- İstiklâl Marşı
-
The title of this article contains the characters İ, ş, ı, and â. Where they are unavailable or not desired, the name may be represented as Istiklal Marsi.
İstiklâl Marşı English: Independence March
Classroom wall with the lyrics of İstiklâl Marşı (far right).
National anthem of
Turkey
Northern CyprusLyrics Mehmet Akif Ersoy Music Osman Zeki Üngör Adopted 12 March 1921 Music sample İstiklâl MarşıThe İstiklâl Marşı (Independence March) is the National Anthem of Turkey and Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, officially adopted on 12 March 1921 - two and a half years before the 29 October 1923 establishment of the Republic of Turkey, both as a motivational musical saga for the troops fighting in the Turkish War of Independence, and as an anthem for a Republic that was yet to be established.
Penned by Mehmet Âkif Ersoy, Albanian origin, and ultimately composed by Osman Zeki Üngör, the theme is one of affection for the Turkish homeland, freedom, and faith, of sacrifice for liberty, and of hope and devotion, explored through visual, tactile and kinesthetic imagery as they relate to the flag, the human spirit and the soil of the homeland.
The manuscript by Ersoy, between the title line İstiklâl Marşı and the first text line, carries the dedication Kahraman Ordumuza – "To our Heroic Army", the army that won the Independence War. The lyrics reflect on the sacrifice of the soldiers during the War.
The Anthem is regularly heard during state and military events, as well as during national festivals, bayrams, sporting events, and school ceremonies.
Of the ten-stanza anthem, only the first two quatrains are typically sung. A framed version of the national anthem typically occupies the wall above the blackboard in the classrooms of every public – as well as almost every private – school in Turkey (accompanied by a Turkish flag, a photograph of the country's founding father Atatürk, and a copy of Atatürk's famous inspirational speech to the nation's youth).
The anthem was the subject of a brief copyright dispute in 2010, when GEMA, the German music copyright society, attempted to collect royalties on the anthem.[1] The composition has also been adopted as the National Anthem of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.[2]
A scroll displaying the first two quatrains of the anthem was depicted on the reverse of the Turkish 100 lira banknotes of 1983-1989.[3]
Contents
History
Following the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, a nation-wide competition was organized to select an original composition for a National March- for which a total of 724 poems were submitted. Mehmet Akif Ersoy, a very well known poet of the time, refused to participate in consideration of a monetary prize. He was called and convinced by parliament to write a poem, disregarding the prize. A ten-verse poem written by Ersoy was unanimously adopted by the Turkish Grand National Assembly following evaluation by parliamentary committee; the prize was granted to a society of veterans.
Shortly thereafter, twenty-four composers participated in another competition arranged for the selection of a musical composition that would suit the elected National Anthem best. The Council, which was only able to convene in 1924 due to the Turkish War of Independence, adopted the music composed by Ali Rıfat Çağatay.
Turkish lyrics
Turkish lyrics English translation - Korkma, sönmez bu şafak larda yüzen al sancak;
- Sönmeden yurdumun üstünde tüten en son ocak.
- O benim milletimin yıldızıdır, parlayacak;
- O benimdir, o benim milletimindir ancak.
- Çatma, kurban olayım çehreni ey nazlı hilâl!
- Kahraman ırkıma bir gül! Ne bu şiddet bu celâl?
- Sana olmaz dökülen kanlarımız sonra helâl,
- Hakkıdır, Hakk'a tapan, milletimin istiklâl!
- Ben ezelden beridir hür yaşadım, hür yaşarım.
- Hangi çılgın bana zincir vuracakmış? Şaşarım!
- Kükremiş sel gibiyim, bendimi çiğner aşarım;
- Yırtarım dağları, enginlere sığmam, taşarım.
- Garbın âfakını sarmışsa çelik zırhlı duvar,
- Benim iman dolu göğsüm gibi serhaddim var.
- Ulusun, korkma! Nasıl böyle bir imanı boğar,
- "Medeniyet!" dediğin tek dişi kalmış canavar?
- Arkadaş! Yurduma alçakları uğratma sakın!
- Siper et gövdeni, dursun bu hayasızca akın.
- Doğacaktır sana vaadettiği günler Hakk'ın;
- Kim bilir? Belki yarın? Belki yarından da yakın!
- Bastığın yerleri "toprak" diyerek geçme, tanı!
- Düşün, altındaki binlerce kefensiz yatanı!
- Sen şehit oğlusun, incitme, yazıktır atanı;
- Verme, dünyaları alsan da bu cennet vatanı.
- Kim bu cennet vatanın uğruna olmaz ki fedâ?
- Şüheda fışkıracak toprağı sıksan, şühedâ!
- Canı, cananı, bütün varımı alsın da Hüdâ,
- Etmesin tek vatanımdan beni dünyada cüdâ.
- Rûhumun senden, ilâhi, şudur ancak emeli;
- Değmesin mabedimin göğsüne na-mahrem eli!
- Bu ezanlar ki şahadetleri dinin temeli,
- Ebedi yurdumun üstünde benim inlemeli.
- O zaman vecd ile bin secde eder varsa taşım;
- Her cerihamdan, ilâhi, boşanıp kanlı yaşım,
- Fışkırır rûh-i mücerret gibi yerden nâşım;
- O zaman yükselerek arşa değer belki başım!
- Dalgalan sen de şafaklar gibi ey şanlı hilâl;
- Olsun artık dökülen kanlarımın hepsi helâl!
- Ebediyyen sana yok, ırkıma yok izmihlâl.
- Hakkıdır, hür yaşamış bayrağımın hürriyet;
- Hakkıdır, Hakk'a tapan milletimin istiklâl!
- Fear not! For the crimson flag that proudly ripples in this glorious twilight, shall never fade,
- Before the last fiery hearth that is ablaze within my nation is extinguished.
- For that is the star of my nation, and it will forever shine;
- It is mine; and solely belongs to my valiant nation.
- Frown not, I beseech you, oh thou coy crescent,
- But rose upon my heroic race!1 Why the anger, why the rage?2
- Our blood which we shed for you might not be worthy otherwise;
- For freedom is the absolute right of my God-worshipping nation.3
- I have been free since the beginning and forever shall be so.
- What madman shall put me in chains! I defy the very idea!
- I'm like the roaring flood; trampling and overflowing my dyke (weir),
- I'll tear apart the mountains, fill up the open seas4 and still gush out!
- The lands surrounded by the Western's and they armored with walls of steel,
- But I have borders guarded by the mighty chest of a believer.
- Recognize your innate strength, my friend! And think: how can this fiery faith ever be killed,
- By that battered, single-fanged monster you call "civilization"?5
- My friend! Leave not my homeland to the hands of villainous men!
- Render your chest as armor and your body as trench! Stop this disgraceful rush!
- For soon shall come the joyous days of divine promise...
- Who knows? Perhaps tomorrow? Perhaps even sooner!
- View not the soil you tread on as mere earth - recognize it!
- And think about the shroudless thousands who lie so nobly beneath you.
- You're the noble son of a martyr, take shame, hurt not your ancestor!
- Unhand not, even when you're promised worlds, this paradise of a homeland.
- What man would not die for this heavenly piece of land?
- Martyrs would gush out should one simply squeeze the soil! Martyrs!
- May God take my life, all my loved ones and possessions from me if He will,
- But may He not deprive me of my one true homeland for the world.
- Oh glorious God, the sole wish of my pain-stricken heart is that,
- No heathen's hand should ever touch the bosom of my sacred Temples.
- These adhans, whose shahadahs are the foundations of my religion,
- May their noble sound last loud and wide over my eternal homeland.
- For only then, shall my fatigued tombstone, if there is one, prostrate6 a thousand times in ecstasy,
- And tears of fiery blood shall flow out of my every wound,
- And my lifeless body shall gush out from the earth like an eternal spirit,
- Perhaps only then, shall I peacefully ascend and at long last reach the heavens.
- So ripple and wave like the bright dawning sky, oh thou glorious crescent,
- So that our every last drop of blood may finally be blessed and worthy!
- Neither you nor my race1 shall ever be extinguished!
- For freedom is the absolute right of my ever-free flag;
- For independence is the absolute right of my God-worshiping nation!
Footnotes:
1 Although "ırk" means "race" in contemporary Turkish, it had different associations in Ottoman Turkish. Also note that the poet was of Albanian origin. In Ottoman Turkish it also carries the connotations of 'generation,' 'offspring' and 'family linage.' [4]
2 A white crescent and star superimposed on a crimson background comprise the Turkish flag- the poet is invoking the image of the crescent and comparing it to the frowning eyebrows of a sulky face. The flag (and the spirit of freedom which it embodies, under threat from invading nations against whom victory initially seems impossibly difficult to achieve, hence "coy") is being treated as a coy maiden with a sulky face (symbolically, the resentment of the invasion) who is playing hard-to-get. That is, the "coy" flag is being "playful" about letting the troops achieve ultimate victory and thus, freedom.
3 This is actually a wordplay on the words hak (right) and Hakk (God).
4 A Turkish poetical word (with no direct English translation) that may refer to anything perceived by Man as a boundless expanse: the heavens, the oceans, the horizon, the Universe, etc.
5 What is being referred to as "civilization" is the invading European nations (France, Britain, Italy and Greece) and their armies, which were superior in terms of equipment and manpower to the war-stricken, undermanned, and underfed Turkish forces that were hastily assembled by patriotic civilians and ex-military officials following World War I. This tight collaboration between civilians and former armed officials was due to the Ottoman Imperial Court's internal corruptions and the presence of individuals in power who preferred to protect their own interests rather than the interests of the greater public. (see Sultan Vahdeddin and Damat Ferid Pasha) This self-preserving behavior manifested itself as political inaction, an openness to foreign manipulation, treacherous collaborationism and the much-protested acceptance of an unjust treaty - actions that ultimately resulted in a hurt national pride, widespread feelings of resentment and humiliation, as well as the anarchic dissolution of the Empire. It was at such a grim point in time that a defiant new organization of armed and civil forces, led by Atatürk, gave the people hope for the future through a series of successful battles and liberation campaigns, which gradually turned into an increasingly successful War of Independence.
Thus, the poet is calling out to the Nation, saying, as it were, "While 'the lands of the West may be armed with walls of steel', i.e., while these European armies may have seemingly impenetrable/unbeatable modern technology and weaponry, do not be fooled/discouraged by their apparent superiority. Look at what we have accomplished so far with virtually non-existent arms and supplies! We are horribly fatigued, and at a disadvantage in every conceivable way, yet we still are able to succeed in our battle for liberty! This seemingly undefeatable 'monster' has had almost every one of its teeth knocked out (hence, 'single-fanged') by our victorious campaign! Our motivation, faith, and internal drive is what has and will continue to carry us through, and that is something that our enemies cannot remotely match. All we need for ultimate victory is the ability to recognize our true 'innate strengths': a 'fiery faith' and the 'mighty chest (i.e. heart) of a believer'".6 Prostration is the act of laying one's forehead on the ground as part of Muslim sacred ritual (see Namaz, As-Sajda or Salah). The image being painted here is that of a battle-fallen and pain-stricken man, who becomes ecstatic following the victorious end of the War of Independence. This is a man whose mind, body and soul have at long last found peace, and may finally ascend and reach the heavens, knowing that his homeland is finally safe and sound and that all his suffering was all worth it in the end.
Notes and references
- ^ "Turkey Scrambles to Protect National Anthem". Der Spiegel. http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,733515,00.html. Retrieved 2011-08-08.
- ^ "Turkey: İstiklâl Marşı". NationalAnthems.me. http://nationalanthems.me/turkey-istiklal-marsi. Retrieved 2011-08-08.
- ^ Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey. Banknote Museum: 7. Emission Group - One Hundred Turkish Lira - I. Series & II. Series. – Retrieved on 20 April 2009.
- ^ http://www.osmanlicaturkce.com/
- History of the İstiklâl Marşı from the website of the Washington Embassy of The Republic of Turkey- The Turkish Flag and National Anthem
- Official Records of the Grand National Assembly of The Republic of Turkey on the parliamentary debates and history of the İstiklâl Marşı- Zabit Ceridesi - 12.03.1921 (Turkish)
- Society for the Study and Preservation of the İstiklâl Marşı- İstiklâl Marşı ve Tarihçesi (Turkish)
- Documentary on the Turkish National Anthem- İstiklâl Marşı Belgeseli (Turkish)
- İstiklâl Marşı Research Publication- İstiklâl Marşı Anlam ve Önemi (Turkish)
External links
- Vocal of the İstiklâl Marşı in Ogg Vorbis
- Dramatic Reading of the text of the İstiklâl Marşı
- İstiklâl Marşı - MIDI version
- İstiklâl Marşı - Instrumental version
- İstiklâl Marşı - Acoustic Guitar version
- İstiklâl Marşı - Electric Guitar version
- İstiklâl Marşı - Baglama version
- İstiklâl Marşı - Guitar Chords in PDF format
- The Original Composition by Ali Rıfat Çağatay
National anthems of Europe National anthems
of sovereign statesAlbania · Andorra · Armenia · Austria · Azerbaijan · Belarus · Belgium · Bosnia and Herzegovina · Bulgaria · Croatia · Cyprus · Czech Republic · Denmark · Estonia · Finland · France · Georgia · Germany · Greece · Hungary · Iceland · Ireland · Italy · Kazakhstan · Latvia · Liechtenstein · Lithuania · Luxembourg · Macedonia · Malta · Moldova · Monaco · Montenegro · Netherlands · Norway · Poland · Portugal · Romania · Russia · San Marino · Serbia · Slovakia · Slovenia · Spain · Sweden · Switzerland · Turkey · Ukraine · United Kingdom · Vatican City
National and regional
anthems of other
political entitiesAbkhazia (disputed) · Adygea (Russia) · Åland (Finland) · Asturias (Spain) · Bashkortostan (Russia) · Basque Country (Spain) · Bavaria (Germany) · Brittany (France) · Catalonia (Spain) · Chechen Republic (Russia) · Dagestan Republic (Russia) · Cornwall (UK) · Corsica (France) · Crimea (Ukraine) · England (UK) · Faroe Islands (Denmark) · Flanders (Belgium) · Friesland (Netherlands) · Gibraltar (UK) · Greenland (Denmark) · Guernsey · Istria (Croatia) · Northern Ireland (UK) · Jersey · Republic of Karelia (Russia) · Komi Republic (Russia) · Kosovo (disputed) · Lincolnshire (UK) · Lusatia (Germany) · Macedonia (Greece) · Isle of Man · Mari El (Russia) · Mordovia (Russia) · Nagorno-Karabakh (disputed) · North Ossetia-Alania (Russia) · Republika Srpska (Bosnia and Herzegovina) · Sami · Scotland (UK) · South Ossetia (disputed) · Svalbard (Norway) · Tatarstan (Russia) · Transnistria (disputed) · Northern Cyprus (disputed) · Tuva (Russia) · Udmurtia (Russia) · Valencia (Spain) · Wales (UK) · Wallonia (Belgium) · Yorkshire (UK)
Anthems of former
political entitiesAlsace (German Empire) · German Democratic Republic (East Germany) · Soviet Union (1944-1991) · SFR Yugoslavia (1977-1991) · FR Yugoslavia (1992-2003) · Serbia and Montenegro (2003-2006) Second Spanish Republic (1931-1939)
Anthem of
European Union and
Council of EuropeComplete List · Africa · Asia · Europe · North America · Oceania and the Pacific Islands · South AmericaCategories:- National anthems
- National symbols of Turkey
- Turkish Cypriot culture
- Turkish words and phrases
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.