WHEN DICTATORS SUCCEED
Ex-King Amanullah fell in love with Western civilisation in the course of his European travels. But the principal incentive towards reconstructing Afghanistan overnight is said to have oeen supplied by example of a fellow Moslem the redoubtable Kemal Pasha. As a virtuoso of revolution and dictatorship Kemal towers head and shoulders above all other personal and party autocratracies since the World \vair. The changes which he has wrought among his people make comparison and they reach further and deeper than the Bolshevist experiment.
Lenin had to beat a retreat before private ownership as affecting fivesi xtiis of the Russian people, the peasants. The Communist war upon religion has experienced a similar fate. But Kemal Pasha has destroyed the Caliphate, has violated the foundamental principles of the religion of the Koran, lias set himself to recast the habits of millenniums in the matter of sex and family relations. The Communist dictatorship has been content to eject a few useless vowels from the Russian alphabet and has failed to im_ pose the Western calendar on the majority of the people. But Kemal blithely throws an entire Oriental alphabet into the Bosphorus and sets a whole nation to learn the Latin characters. It is as remarkable a volte face as history can recall; an entire nation at the word of command gives up reading from right and left and begins to read from left to right.
Many, complex reasons, historical, social and personal, are necessary to explain why Kemal has been able to nave his own way so emphatically. But one factor, common to all port-war dictatorships, has been peculiarly to the fore in the ease of Turkey. It is tne spirit of nationalism asserting itself against the foreigner. “In this task (cementing Communist regime) Lenin was incalculably aided by allied intervention,” and every well-informed person on Russian known how true this is. The Fascist revolution was due, in no small measure, to the prevalent sense of resentment in Italy, at the behaviour of Italy’s allies. Kemal had more than foreign arrogance or foreign “intervention” to point to. A Greek army was marching into the heart of Anatolia and Greek victory would unquestionably have led to complete national dismemberment. The thought of what Kemal did to save his country unquestionably produces acquiscence in reforms that by themselves offend or outrage large sections ot popular sentiment. If Afghanistan had been invaded by a Russian or British army and saved by Amanullah, the Shinwari mollalis would have submitted to the Ameer’s Western motor cars and Queen Souriya’s decollete evening gowns.
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Hokitika Guardian, 14 March 1929, Page 7
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428WHEN DICTATORS SUCCEED Hokitika Guardian, 14 March 1929, Page 7
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