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1908 Proclamation of the Young Turks
Reproduced below is the proclamation issued by the Young Turks in 1908 with
their coming to power in Turkey.
With the coming of war in Europe in August 1914 the Young Turk administration
proved far more receptive to German friendship than to approaches from the
Allies, and eventually ended a stance of neutrality at the end of August 1914 by
declaring an alliance with Germany (secretly agreed as early as 2 August 1914).
Proclamation for the Ottoman Empire
1. The basis for the Constitution will be respect for the predominance of the
national will. One of the consequences of this principle will be to require
without delay the responsibility of the minister before the Chamber, and,
consequently, to consider the minister as having resigned, when he does not have
a majority of the votes of the Chamber.
2. Provided that the number of senators does not exceed one-third the number of
deputies, the Senate will be named as follows: one-third by the Sultan and
two-thirds by the nation, and the term of senators will be of limited duration.
3. It will be demanded that all Ottoman subjects having completed their
twentieth year, regardless of whether they possess property or fortune, shall
have the right to vote. Those who have lost their civil rights will naturally be
deprived of this right.
4. It will be demanded that the right freely to constitute political groups be
inserted in a precise fashion in the constitutional charter, in order that
article 1 of the Constitution of 1293 A.H. [=Anno Hegira] be respected.
7. The Turkish tongue will remain the official state language. Official
correspondence and discussion will take place in Turkish.
9. Every citizen will enjoy complete liberty and equality, regardless of
nationality or religion, and be submitted to the same obligations. All Ottomans,
being equal before the law as regards rights and duties relative to the State,
are eligible for government posts, according to their individual capacity and
their education. Non-Muslims will be equally liable to the military law.
10. The free exercise of the religious privileges which have been accorded to
different nationalities will remain intact.
11. The reorganization and distribution of the State forces, on land as well as
on sea, will be undertaken in accordance with the political and geographical
situation of the country, taking into account the integrity of the other
European powers.
14. Provided that the property rights of landholders are not infringed upon (for
such rights must be respected and must remain intact, according to law), it will
be proposed that peasants be permitted to acquire land, and they will be
accorded means to borrow money at a moderate rate.
16. Education will be free. Every Ottoman citizen, within the limits of the
prescriptions of the Constitution, may operate a private school in accordance
with the special laws.
17. All schools will operate under the surveillance of the state. In order to
obtain for Ottoman citizens an education of a homogenous and uniform character,
the officials schools will be open, their instruction will be free, and all
nationalities will be admitted. Instruction in Turkish will be obligatory in
public schools. In official schools, public instruction will be free. Secondary
and higher education will be given in the public and official schools indicated
above; it will use the Turkish tongue. Schools of commerce, agriculture, and
industry will be opened with the goal of developing the resources of the
country.
18. Steps shall also be taken for the formation of roads and railways and canals
to increase the facilities of communication and increase the sources of the
wealth of the country. Everything that can impede commerce or agriculture shall
be abolished.
Source: The Young Turks, trans. A. Sarrou, in Civilization since Waterloo, Rondo
Cameron, ed. (Paris, 1912), pp. 40-42. Text modernised by Prof. Arkenberg.