and
radical ideas onto the agenda of the Ottoman intellectual circles. It is debatable
whether they could make the ordinary people hear their voice but one of the
functions of the intellectuals in a society is their ability to name and describe the
changes effecting the social structures and life. The Young Ottomans might not drag
the people to the political arena as easily as they expected but they drew the picture
of a man who is trying to understand what is going on and reflected the panic and
flurry of a man who is trying to take necessary measures against the changing
conditions which effect every segment of his life.
In this respect they felt that something must be done very urgently and, by
reserving the basic institutions of the state and society, some adaptations must be
brought from the West for the problems which could not answered by the present
intellectual milieu. At this point it has to be said that, by way of their encyclopedic
and superficial knowledge, they could well understand that Western progress owed
much to the abolition of the hegemony of the religious institutions on intellectual
thinking. However what they could not realize was that the same process in an
Islamic state and society mean the depreciation of the values and institutions which
they tried to preserve.
Another important notion in Western progress is the invention of the
nationalism. It began as a project in almost every country. The modern state had to
be involved by the people who speak the official language, have a motherland vision
and sympathy to their country men. The scope of the modern state had to be wider
than the traditional state regarding the masses which will be motivated for the
prosperity of the nation and the state. If modernism would be the case for the
Ottoman Empire a re-imagination of the people as a nation was to be expected. The
Young Ottomans envisaged this thought and tried to motivate the subjects of the
58
Empire gather under the flag of the Ottoman state. However such a tendency,
inevitably, was a threat for the millet system which was regarded to be the guarantee
of the harmony and stability of the Empire.
In this chapter secularism and nationalism will be the challenging ideas
focused on.
Secularism:
Secularism was the attempt to turn the attentions of the people to this world.
It was the program of bringing back the ideal and the Truth to this world. It has been
a project to rescue humanity from the yoke of religion and dogma with the light of
reason and knowledge; shortly being more this-worldly in social and individual
level.
In the beginning it is useful to remember the thoughts of the Young
Ottomans about the Caliphate. First of all, according to them the state should be for
the protection of the basic individual rights. The political and social rights of the
citizens should be secured and the state should let everyone enjoy their rights. In
addition to this, they, especially Namık Kemal, did not accept any right (hukuk)
other than individual rights. If his social contract theory is remembered, he accepts
that the community or the state as the collection of the individuals who have
freedom. Such a collection does not mean a different legal body. At this very point
there is a critical position held by the Young Ottomans that because the caliphate is
the successor of the Prophet and responsible for the continuation of the divine order,
he has to have a legal standpoint of his own. Namely disclaiming the legacy of any
institution or structure other than the individual implies a rejection of the ultimate
authority of the Caliphate. Even if they did not say explicitly, their ideas bear the
arguments that there is no Islamic society or state either.
59
Let’s be clearer. In Islam the notion of community is very important; it is
supposed by Islam that the ideal society is the community of the Muslims which
shows the glory of the divine order on earth. There is some worship which Muslims
must perform with or in the community; for instance the Cuma pray, zekat
(almsgiving), even pilgrimage. The ummet does not refer to the addition of single
Muslims but to the community. Yes, there is a rule which expresses that everyone is
responsible for his own act, but this does not mean the individualism as understood
by the West. The individual can earn heaven as soon as he satisfies the need of his
family, relatives, community, etc, help the poor and the needy, etc.
State is somehow debatable, because some Islamic philosophers claim that
the state itself does not have to be a state of Islam as soon as it lets the believers
worship freely, while others insists on the state’s role as the representative and
banner-holder of the divinity. However the Young Ottomans insist on the
continuation of the Ottoman Empire as the representative of Islam. But as is seen
above, there are contradictions in their thoughts. They omit that the state and
religion are believed as two inseparable brothers (din –u devlet) the disappearance of
the one means the demise of the other for the Ottoman understanding.
While Namık Kemal and Ziya Pasha, unintentionally, undermined the
Caliphate and Islamic state and society, Ali Suavi did it openly. As is stated in the
previous chapter, he is neither the opponent nor the proponent of the demise of the
Caliphate, because for him there had never been such an institution for the Muslims
(Danismend 1942, 25). He believes that the caliphate is an invention of the Eastern
monarchies to legalize their existence and continuity.
When the Caliphate and the Islamic state “reality” are disclaimed then the
law, moving side by side with these institutions, is opened to the criticism
automatically. The Sheria had always been the basic law for the Islamic states,
although they composed it with their traditional laws (örf, adet). In these orders the
dogmas imposed by these channels have priority against reason. Although Islam
60
addresses the people who have reason, the belief must be approved by the hearth
(kalp-gönül). In this atmosphere, the reason has a limit and is insufficient to
understand the Truth wholly. The doors of the Truth are opened according to rank
determined by the sincerity of the belief of the Muslims. The Prophets are the ones
who are allowed to know more, the others’ ability to know comes after them47.
Shortly, ordinary men can not know the result of his decision completely; they have
to obey the discretion of God who knows the good and bad for the people. As a
result, the human is deprived of comprehending the world.
However, as is stated in the previous chapter, and will be stated in the
following chapter in detail, the Young Ottomans believed that the human can attain
the knowledge of natural law with his reason. To make the long story short, they
argued that in the administration of the state reason must be used instead of
traditional beliefs. The science and technology must be the essence of the decisions
taken by the state: “The essence of the political science is not the Sheria but
Geography, Economics and Morality.”48
It is very clear that they demand the Sheria be constrained within the private
sphere. Namık Kemal and Ziya Pasha insist on the application of the Sheria but it
must be stated that what they want is the reformed form of Sheria. Just as in the
letter, which was sent by Mustafa Fazıl Pasha to the Sultan, some clear messages are
given about the issue:
But my Lord, you, of course, know better than me that the religion and sect
address to the soul and promise us the moral blessings; it is clear that what
limits and determines the law of the nations is not the religion or sect. If
religion does not keep its position as the Truth, namely, interferes to worldly
affairs, it will destroy all and itself also.49
47 In this respect Mirach is the revelation or presentation of the Truth for the Prophet by God
48 “lmi siyasetin esası Seriat degil, Cografya, ktisat ve Ahlaktır.” [Ali Suavi quoted from
Danismend (1942, 24)]
49 “Ancak Padisahım Efendim, Zat-ı sahaneniz benden ra’na bilirsiniz ki, din ve mezhep ruha
hükmeder ve bize ni’am-ı uhreviye vaad eder; su kadar ki milletlerin hukukunu tahdid ve tayin eden
61
Or Ali Suavi states:
Reform in alphabet is a good reform (emr-i hasane). In such subjects it is
better not to mention bid’ at. Because bid’ at means to propose what does
not exist in religious terminology. Issues, such as this, are about the worldly
affairs, not the affairs of the divinity. We have to change and reorganize our
worldly affairs according to our needs.50
…otherwise, what we call the political science is not a thing donated with
miracles and extraordinary powers which cannot be attained with reason.51
If a comparison was made among the Young Ottomans to determine which
one was the most radical, the winner would be, unhesitatingly, Ali Suavi. His zealot
character (as named by Serif Mardin) shaped the tone of his writings. In addition to
his thought about the Caliphate and the secular state administration, he is also the
one who argued that worship can be performed in Turkish. To voice this idea is
extremely controversial even today he insists on the usage of Turkish in worships by
quoting the arguments of leading Islamic philosophers and leaders. According to
him the verses can be translated into Turkish, the hutbe, in Cuma prayer, can be
addressed in Turkish and the prayer can be performed in Turkish.52
It should not be assumed that Islam ordered that Arabic is the language of the
religion because Quran was sent in Arabic. It is not true; just as is not he
(mam-ı Azam Ebu Hanife) the one who announced a fatwa for the non-
Arabs to use their own languages while praying?53
din ve mezhep degildir. Din hakayık-ı ezeliye makamında durup kalmazsa, yani umur-ı dünyeviyeye
dahi müdahele ederse, cümleyi itlaf eder, kendisi dahi telef olur.”[Mustafa Fazıl Pahsa quoted from
Kaplan (1974, 10)]
50 “Islah-ı hat emr-i hasenedir. Böyle meselelerde bidat tabiri karıstırılmasa iyi olur. Çünkü bidat
ıstılah-ı serde dinde olmayan bir seyi peyda etmek demektir. Böyle hat gibi meseleler ise umur-ı
diniyyeden olmayıp, umur-ı dünyeviyyemizdendir. Umur-ı dünyeviyyemizi iktiza-yı mesalihe göre
tebdil ve tagyirde muhtarız..”[Ali Suavi quoted from Kaplan (1974, 521)]
51 “Yoksa ilm-i siyaset dedigimiz insanların aklı ermeyecegi avaid-i fevkalade üzre mucizat ile tertip olunmus
gibi bir sey degildir.” [Ali Suavi quoted from Kaplan (1974, 530)]
52 which means the verses can be read in Turkish while praying.
53 “Sakın zannolunmasın ki fil’asl Arabi olan su lisanın amme-i slama lisan olmasına Kur’anın
Arabi olusu ve adem-i tercemesi cebretmistir. ste bu da böyle degildir; zira (mam-ı Azam Ebu
Hanife) degil midir ki Arap olmayanlar için Kur’anı kendi lisanına terceme ile namazda bu tercemeyi
okumaga fetva verdi?”[Ali Suavi quoted from Danismend (1942, 34)]
62
So if this is the case, why are our people forced to read Arabic version of the
commentary on Quran like Khadi Celaleyn and Ebu-suud? How will we
mean this? Do you say it is tradition? Do you say, because they do not have a
Turkish version of the commentary on Quran, they read the Arabic version?
It is wrong, because there are Turkish versions.54
What all above meant for the people of the Ottoman Empire is clear. The
mentality shaped by morality and religion was forced to change; the social structure
shaped according to traditions was shaken. The mentality, proposed by the Young
Ottomans, leads the hesitation for the people about the things which they know and
believe as the truth.
Nationalism:
Most of this section will be shaped by the thoughts of Namık Kemal about
Turkish (even if he prefers to say Ottomanism) nationalism. H was a sincere
Ottomanist, however his followers accept him as one of the founders of Turkish
nationalism. In this part the dilemma of the Young Ottomans that they faced while
they were trying to offer a nation building project, will be discussed but firstly it is
necessary to understand the ideas of Namık Kemal about nationalism and the
motherland (Vatan).
As is mentioned in the third chapter, the motherland meant for an Ottoman
subject, the place where he was born. He was characterized by the people of another
region according to his birthplace (memleket). He, also, felt himself as stranger
outside of his own place. Turkish folk music is full of such feelings one feels when
he is out of his town. However this was for the micro lives. In the big picture, for a
Muslim, the world is divided into two sectors: one is the land of Islam (dar-u’l
Islam) and the rest is the land of infidels (dar-u’l Harp). But the owner of both is
God. What Muslims are expected to do is the Islamisation of the land of infidels.
54 “Hal böyle iken yine halkımızın camilerde medreselerde Kadı ve Celaleyn ve Ebusuud gibi Arabi Tefsir
okumaları ne içindir? Buna ne mana verecegiz? Görenek mi dersiniz? Bu görenek ne içindir derim?
Türkçede tefsir yok onun için Arapçadan okuyorlar mı dersiniz? Yanlıstır. Zira Türkçe tefsirlerimiz var.” [Ali
Suavi quoted from Kaplan (1974, 516)]
63
Namely, for a Muslim there cannot be a concrete, predetermined place which is
encircled with boundaries. In Ottoman reality, like other Islamic states, first (micro)
was for the subjects, the realization of the second one was transferred to the state by
the Muslim subjects while delivering the suzerainty right.
In micro level, there was no need for sharing the same goals among neighbor
villages or towns. Everyone was allowed to live on his own land and any
interference was forbidden by the state. The borderline of the “motherland”, for
those people, starts and finishes within their birthplace. Of course, such an
understanding cannot be accepted by the modern nation state which Namık Kemal
had in mind.
For this reason, he had to challenge both micro and macro understanding. In
micro level, he tried to create a motherland vision for the subjects of the Empire.
This was an attempt of enlargement which goes beyond the “motherland” vision of
the traditional perspective. He offered a motherland which refers to the lands of the
Ottoman Empire. He addressed all the people, disregarding their compartmental
position, in millet system, to gather under the flag of the state and defend their
motherland. The main tone of his plays and poems was the praise of the nation and
motherland.
In the macro level, an opposite attempt was made by Namık Kemal which
can be called the constraining attempt. According to this vision, the state is proposed
to concentrate on the land and people within its borders. It has to improve the
prosperity of the Ottoman nation. Namık Kemal tried to limit the tendency of the
Ottoman administration, towards keeping the interest of the Muslims all around the
world as the preserver of faith. In this respect, it is interesting to note that the Young
Ottomans did not have any writings which criticized the assault of the Western
countries against the Muslim lands. Ziya Pasha even appreciated the British Empire
for her annexation of India thanks to her patience and effort in the way of progress.
64
[Hürriyet, N.40 quoted from Kaplan (1978, 101)] 55. Besides, the state is, also,
proposed to apply same law for the subjects irrespective of their religion and sect.
The subjects, now citizens, of the Empire were called to gather under the flag
of the Ottoman Empire and work for the prosperity of their nation. The glory and
harmony of the Ottoman society was praised by the Young Ottomans, namely a
nation living in the motherland for the same goals.
Up to this point everything is proper for a classic nation building. Namely
what they tried to do is Ottoman nationalism. But the ideas borrowed from the West
and their confused consciousness did not let them create a nation and motherland on
which all of the Ottoman millets desired to live. In Western nation states the
centralization and modernization forced the people of the countries to use official
language, sometimes believe official religion, and obey the rule of the central
authority. When the Young Ottomans borrowed the idea of the Western thinkers
about freedom, monarchy, nationalism and modernity, such applications would
inevitably, come after. Of course these requirements intensified their confusion and
while they tried to announce Ottomanism, they offered the Turkish as a common
language and the Turks as the glorious.
If we turn back to the discussion mentioned at the beginning, the Young
Ottomans realized the necessity of creating a nation from the communal structure of
the Ottoman Empire. They accepted the national state model of the West as the ideal
and tried to determine the main determinants of being a nation. In this respect,
Ottomanism was a political nationalism project. It is absolutely an “imagined”
nation56 which was tried to be created by the Young Ottomans57. Because, as is
55 Ali Suavi’s criticism about the Khive Khanate should have to be stated but it should be
remembered that the interest of Ali Suavi towards this country was about their nationality not
religion.
56 It was the expression used by Benedict Anderson; (1991)
57 The same process had been seen in the Habsburg Empire. As an Empire including many ethnic
communities, it tried to create a vision for its subject in the way of creating a nation.
65
stated in Chapter III, Ottomanism had never referred to an identity of any millet
within the Empire. It was the identity of the rulers. Expanding the scope of this
identity and making it the identity of the Ottoman people, firstly, required a change
in its meaning. In fact, the goal of the rulers, for some time58, was to gather all of the
subjects under the name of Ottoman. The Young Ottomans accepted the model of
the Tanzimat and used the expression “Osmanlı milleti” to refer the citizens of the
Ottoman Empire in their writings.
In the second step, a common language must be put aside for the citizens of
the Empire in order that they could communicate with the state and other citizens.
The classical Ottoman language was not suitable for this purpose. A more simple
language should be used for official writings and education. There was an attempt
for the name of using simple language before Tanzimat; it was in the first official
newspaper, Takvim-i Vakayi, published under the reign of Mahmud II. The language
used in this newspaper was, relatively, simpler.59 Also the Young Ottomans tried to
use a simple language in order to be able reach their readers easily. But this is not a
simple marketing tactic, they insisted on the usage of a simple and common
language for official writings, education and daily communication. They tried to
integrate the subjects of the Empire both politically and socially.
However, their confused consciousness, mentioned above, and the peculiar
situation of the Empire did not let them offer clear proposals. First of all, the identity
of the Ottoman became very wide when it is used for the entire range of subject.
Even the Turks hesitated to be named as Ottomans. To be clearer, the Young
Ottomans were in lack of a subject which can be called Ottoman. However they
needed one to build a nation so they emphasized the Turks to name the nation they
58 Begining with the Tanzimat
59 It should be stated that the newspaper was not published only in Turkish, but the copies in different
languages of the communities of the Empire, such as Arabic, language of Armenians..etc. were also
printed and circulated. This shows that , in that time, the Otoman state was far from a nation building
project.
66
tried to create. “Among the Ottoman community Turks, thanks to their glorious
talent, features and population, earn the prior status.”60
Their emphasis on Turks caused some hesitation about their Ottomanism
vision. However apart from this, the ideology of nationalism among ethnic
communities of the Empire revealed a different conclusion. Mutual emphasis on
ethnic identity (even the real intention of the Young Ottomans was Ottomanism)
accelerated the process.61
In conclusion we have to state, once again, that the Young Ottomans were
sincere Ottomanist. The process described above was totally different from the ideal
in their mind. They always worked for the unity of the Ottoman state and society.
They did not intentionally emphasize Turks and Turkish in order to construct a
Turkish nationalism. However their open-ended claims let the proponents of
different ideologies of the following generations interpret them differently.
Following two quotations are illuminative to show the repercussions of their
thoughts on the following generations:
Kemal’s most important and glorious inheritance is the love of the
motherland, it was once a moral love, and with the appearance of him it
became this-worldly (Tarhan 1955, 105)
We commemorate him (Namık Kemal) because he is one of the first showing
us the Western thought. He is the greatest ideologue of us. He is the
precursor of the present. He is nationalist, patriot… (Gündüz 1955, 105)
Secularism and nationalism are two important concepts of modernization.
They targeted the traditional state formations which depended on the religion (or
traditions) and the glorification of the imperial center. The Ottoman Empire had
always tried to avoid the disintegration of the harmony in the Empire that had rested
60 “Osmanlı camiası içinde gerek nüfus kalabalıgı gerekse kabiliyetleri itibariyle birinci mevkide
“vüsat-i havsa, itidal-i dem” tahammül ve sükunet gibi mümtaz meziyet ve sıfatlara malik bulunan
Türkler isgal etmektedir.” [Namık Kemal quoted from Kaplan (1974,..229)]
61 See Karpat (2001, 320)
67
on the millet system. The Young Ottomans also demanded the continuity of this
order but the unavoidable consequences of their proposals62 were in contradiction
with the very basis of this idealized order. In this chapter we tried to discuss their
proposals and their probable consequences. In the following chapter (which is the
last chapter of the main body) the changes in the world view of the ordinary
Ottoman man will be evaluated.
62 we should once again repeat that they are neither the initiator nor the sole cause of the destruction
of the harmony mentioned
68
CHAPTER 6. THE MENTALITY OF THE ORDINARY MAN
In this chapter the most elaborate dimension of the mentality transformation
will be handled: the transformation of mentality of the ordinary man who felt the
effects of the changing environment deeply, the deep effect of modernization in
beliefs and perspective. His understanding of time, space, economics and this-world
was forced to change. He had to find ways to survive under the new conditions. In
this respect the deviation from the morality set by the traditional doctrines was most
observed in this dimension. Namely, the mentality followed a different way to
position itself in new conditions. Besides, because the morality of the traditional
order did not disappear swiftly, the most dramatic bifurcation63 emerged in the lives
of the ordinary man; while he tried to or pretended to obey the traditional order, he
adopted new rules in his life in order to continue his livelihood.
The thoughts of the Young Ottomans were, actually, the reflection of this
dilemma in intellectual level; they were the voice of the Ottoman subjects who tried
to redefine their position. In fact their emphasis on the concept of individual was an
exit from this dilemma. The individual, enhanced with reason and ability to
comprehend the law of nature, could show enough resistance to the difficulties of
the new conditions. In this respect, their conception of individual is not only
important at the political level; the economic dimension of it should be kept in mind.
The enthusiastic and selfish human being has been the main actor of modernization
process, and the Young Ottomans showed that they well understood the importance
of this concept.
As is mentioned above, the individual is enhanced with reason and ability to
understand the law of nature. Namık Kemal stated that the human dominates the
world with reason. Because he has the ability to understand the law of nature and
can attain the knowledge of the Truth with reason, he can dominate the world.64 If
63 More dramatic than the bifurcation of Tanzimat as expressed by Berkes.
64 See Hikmet-i Hukuk quoted from Kaplan (1974, 207)
69
this argument is analyzed carefully, it can be understood that it will lead to an
understanding that the Truth belongs to this world, not to the eternal world as
expressed by the Islamic doctrine. So the effort must be searching it in this world.
Namely, like Protestant belief, the eternal happiness can be gained through this
world.65 Then isn’t it reasonable to work for this world? The answer of Namık
Kemal to this question is a clear “Yes”:
Although human is a mortal being he has to work as if he is immortal.
Otherwise, if everyone concentrates on only his time of existence in this
world and everyone arranges his effort according this time, humanity can not
last. There is a kalenderane66 mentality which claims that everything is done
by God only, labor and effort are all useless. Whereas, in this world the
property is accumulated, and this occurs as a consequence of work. In order
to guarantee the future, it should be earned twice but spent once.67
The achievement of such an understanding among Ottoman identities would
need a big shift in their economic mentality. In every traditional society,
subsistence-minded economic understanding had been dominant. In the Ottoman
and the Islamic understanding, because the owner of the property is god and he
gives rızk to his kuls according to measure he predetermined, the result of the
endeavor can not be foreseen by anyone. In tevekkül understanding, the final
decision is expected from God for the result of the human endeavor.
Besides, the accumulation was accepted as a bad habit by society; spending
money for almsgiving, founding pious endowment, organizing feasts…etc. were the
65 In this respect, it is meaningful that Ali Suavi was called as “Protestant Suavi” by the stanbul
newspapers. (Atay 1954, 104)
66 the expresion ‘kalenderane’ used for the people who almost cut his material bonds with this world.
They drink wine and establish loose connections with daily life. It can not be used for all members of
heteredox beliefs in the Ottoman society. However Namık Kemal’s tone implies that the expression
also involves the orders who prefer an “ascetic” life style
67 “nsan fani oldugu halde yine ebedi hayata mahzar olacak gibi çalısmalıdır. Yoksa herkes sayini müddeti
hayatı nispetiyle tahdit ederse ömrü daimi olan insaniyet baka bulamaz. Bizde kalenderane bir zihniyet
vardır; her ne yaparsa Allah yapar; emekler saiyler hep beyhudedir, diyorlar. Halbuki dünyada mal ıtlak
olunur ne varsa hepsi çalısmak ile vücuda gelir. Müstakbeldeki hali emniyet altına almak iki kazanıp bir
yemekle mümkün olur.”[ Say, quoted from Özön, M. Nihat, (1938, 221)]
70
signs of welfare, not the money one holds. Shortly what is important for such
societies was not production but consumption.
Such an atmosphere, normally, led to a bohemian life style which the Young
Ottomans could not accept. The humble, passive human had to be turned into a
furious and energetic one who has ideals about this world and one who is
enthusiastic to have the richness of this-world. However, firstly, the human must be
reminded that he has will to act and he can control his own action:
I do not care even if I am told that I have no freewill and what I know as
freewill is only the result of some successive occasions. Since I definitely
know I am free to write or not to write these lines when I get the pencil in my
hand and do not feel any outside effect determining my intention about
writing, I, of course, know I am free.68
Namely, the control of the human act is taken from God and given to human
himself, so human is given two certificates by the Young Ottomans, first
understanding that praises the labor for this world, second the freewill. Thanks to
these two certificates human could be braver, reasonable, he could make analytic
projections and will try to realize his very existence in this world. In fact what the
Young Ottomans tried to do was imposing the Ottoman subjects self-confidence.
They lamented the sluggish type imposed by the religious orders. In this respect, the
basic characters of Namık Kemal’s plays and novels are furious, energetic and selfconfident.
What do we have in our hand? Are not they totally a mind and a heart from a
piece of meat and a few drops of blood? But what did we do with this mind
and heart? What are we still doing? We gathered a few pieces of wood and
built a ship, put some trees on it and attached a piece of linen to these trees.
Thanks to these, we can travel all around the world and dominate the earth.
Air brings what power it has; winds from that side uproots the trees,
68 “bana istenildigi kadar sende fi-nefs-il emr ihtiyar yoktur. htiyar zannettigin ahval birbirini takip
ederek gelmekte olan bir takım esbabın netayicinden ibarettir denilsin dursun. Ben madem ki kalemi
elime aldıgım zaman su satırları yazmakta veya yazmamakta muhtar oldugumu ilmel-yakin, aynelyakin
biliyordum ve bana yazmayı istemekte veya istememekte hariçten hiçbir sebebin tesir eyledigini
göremiyorum, elbette kendimi muhtar bilirim.” [Namık Kemal, Hukuk, quoted from Özön (1938,
63)]
71
collapses the hills to each others; air drags the sea, mixes the deep of the seas
and reveals the stones of the bottom of the seas to the surface. It seems as if
it will swallow everything on its way but we, still, challenge it with those
trees and linen. We struggle again and again; wind gets tired but human does
not. He demands another storm, another enemy to challenge.69
What is expressed in this quotation is the next phase of the human who takes
the control of his action; fighting with the blockades on the way of progress. In
western progress, first step was the emancipation of the human from the traditional
and ancient bonds. He had been given an identity as an individual. Then the
hegemony of the religion on knowledge abolished. Thanks to this achievement, the
ordinary man (layman) realized the truth and forced the dogmas. Every progress
increased the self-confidence of the humanity. Human with reason, as the main actor
in this progress was praised and it is expressed that human can learn and know
everything with reason. If he can learn and know he can also control and dominate
it. Namely mental achievement should be completed with physical one. Shortly, the
nature, which is both a laboratory and obstacle for the human progress should be
controlled by humanity. As seen above, Namık Kemal does not draw a different
picture. He praises the achievement of humanity against natural obstacles and labels
nature as the enemy. “In the countries, called civilized, humanity almost totally
dominates the nature.”70
As is well known, this domination has not been an innocent control. It bears
exploitation which cannot be accepted by many Eastern belief systems. However
69 “Elimizde ne var? Ne oldugu bize meçhul bir akıl ile bir kaç lokma etten, birkaç damla kandan yapılmıs
bir gönül degil mi? Ya biz o akıl ile bu kalp ile neler yapmısız? Neler yapıyoruz? Birkaç tahtayı bir yere
toplamısız, bir tekne haline koymusuz, üzerine birkaç agaç dikmisiz, kenarlarına birkaç arsın bez baglamısız
o sayede su gibi bulundugumuz dünyanın dört yanını tutmus, haya gibi oturdugumuz kürenin her tarafını
ihata etmis iki mehip kudretin ittifakına galip geliyoruz. Hava ne kadar kuvveti var ise meydana çıkarıyor,
mesela su taraftan esiyor, agaçları kökünden söküyor, tepeleri birbirine çarpıyor, denizde ne kadar su varsa
önüne katıyor; ona da kanaat etmiyor, deryanın ka’arını karıstırıyor, rast geldigi tasları toprakları su yüzüne
çıkarıyor, bu tarafa dogru sürüyor. Önüne her ne tesadüf ederse yutacak gibi görünür, biz yine agaç
kırıklarıyla, o bez parçalarıyla karsısına, zıddına gidiyoruz. Ugrasıyoruz, ugrasıyoruz; rüzgar yoruluyor,
siddetinden kuvvetinden kalıyor, insan yine yorulmuyor, bir fırtına daha istiyor, çarpısacak bir düsman
bekliyor.” [Namık Kemal, Akif Bey quoted from Kaplan (1974, 428)]
70 “Memalik-i mütemeddine dedigimiz yerlerde tabiat-ı beser bayagı tabiat-ı aleme tahakküm etmis”
[Namık Kemal, Terakki quoted from Kaplan (1974, 199)]
72
this domination has always been tried to be legalized by its addition to the welfare of
humanity. Frankly, the Young Ottomans did not have time to discuss the negative
effects of this domination. They dealt with the result much more than the process.
They demanded modernization, individualization and welfare very urgently. Isn’t it
Islam that orders working? So the Ottomans must also work harder. Isn’t it Islam
that orders Muslim be powerful? So the state should set its order to progress…etc. If
the answers of such questions are given superficially who can say that they must be
“No”? Actually, no one. However a thorough analysis will reveal the reality that a
dramatic shift was needed for the Ottomans to accept this process.
In fact, even the result would not attract the Ottomans because of the humble
life style. Just as Namık Kemal, harshly, assaulted on this mentality.
Modesty, which means satisfaction with the things one earned as a result of
sufficient labor, is attributed a different meaning. When one owns a cloak
and a morsel, he felt himself as the owner of an inexhaustible treasury. Also
it becomes a merit to rest in his residence without doing anything. As soon as
these thoughts are dominant among people it is impossible to find any
surplus rebounded from the amount spent from the livelihood of anyone or
any stone building from one’s ancestors.71
From a different perspective, this quotation summarizes the mentality of the
Ottoman subjects. Because this world is the temporary residence of Muslims, extra
effort is meaningless when one earns his livelihood. The buildings were also the
reflection of this mentality, so they were very modest and feeble against time; timber
and brick were the main materials of the buildings. Namely every object and
atmosphere reminded people that this-world is temporal and extra effort is
meaningless (even sin) which made people too much involved with worldly affairs.
71 “Elden gelen sa’yi fi’ile getirdikten sonra müyesser olan kisb ile iktifa demek olan kanaat baska manaya
hamlolunmus. Bir hırka ile bir lokma nasib oldu mu, bir kenz-i layüfnaya malikiyet zehabı hasıl olarak tenperverlik
peygulesinde yan gelip zevke bakmak sevap hükmünde tutuluyor...Halkta bu fikirler mevcud iken
hemen hiç kimsenin çekmecesinde havayic-i zaruriyesini idare edecek miktardan ziyade ve belki o kadar para
bulunabilmek ve hemen hiç kimseye ceddinden –tamir ihtiyacından vareste- bir kargir hane kalmak ihtimali
yoktur.” [Namık Kemal, Terakki quoted from Kaplan (1974, 201)]
73
Both divan and folk literature supported this mentality. Firstly, the subjects
and objects of the divan literature were always abstract; the concrete issues were told
with allusions and abstract metaphors. Besides the style of the literal works were
accepted more important than the subject itself. The content was usually sacrificed
for the sake of style. Second, both divan literature and folk literature dictated the
mentality that extra effort for this world is meaningless. The divan literature did this
by proposing extravagancy and excess entertainment. Joy, wine and luxury had been
the main theme for this literature.
In folk literature there had been two main currents. The one, under the
control of religious orders, used the modesty and proposed people be modest and
content with what God gave them. The second currency was more “this worldly”, it
expressed the joy of life, natural beauties and love as its main theme. However even
this tendency had never been too much “this worldly”. People are recommended to
enjoy this world because it is a temporary existence. It is, again, dominant in this
type of folk literature that the effort devoted for this life is meaningless. Beside this,
according to both currents, justice will be set in the judgment day; so it is wise to let
the judgment to God prevail.
However, the Young Ottomans’ effort had been for this world. Because of
this, they criticized the main style of the divan literature and claimed that the idea or
meaning is the essence of the literature.72
In our literature the meaning is sacrificed for the style that contemplation
becomes excessive. It is excessive that, sometimes, it is unclear if there is an
idea given.73
The concept of time is also flu in both literature and lives of the people. What
is important for the people was the time they live; past was only a memory, it was
72See Namık Kemal, Talim-i Edebiyat quoted from Kaplan (1974, 381)
73 “Edebiyatımızda mana sanat ugruna feda oluna geldiginden vüs’at-i tasavvur o derece ifrata
varmıstır ki, bazı kere tahayyülde eb’ad-ı mutlaka dahiliye bile kanaat olunmaz.” [Namık Kemal;
Lisan-ı Osmani’nin Edebiyatı Hakkında Bazı Mülahazatı Samildir, quoted from Kaplan (1974, 186)]
74
remembered with stories and tales; the analysis of the past events were rare; it was
even meaningless for the ordinary man. Future was unclear for the human because it
can only be known to God, so making plans and projections on it meant interference
of God’s domain. However the modern man need to know what future may bring,
and make forecasts about the future to make preparations for the probable
consequences.
Let’s think freely. Does not the life of the people consist only of future?
What is past? A death…What is present? It is a last breath.
Both for individual and societies what is the benefit of the past events even
they were full of glory and happiness? And what will be left for the future
event even if the present is fine.74
Shortly the advantages of the modernization are always praised by the Young
Ottomans. While doing this, they criticized the mentality of the traditional order
which, for them, dragged people to laziness, sluggishness and unawareness about the
civilization. In this respect Namık Kemal, in ‘Medeniyet’ article, compares two
types of human, while one lives according to traditional order, the other enjoys the
modernity:
…is the security of the man who is accustomed to eat dye-bread and sleep on
the earth less comfortable than the man who eats delicious meals and sleeps
in bed?...What is the superiority of the French woolen cloth over aba in case
of warming the body?
Civilization offers people millions of gold. Does gold increase appetite? Or
does it lengthen life?
Civilization offers palaces from marble. Do such building block the death?
Or do they abolish illness?
Civilization offers light in the streets at night. What is the benefit for the man
wandering around on the street instead of spending time with his family after
the sunset?
Civilization offers ships and trains. Why does a man need to travel up to
three hundred hours and stay five to ten days on seas, when it is enough for
him to have a hut and two acres of land for his livelihood?
74 “Layıkıyle düsünülsün insanın hayatı yalnız istikbalden ibaret degil midir?Mazi nedir? Bir mevt-i
ebedi. Hal nedir, bir nefes-i va-pesin. Gerek fert için gerek cemiyet için mazi mesut imis sanlı imis,
bu güne ne faydası görülür, hal rahat imis, emin imis yarına ne lütfu kalır?” [Namık Kemal; stikbal,
quoted from Özön (1938, 46)]
75
Civilization invented telegraph. Isn’t it meaningless for the poor, who is even
unaware about the situation of next room, to learn the incidences in
America?...etc.
Such arguments are the signs of the man who is unaware about his nature and
talent as a human. As is seen while the birthrate of the humans is equal to
almost all creatures, there are more human than the creatures in number
thanks to his ability creating civilization. Just as, it is obvious that the
civilization is the guarantor of human life.
Apart from these, the new inventions, gained as a result of human labor and
idea in this world, are clear proofs that human is not created to eat a piece of
bread and sleep on earth. Just as, accepting civilization as meaningless
means claiming a deficiency in the creation of human.
Yes stone building can not block the death and illness, but they can resist
against fire and collapse.
Yes it is more proper for man to spend time with his family rather than
wandering around on the streets at night, but thanks to the light provided by
gasoline, the production and commerce can be active for an extra six to
seven hours.
The people, traveling on ships and trains, bring the richness and beauty of the
places all around the world to their citizens.
The civilization, using telegraph, can learn the incidences all over the world
and benefit from the results of the incidences.
To claim ‘That is enough for us, we have to content with it’ or ‘We inherited
this from our ancestors, rest is bid’at, lessons, experiments, books, machines,
progresses, inventions are all meaningless’ and to live under the yoke of the
infidels like Indians and Algerians are not wise thoughts for the humanity.”
In conclusion, being uncivilized means dying before the pre-determined
time.75
75 “çavdar ekmegi yemege ve toprak üzerinde yatmaga alısmıs bir adamın karnını doyurmak ve uykusunu
uyumakta gördügü asayis, nefis ta’amlar yemege ve yaldızlı karyolada yatmaga meluf olanların rahatından az
mıdır? Vücudu ısıtmakta Fransız çuhasının adi abaya ne rüçhanı olabilir?”
“Medeniyet insanı milyonlarla altına malik edermis. Altın istihayı mı ziyadelestirir? Hayat mı çogaltır?”
“Medeniyet mermerden masnu’ saraylar peyda edermis. O kadar metin binalar ecele mi medhal bırakmaz?
Hastalıgı mı men eder?”
“Medeniyet geceleri sokakta gaz peyda edermis. Allah’ın günesi zail olduktan sonra insana göre akrabasının
arasına girip de i’tilaf-ı aileden müstefid olmak gibi bir lezzeti terk ederek kahve kahve dolasmakta ne
ihtiyacı olabilir?”
“Medeniyet vapurlar, simendiferler husule getirmis. kametine bir kulübe ve maisetine iki dönüm toprak kafi
olan bir adamın üç yüz saatlik yerlere gitmeye ve bes on gün denizler içinde kalmaya ne ihtiyacı olabilir?”
“Medeniyet telgrafı icad eylemis. Yanı basındaki odada geçen ahvali bilmeyen biçareye göre Amerika’nın
vukuatını ögrenmeye çalısmakta ne mana vardır? Keza ve keza.”
Bu türlü mütaala insanın tabiat ve istidadından bütün bütün gaflet eseridir. Görüyoruz ki insan tevlid
kuvvetinde, hemen kaffe_i hayvanatın kafesinden birkaç bin kat ziyade bulunuyor; ve bu kesret sahra-yı
vahsette degil, saadet-sera-yı medeniyette görülüyor. Bundan bilbedahe sabit olur ki medeniyet hayat-ı
beserin kafilidir.”
“Bundan baska insanın sa’y ve fikir ile dünyada izhar ettigi bunca bedayi’ öyle bir parça ekmek yemek ve
topraklarda yuvarlanıp uyumak için yaratılmıs bir mahluk olmadıgına bürhan-ı kafidir.”
“Evet, kargir binalar ecele, hastalıga mukavemet etmez. Fakat, yanmaya, yıkılmaya karsı durur; letafet ve
mamuriyetle birkaç karn evlada kalır.”
76
Of course, it should be remembered that what Namık Kemal means as
civilization is modernization. Because the lives of the Ottomans do not resemble the
one who sleeps on earth. But he exaggerates the example to press his praise for
modernization.
The Young Ottomans needed modernism very urgently. The Ottoman
Empire should be as strong as the European states and the citizens of the Empire as
prosperous as the Europeans. In this respect, the civilization, industrial and scientific
methods of the Europeans should be applied in the Ottoman Empire.
Engineering has reached its zenith of expectations: through it, the continents
are separated, seas are united and plots of earth are located in the midst of
vast oceans and water found sandy in wastes.
Economics has given rise to the division of labor. A mediocre artisan is, in
his field, ten times as able as an ancient master craftsman.
When will we start taking example?
What we have done does not amount more than a few superficial changes
that newspapers and that through the efforts of the late Sinasi were able to
bring about the literature.
We have not a single factory. How are arts and crafts to prosper in our
country?
We have not been able to establish a single joint-stock company. Is this the
way to advance trade?
Is there a single Ottoman Bank in existence? How do we propose to go about
creating wealth? [Namık Kemal quoted from Mardin (2000, 406)]
According to Ali Suavi, basic reason why the Ottomans cannot industrialize
is the guild reality. He states that the traditional training system hinders the artisans
“Evet, geceleri issiz bir adam için muttasıl ailesini terk edip de sokaklarda eglence taharri etmekte bir letafet
yoktur. Fakat gaz olan yerlerde ashab-ı sa’y u ticaret geceleri de altı yedi saat isyle veya alısverisiyle mesgul
olur ve bu suretle ömrü üzerine bir ömür daha katar.”
“Simendifer veya vapur ile birkaç yüz saatlik yerlere giden veya birkaç gün deniz üzerinde çalkalananlar ise
marifetin bir keramet-i garibesiyle tayy-ı mekan etmis veya postuyla sulardan geçmis gibi cihanın ta öbür
tarafına giderler, havayic-i hayatı getirirler, vatandaslarının ayagına isar ederler.”
“Telgraf kullanan akvam, eger eski dünyada ise yeni dünyada bulunan bir tabinin hazakatinden veya zuhur
eden bir vak’anın tesiratından hayatlarına, büyük büyük faydalar görürler.”
“ <<Bize su lazım, onunla kanaat etmeliyiz>>. Ve <<Pederlerimizden bunu gördük, onun haricinde ne varsa
bid’attir. Dersler, talimler, kitaplar, makineler, terakkiler, icadlar ne ise yarar?>> diye Hintliler, Cezayirliler
gibi, ecanibin kahır ve galebesi altında hürriyete hiçbir suretle yakısır seylerden degildir.”
“Hülasa medeniyetsiz yasamak, ecelsiz ölmek kabilindendir.” [Namık Kemal quoted from Kaplan (1974,
231-233)]
77
learn new inventions and adapt a different method which may cause his expulsion
from the guild organization.
In fact the basic reason is the mentality of the traditional order which has
been an obstacle for the state and people to accept and adopt the modern mentality.
However, as is told at the beginning of this chapter, the individual, who is open to
net effects of the industrial and commercial progress of the Western states in his
daily life, had to accept some of them. His view about property and this-world
shifted dramatically (Sayar 1986, 345). As a result of this shift:
The changed patterns of social stratification and acquisition of wealth, the
modern educational system and other factors produced two seemingly
conflicting results: first, they undermined the traditional social order and
mobilized the masses in populist religious movements that appeared to
advocate a return to older, but actually sought to accommodate change
within a traditional Islamic social framework; second they participated in the
rise of a new and increasingly individualistic middle class, with its own
pragmatic values and modernist Islamic identity. The political impact of
these reactions began to materialize in the 1860s in the Young Ottoman
movement. (Karpat 2001, 181)
78
CONCLUSION
The modernization of societies is not a simple replacement of institutions and
interrelations. Every belief, institution, relation or whatever has deep roots in the
history of societies. The Ottoman modernization should also be observed from this
perspective. It is a multidimensional evolution that incorporated values and ideas of
the traditional culture and history (Karpat 2001, 328). The traditional establishment
of the Ottoman Empire had clear and deep inconsistencies with modernity like every
traditional order. If the modernization option is chosen the traditional order must be
out, because it requires a total change in the establishment of societies. The way of
life promised by modernity excludes the institutions and beliefs of the past. The
traditions survive only through their symbolic meanings.
However for the societies, living under the threat and assault of the European
state and capitalism had no other choice. They have to modernize their state and
societies in order to survive in new order. In the Ottoman Empire the threat was first
understood by the state elites after withdrawals, but at the beginning the technology
transfers seemed as the cure for the defeats in the military field. It was not a
modernization project. In the 19th century new bureaucratic cadre brought the
modernization of the state to the agenda. The members of the Young Ottomans
flourished from this cadre.
When we look at the thoughts of the Young Ottomans, it can be seen how the
evolution of the Ottoman modernization requires a profound and broad perspective.
Despite their superficial analysis and explanations, the Young Ottomans felt obliged
to deal with the multiple structures of Ottoman society. Like an encyclopedist, they
brought reform proposals for state, economy, family, population, press, literature,
local administration, etc. They needed urgent modernization of the Empire. They
demanded rapid changes. They were patriot Muslims who wanted the continuity of
both Ottoman Empire and its Islamic character.
79
In order to preserve the Empire they proposed that the governmental,
administrative and financial techniques of the West be applied to the Empire
(Mardin 2000, 404). They realized the incompatibility of the traditional order of the
Empire with the realities of the modern world. However they wanted both the
survival of the basic institutions of the Empire and Islam, and the modernization of
Ottoman state and society. So they tried to reconcile the thesis of modernity with the
Islamic doctrines and traditional teachings and understanding. In fact they searched
the equivalent of the Western concepts in Islamic and traditional doctrines.76
However it is important to note that such modernist arguments did not represent the
view of Muslim teaching and tradition common among Ottoman Turks (Davison
1963, 67).77 But they did not have time to consider such concerns. They brought the
examples of applications of European countries and proposed the way to follow for
the modernization of the Empire.
In this respect, they are the first Islamist thinkers. That is, they reformulated
the content of the Islamic concepts as to fill them with modern notions. In fact what
they did was the normal reflex of every intellectual of the non-European countries.
In this study, there is not any hesitation about the sincerity of their belief, but we
claim that while they tried to guarantee the survival of Islam and the basic
institutions of the Empire, their proposals undermined the bases of the two pillars of
society. Also we claim that this perspective is crucial to understand the philosophy
of the Young Ottomans.
The modernization of the Ottoman Empire was, at the same time a mental
transformation of every element of the Ottoman Empire. The understandings about
every particular field of life had to be adapted to the new conditions. The role of the
Young Ottomans in this process had been bringing new explanations and
understanding for the changing conditions. In fact every adaptation and
76 icma with national assembly, labor with endeavor for this world, election of the first four caliphs
with the democracy, biat with social contract…etc.
77 Davison, Roderic (1963) p.67
80
understanding had brought the end of the Empire, because the traditional mentality
of the Ottoman Empire contradicted with the mentality of the modernity. Every
attempt to transform the mentality in favor of the latter meant the dissolution of the
Empire. Of course the way to dissolution was neither opened solely by the Young
Ottomans nor concluded by them. However their open-ended claims were used by
different political currents in Turkish history; the modernists, nationalists, Islamists,
etc. They found roots of their philosophies in their writings.
The revolutions are made by intellectuals. It is wrong to attribute the success
of the reform in the Ottoman Empire only to the massacre in the Mountain of
Resne and the harsh protest of Salonica and Serez. Namık Kemal pressed the
hot stamp of love of freedom to the thoughts of the young generations with
his pencil of fire78
In earlier times, their claims were voiced in the first parliament. Some
members of the parliament used their thoughts to criticize the government (Karpat
2006, 377).
In the Turkish Republic the interest towards the Young Ottomans were
declared louder. Atatürk expressed his sympathy for Namık Kemal in a speech
addressed to his friends79. In this modernist era the philosophy of the Young
Ottomans was reevaluated and, sometimes, their effect was exaggerated. However
this exaggeration is important to show the destination their thoughts could point.
As a result, the modernization attempts of the Young Ottomans were
inherited by the future generations, and the ways they opened, made the activists of
the later periods more radical and brave. The human type they drew has become the
78 “nkılapları mütefekkirler yapar.. nkılabı Osmaniyi yalnız Resne daglarında vukua gelen kıyamın,
Selanik ve Serez’in siddetli protestolarının tesirine atfetmek büyük gaflet olur… Namık Kemal atesin
kalemiyle gençlerin dimagında hürriyete ask ve muhabbet hissini ikad ediyordu.” (Bedri Nuri 1955,
32)
79 “Vatanın kurtulusu ve istiklali için ölmeyi bugünkü nesle Namık Kemal ögretti. Harbiye
senelerinde siyaset fikirleri bas gösterdi. Namık Kemal’den gelen sesin büyüsüne kapılmıstık. Bu ses
ruhumuzu simsek gibi sarsıyor, bu ses simdiye dek okudugum hiçbir sese benzemiyordu. Namık
Kemal’in yigit sesi önümde bambaska bir ufkun açılmasına yol açıyordu.” (Karaalioglu 2005 back
page)
81
reality of many Muslims who tried to reconcile their beliefs with capitalist and
modernist notions. It is not possible, even today, to state that the bifurcation has
disappeared, but capitalism and modernism press their impact on the ancient beliefs
of the Eastern societies.
82
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