Masonic Dictator Mustafa Kemal was Jewish - Here is
the Proof
Freemason Mustafa
Kemal, the Gay
dictator and the alleged founder of the oppressive secular republic
in Turkey was Jewish.
To this date, there is extreme confusion among Muslims and non-Muslims
alike around the world regarding who was Freemason Mustafa Kemal, the
Gay dictator of Turkey. Recently, yet other evidences have surfaced that
Gay Mustafa Kemal, the cruel dictator of Turkey, was not only a non-muslim
doenmeh, but also a secret Jewish descendant of 17th-century Jewish
false messiah
Sabbatai Tzwi (Zevi)! The evidence comes not from tracing his
genealogy, but from the statements he himself made. Check out the
following:
Subject:
Freemason Dictator Mustafa Kemal confesses his Jewishness
Source: Forward, A Jewish Newspaper published in New York,
January 28, 1994
WHEN KEMAL ATATURK RECITED SHEMA YISRAEL
"It's My Secret Prayer, Too," He Confessed
By Hillel Halkin
ZICHRON YAAKOV - There were two questions I wanted to ask, I said over
the phone to Batya Keinan, spokeswoman for Israeli president Ezer
Weizman, who was about to leave the next day, Monday, Jan. 24, on the
first visit ever made to Turkey by a Jewish chief of state. One was
whether Mr. Weizman would be taking part in an official ceremony
commemorating Kemal Ataturk.
Ms. Keinan checked the president's itinerary, according to which he and
his wife would lay a wreath on Ataturk's grave the morning of their
arrival, and asked what my second question was.
"Does President Weizman know that Ataturk had Jewish ancestors and was
taught Hebrew prayers as a boy?"
"Of course, of course," she answered as unsurprisedly as if I had
inquired whether the president was aware that Ataturk was Turkey's
national hero.
Excited and Distressed
I thanked her and hung up. A few minutes later it occurred to me to call
back and ask whether President Weizman intended to make any reference
while in Turkey to Ataturk's Jewish antecedents. "I'm so glad you called
again," said Ms. Keinan, who now sounded excited and a bit distressed.
"Exactly where did you get your information from?"
Why was she asking, I countered, if the president's office had it too?
Because it did not, she confessed. She had only assumed that it must
because I had sounded so matter-of-fact myself. "After you hung up," she
said, "I mentioned what you told me and nobody here knows anything about
it. Could you please fax us what you know?"
I faxed her a short version of it. Here is a longer one.
Stories about the Jewishness of Ataturk, whose statue stands in the main
square of every town and city in Turkey, already circulated in his
lifetime but were denied by him and his family and never taken seriously
by biographers. Of six biographies of him that I consulted this week,
none even mentions such a speculation. The only scholarly reference to
it in print that I could find was in the entry on Ataturk in the Israeli
Entsiklopedya ha-Ivrit, which begins:
"Mustafa Kemal Ataturk - (1881-1938), Turkish general and statesman and
founder of the modern Turkish state.
"Mustafa Kemal was born to the family of a minor customs clerk in
Salonika and lost his father when he was young. There is no proof of the
belief, widespread among both Jews and Muslims in Turkey, that his
family came from the Doenme. As a boy he rebelled against his mother's
desire to give him a traditional religious education, and at the age of
12 he was sent at his demand to study in a military academy."
Secular Father
The Doenme were an underground sect of Sabbetaians, Turkish Jews who
took Muslim names and outwardly behaved like Muslims but secretly
believed in Sabbetai Zevi, the 17th-century false messiah, and conducted
carefully guarded prayers and rituals in his name. The encyclopedia's
version of Ataturk's education, however, is somewhat at variance with
his own. Here is his account of it as quoted by his biographers:
"My father was a man of liberal views, rather hostile to religion, and a
partisan of Western ideas. He would have preferred to see me go to a lay
school, which did not found its teaching on the Koran but on modern
science.
"In this battle of consciences, my father managed to gain the victory
after a small maneuver; he pretended to give in to my mother's wishes,
and arranged that I should enter the (Islamic) school of Fatma Molla
Kadin with the traditional ceremony. ...
"Six months later, more or less, my father quietly withdrew me from the
school and took me to that of old Shemsi Effendi who directed a free
preparatory school according to European methods. My mother made no
objection, since her desires had been complied with and her conventions
respected. It was the ceremony above all which had satisfied her."
Who was Mustafa Kemal's father, who behaved here in typical Doenme
fashion, outwardly observing Muslim ceremonies while inwardly scoffing
at them? Ataturk's mother Zubeyde came from the mountains west of
Salonika, close to the current Albanian frontier; of the origins of his
father, Ali Riza, little is known. Different writers have given them as
Albanian, Anatolian and Salonikan, and Lord Kinross' compendious 1964
"Ataturk" calls Ali Riza a "shadowy personality" and adds cryptically
regarding Ataturk's reluctance to disclose more about his family
background: "To the child of so mixed an environment it would seldom
occur, wherever his racial loyalties lay, to inquire too exactly into
his personal origins beyond that of his parentage."
Learning Hebrew
Did Kinross suspect more than he was admitting? I would never have asked
had I not recently come across a remarkable chapter while browsing in
the out-of-print Hebrew autobiography of Itamar Ben-Avi, son of Eliezer
Ben-Yehuda, the leading promoter of the revival of spoken Hebrew in late
19th-century Palestine. Ben-Avi, the first child to be raised in Hebrew
since ancient times and later a Hebrew journalist and newspaper
publisher, writes in this book of walking into the Kamenitz Hotel in
Jerusalem one autumn night in 1911 and being asked by its proprietor:
" 'Do you see that Turkish officer sitting there in the corner, the one
with the bottle of arrack?' "
" 'Yes.' "
" 'He's one of the most important officers in the Turkish army.' "
" 'What's his name?' "
" 'Mustafa Kemal.' "
" 'I'd like to meet him,' I said, because the minute I looked at him I
was startled by his piercing green eyes."
Ben-Avi describes two meetings with Mustafa Kemal, who had not yet taken
the name of Ataturk, 'Father of the Turks.' Both were conducted in
French, were largely devoted to Ottoman politics, and were doused with
large amounts of arrack. In the first of these, Kemal confided:
"I'm a descendant of Sabbetai Zevi - not indeed a Jew any more,
but an ardent admirer of this prophet of yours. My opinion is that every
Jew in this country would do well to join his camp."
During their second meeting, held 10 days later in the same hotel,
Mustafa Kemal said at one point:
" 'I have at home a Hebrew Bible printed in Venice. It's rather old, and
I remember my father bringing me to a Karaite teacher who taught me to
read it. I can still remember a few words of it, such as --' "
And Ben-Avi continues:
"He paused for a moment, his eyes searching for something in space. Then
he recalled:
" 'Shema Yisra'el, Adonai Elohenu, Adonai Ehad!'
" 'That's our most important prayer, Captain.'
" 'And my secret prayer too, cher monsieur,' he replied,
refilling our glasses."
Although Itamar Ben-Avi could not have known it, Ataturk no doubt meant
"secret prayer" quite literally. Among the esoteric prayers of the
Doenme, first made known to the scholarly world when a book of them
reached the National Library in Jerusalem in 1935, is one containing the
confession of faith:
"Sabbetai Zevi and none other is the true Messiah. Hear O Israel, the
Lord our God, the Lord is one."
It was undoubtedly from this credo, rather than from the Bible, that
Ataturk remembered the words of the Shema, which to the best of my
knowledge he confessed knowing but once in his adult life: to a young
Hebrew journalist whom he engaged in two tipsily animated conversations
in Jerusalem nearly a decade before he took control of the Turkish army
after its disastrous defeat in World War I, beat back the invading
Greeks and founded a secular Turkish republic in which Islam was
banished - once and for all, so he thought - to the mosques.
Ataturk would have had good reasons for concealing his Doenme origins.
Not only were the Doenmes (who married only among themselves and
numbered close to 15,000, largely concentrated in Salonika, on the eve
of World War I) looked down on as heretics by both Muslims and Jews,
they had a reputation for sexual profligacy that could hardly have been
flattering to their offspring. This license, which was theologically
justified by the claim that it reflected the faithful's freedom from the
biblical commandments under the new dispensation of Sabbetai Zevi, is
described by Ezer Weizman's predecessor, Israel's second president,
Yitzchak Ben-Zvi, in his book on lost Jewish communities, "The Exiled
and the Redeemed":
'Saintly Offspring'
"Once a year (during the Doenmes' annual 'Sheep holiday') the candles
are put out in the course of a dinner which is attended by orgies and
the ceremony of the exchange of wives. ... The rite is practiced on the
night of Sabbetai Zevi's traditional birthday. ... It is believed that
children born of such unions are regarded as saintly."
Although Ben-Zvi, writing in the 1950s, thought that
"There is reason to
believe that this ceremony has not been entirely abandoned and continues
to this day," little is known about whether any of the Doenmes'
traditional practices or social structures still survive in modern
Turkey. The community abandoned Salonika along with the city's other
Turkish residents during the Greco-Turkish war of 1920-21, and its
descendants, many of whom are said to be wealthy businessmen and
merchants in Istanbul, are generally thought to have assimilated totally
into Turkish life.
After sending my fax to Batya Keinan, I phoned to check that she had
received it. She had indeed, she said, and would see to it that the
president was given it to read on his flight to Ankara. It is doubtful,
however, whether Mr. Weizman will allude to it during his visit: The
Turkish government, which for years has been fending off Muslim
fundamentalist assaults on its legitimacy and on the secular reforms of
Ataturk, has little reason to welcome the news that the father of the
'Father of the Turks' was a crypto-Jew who passed on his anti-Muslim
sentiments to his son. Mustafa Kemal's secret is no doubt one that it
would prefer to continue to be kept.
(You can also see the above article on YouTube.com
as a
video) |