Türkİye

Turkey marks Ataturk’s death with 'chains of respect'

People across the country pay tribute to founder on 79th anniversary

10.11.2017 - Update : 10.11.2017
Turkey marks Ataturk’s death with 'chains of respect' People pay their respects on 09:05 am, the death time of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, founder of the Republic of Turkey, during the 79th anniversary of his death at the Dolmabahce Palace where Ataturk died in Istanbul, Turkey on November 10, 2017. (İsa Terli - Anadolu Agency)

By Ali Ozak, Erdinc Aksoy, Metin Tokgoz, Mustafa Gungor, Sabri Kesen and Ahmet Bayram

ANKARA

People throughout Turkey on Friday marked the anniversary of the death of founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in unique and innovative ways.

In many cities, including Istanbul and Adana, human "chains of respect" stretching for kilometers were formed as people held hands to mark the 79th anniversary. The chain of people in Adana trailed 14 kilometers (9 miles).

Off the coast of Istanbul's Maltepe district, a group of divers brought a painting of Ataturk by Britain’s Ned Pamphilon to the surface and held red flares aloft.

Diver Yoshinori Moriwaki, a Japanese engineer living in Istanbul, said: "Today, as one of those involved in the group, we did our best job and took Ataturk’s eyes out of the sea…

"We would have him live forever… I am very happy. The ideas of our forebear will never die."

Parachutists drifted to the ground trailing Turkish flags and in Toroslar, a district in the southern city of Mersin, 7,700 people came together to form an image of Ataturk's face.

Mayor Hamit Tuna thanked those involved. "There was a little confusion, but this is a record," he said.

"The record of this kind of action was 4,500. We have 7,700 friends here."

Parade, concert, dance

In the Aegean Izmir province, citizens paraded with a 350-meter (1,154-feet) banner of Ataturk and a marching band.

"We are grateful to you for teaching us that we should not lose hope and courage even in the most troubled times.

“This day is the day to be worthy of Mustafa Kemal. This day is the day of our republic, our independence, unity and solidarity," Mayor Aziz Kocaoglu said in a speech at Cumhuriyet Square.

The speech was followed by a concert by the city orchestra featuring renowned singer Haluk Levent.

Some 500 high school students in the Black Sea province of Ordu performed a dance representing Ataturk’s iconic signature.

In the Mediterranean resort town of Marmaris, 20 people swam three km (1.86 m) to Keci Island with the slogans, “We remember with respect, we swim for our ancestor”.

Ataturk, who is deeply revered across Turkey, was born in 1881 in Thessaloniki, then part of the Ottoman Empire.

His distinguished military career included repelling the Allied invasion of the Gallipoli peninsula in 1915 and then rallying Turks to withstand the Allies’ attempt to carve up Turkey after World War I in the War of Independence.

As Turkey's first president, he transformed the country through a wide-ranging series of modernizing reforms.

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