Oynatıcıya atlaAna içeriğe atla
57. Alay
Dünyanın en kahraman birliği...
Çanakkale Savaşlarını bir de böyle izleyin...
Muhteşem bir anlatım...

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Döküm
00:00This is now the 57th Regiment Martyrs' Memorial. The 57th Regiment still holds the title of the most heroic unit in the world.
00:08All 49 officers and 3480 soldiers and non-commissioned officers were martyred one after another.
00:14And the regiment commander, Yervay Hüseyin Avni Bey, is martyred.
00:18Then another Yervay, Şevki Bey from Elbistan.
00:21After he became a martyr, Major Ömer Fevzi Ispartalı,
00:24Look, the ranks will decrease, from captain to first lieutenant, then to lieutenant, and eventually there will be no commissioned officers left in the regiment.
00:30And finally, the regimental commander was Hasan Fehmi Bey from Konya, who was also the regimental imam.
00:35There are no ranks; he is the oldest.
00:38Friends, before the last soldier of the 57th Regiment was martyred, he hung the regimental flag on the branch of a small tree and then he died a martyr.
00:48Don't let it fall to the ground, see.
00:49Because it is the honor and integrity of a unit that the flag is so lucky, and the Australians come and find it, take it to Melbourne, and write this under the flag:
01:00This regimental flag was brought from the battlefields, but it was never captured.
01:04Because in Turkish culture, you cannot take possession of the regimental flag until the last guard has been martyred.
01:11Please bow respectfully as you pass under this banner.
01:14And the regiment's first battalion entered combat at half past ten on April 25th, the first day of the war.
01:21Only four and a half hours have passed, and the commander of the first battalion is told to rally his battalion; it is exhausted.
01:29The regimental commander—or rather, the battalion commander, the first battalion commander—reassembles his battalion, but what does he see?
01:34Only four and a half hours had passed; it was three o'clock in the afternoon when the clash began, at ten thirty.
01:40Four and a half hours later, what did the artillery battalion see?
01:44Eight hundred and twenty of his nine hundred soldiers have been martyred in the last four and a half hours.
01:47Eighty people remain.
01:49Nine percent.
01:50He's losing his memory, folks.
01:54And there is no such unit as the Fifty-Seventh Regiment in Türkiye right now.
01:58It has a name, fifty-seven, fifty-six, fifty-eight, whatever, but it doesn't have soldiers, the fifty-seventh regiment.
02:03Only the fifty-seventh regiment, because it's the most heroic unit in the world.
02:06The story I'm about to tell you isn't something you'd find in books.
02:09I would be very grateful if everyone, especially teachers and historians, would listen to this.
02:13Pay attention, I'm telling you this story isn't in the books.
02:16Did they show you the spot in the streambed where our regimental commander was martyred a few days before he died, in Sakarya?
02:23A cannonball landed in his tent on the second day of Ramadan in Çavustos.
02:27He was martyred in the valley, in Çukur, in the riverbed.
02:30And two captives came to his tent a few days before he was martyred.
02:33The men are trembling with fear.
02:35A gun, binoculars, and a Bible are found on one of them.
02:39The Bible is the holy book of Christians.
02:42They take it, put it aside, and seize it.
02:44And we treat these two captives as guests.
02:47What have they done to us?
02:49This is being told by an Australian.
02:50War correspondent.
02:52Charles Bean.
02:53The war correspondent has arrived.
02:55Although he only wrote down the important events he witnessed during his eight and a half months here, thousands of pages of documents also came through from here.
03:03These are the important ones.
03:05Just think about it.
03:06Thousands of pages.
03:07And one of these notes says the following.
03:10Look, we're not the ones saying this, Australians.
03:12August 8, 1915.
03:14There are one hundred Turks inside.
03:16There was also a sheep pen where two German prisoners were kept.
03:19They turned the sheep pen into a prisoner-of-war camp.
03:21Then he came.
03:22The British and our Australians.
03:24They poured gasoline and kerosene around the sheep pen and set it on fire.
03:26Faced with the more intense waves of fire directed at the Turks, they all huddled to one side.
03:32They tried to protect themselves from the flames, but soon they all burned to death, screaming in agony.
03:40At that time, the British and our Australians were laughing heartily at the plight of the Turks.
03:44They have the audacity to turn it off and then they even laugh.
03:48"Isn't there anyone who's going to beat these guys up?" I said.
03:51I was ashamed of my humanity.
03:52Because the same thing had happened the previous day.
03:55Look, they set it on fire again the day before yesterday, on August 7th.
03:57Look, even an Australian is saying it.
03:59And in her diary too.
04:01And friends, when we treated them like guests in the tent, the two prisoners became spoiled.
04:06One of them goes so far as to examine the air force commander from head to toe.
04:11He's researching something, but he doesn't know what it is.
04:13He doesn't know the language.
04:14He can't ask.
04:16Congratulations, by the way.
04:18You're amazing!
04:19Where is my boss?
04:20My manager is from Sakarya.
04:21We're already together with Çankırı.
04:23Congratulations, Director!
04:25You've concentrated perfectly.
04:27You could hear a fly buzzing.
04:28Great.
04:29I'm really speechless, my friends.
04:33You guys are amazing.
04:34I'm not exaggerating.
04:36Now, do you know what's happening, guys?
04:38Someone is spinning around from head to toe, but can't ask why they're spinning.
04:42First we send them to Istanbul, then to Melbourne, and 30 years pass.
04:48I'm saying 30 years ago, it was 1945, but visiting battlefields like this was forbidden.
04:54They went against the rules.
04:55The connection was broken for 38 years, until 1953.
04:5938 years is two generations.
05:00When that bond was broken, they started to marginalize us.
05:04Alevi, Sunni, Circassian, Laz, Yörük, immigrant – that's how the differences have become.
05:09I don't know how they're going to do it.
05:10We haven't been able to visit our ancestors like this for 38 years.
05:13But they've done something even worse.
05:16The villagers were told to sow and harvest in fields that were actually battlefields.
05:19While planting, harvesting, and plowing, the flowers and their bones were shattered into pieces.
05:22And they said, if you find cannonballs, cannon barrels, or cannon stands, sell them for scrap metal.
05:30They've destroyed history here by selling stacks of money for scrap metal prices.
05:35They've sold them, they're gone.
05:38And so, friends, in 1945, one of those two prisoners in the tent said to his wife:
05:44I still haven't forgotten Çanakkale, even after 30 years.
05:47And for 30 years, she always told her family about it.
05:49There was a commander in his tent who held us captive like this.
05:53He was hospitable, he behaved well, and so on.
05:55His family knows our battalion commander only by reputation.
05:58Lieutenant Colonel Hüseyin Amne Bey.
06:00The commander of the 57th regiment.
06:03And here, it's forbidden to wander around.
06:06He needs permission.
06:07Do you know who he got permission from?
06:09Tekin Arıburnu.
06:10Do you know who that person is who took their surname from Arıburnu?
06:12The son of our martyred commander.
06:15Here you go.
06:16Thirty years ago, he was a prisoner in his father's tent.
06:18Now he's asking his son for permission, he doesn't know.
06:21He later served as Chief of the General Staff.
06:23Tekin Arıburnu Pasha.
06:25He says, "I will give you three days of special leave."
06:27Go ahead and explore, but I have one condition.
06:29Come to Ankara in 3 days.
06:31Come and be my guest, have a cup of coffee with me.
06:33My father was also a martyr of Çanakkale.
06:35Come on.
06:36The man kept his word.
06:39He goes to Ankara 3 days later.
06:40They will have coffee at Tekin Arıburnu Pasha's house.
06:42At that moment, he looks and sees...
06:46Tekin Arıburnu goes to the kitchen to get coffee.
06:49The old Anzac is full of excitement and impulsiveness.
06:51He points to a picture on the wall.
06:52Look, madam," he says.
06:53I've been telling you this for 30 years.
06:55This was the commander who took us prisoner in his tent.
06:57His picture.
06:58He recognizes her immediately, just as she was 30 years ago.
07:00Look, the official photo shows him in a uniform with a fur hat.
07:03Yar Bay Hüseyin Arıburnu Bey.
07:04And when he hears this, he understands the issue.
07:07Tekin Arıburnu Pasha knows English.
07:08Instead of getting coffee from the kitchen, he goes to the next room.
07:12And who can guess what it will come with?
07:14A gun, binoculars, a Bible, yes.
07:17When you put it on the coffee table.
07:19Excuse me, the old Anzac's eyes are popping out of their sockets.
07:21"These are mine," said all three of them.
07:24I know, he said.
07:25How does he know?
07:26Friends, these are entrusted to the 57th Regiment before they became martyrs.
07:28He handed over the trust in such a way.
07:31To other units.
07:33He came with such clear information.
07:34These are in the hands of Tekin Arıburnu Pasha.
07:36There were two captives in the father's tent.
07:39One of them was circling around the father.
07:41They were trembling uncontrollably.
07:42These came off his hand.
07:44He knows everything.
07:45These are yours.
07:45I believe in them and I will give them to you, but tell me this.
07:48Why were you shivering in my father's tent 30 years ago?
07:52The answer is brilliant.
07:54The British described the Turks to us in such a way...
07:57Turks are barbarians.
07:59He is a cannibal.
08:00They eat human flesh.
08:01We were afraid in the tent, trembling with fear that the Turks would eat us.
08:04That's what they told me.
08:06Look, there's more to it.
08:08I am Alevi, Sunni, Laz, Yörük, immigrant, everyone.
08:11Have you heard that they eat cannibals?
08:13Friends, we are a wonderful nation.
08:16We don't eat human flesh.
08:17And we are one, like flesh and bone.
08:19Imagine a painting.
08:20Think of a puzzle.
08:21What happens if one piece is missing, guys?
08:24He'll grin right away, won't he?
08:25We're going for a perfect mosaic.
08:27They all became martyrs here, my friends.
08:29There's no ifs or buts about it here.
08:31And his friends say, Tekin Arıburun Pasha.
08:35And then one of you said, "You're scrutinizing my father from head to toe."
08:38Why?
08:40Excuse me, what should the Anzac say?
08:42The English said, and then they said, that Turks also have tails.
08:45We were looking for where the father's tail was.
08:47Look over there.
08:47He described us as being in a queue.
08:50Look at this last veteran of ours, British people.
08:51Hüseyin doesn't run away, or he calls us treacherous people.
08:53Excuse me, you treacherous nation.
08:56You saw our soldier in her arms, right?
08:58He's carrying a wounded Anzac soldier, right?
09:00We've done this many times, not just once.
09:02But do you know what the British have generally done?
09:05Our soldiers are carrying their wounded to their trenches.
09:08Just as he was turning back, our soldier was shot in the back.
09:11He did a good deed.
09:12He took his wounded away.
09:15Yes.
09:15He's right, as he said.
09:16And you'll ask, "Who is that?"
09:17I apologize for keeping you waiting and having to stand.
09:20Our last surviving Gallipoli veteran.
09:21I was with his son yesterday.
09:23I arrived in Çanakkale.
09:23He was my guest.
09:25I'll see you again this evening.
09:26Our elder brother Turgut will also be giving a conference tomorrow, Monday.
09:30The veteran's son.
09:31And friends, I'll say a couple of things about him and then, God willing, I'll immediately connect live with his son.
09:37Do you know what happened?
09:38He was the last veteran of the Çanakkale War to pass away in Kestanecik village, Ereğli, Zonguldak, on May 15, 1994.
09:45He is 110 years old.
09:46He passed away, and look, these are the friends who came to the opening of this martyrs' memorial two years before he died.
09:52The 57th Regiment Martyrs' Memorial was opened in 1992.
09:55He is 108 years old.
09:57She has a daughter named Eylül with her.
09:58Look who that is!
09:59Our veteran has a grandson, Mustafa abi.
10:01She's a teacher right now too.
10:03We went on a trip with her and her grandson this spring.
10:05But now I will connect with my son.
10:07His youngest son.
10:08He is 74 years old.
10:08She's also a retired teacher.
10:11And friends.
10:12Look, this is all it says there about our veteran's life.
10:16Our veteran.
10:17It was located on Cong hill.
10:19He became a war veteran.
10:19Look how he became a war veteran.
10:21His son, who heard it from his own mouth, is telling the story.
10:22He says:
10:23My father described the event as follows.
10:25I didn't take my sandals off my feet for 15 days on the Cong hill.
10:30They can't find water.
10:30Perhaps they even perform their prayers with complete precision.
10:33And she says, I felt a warmth in my foot.
10:36I took my sandal off.
10:37It was filled with blood.
10:38A short while later, I fainted from blood loss.
10:40They took Istanbul to the hospital.
10:42I opened my eyes there.
10:43And my mother heard about it from Zonguldak.
10:45He came to the hospital in Istanbul.
10:47When he saw the wound on my foot.
10:50"I wasn't ashamed," he said.
10:51For such a small wound.
10:52Coming all the way from Çanakkale to Istanbul.
10:55The doctors said...
10:56What are you talking about?
10:56Don't discourage the patient.
10:58This is not a simple matter.
10:59It takes a month to recover.
11:00When he said...
11:01My mother is back.
11:01And he also yelled at the doctors, they say.
11:03If that's the case, I'll take this to Çanakkale a month later.
11:05You will send it back.
11:07I raised him believing he would make me the mother of a martyr.
11:09Look over there.
11:10And it arrived a month later.
11:12He fought here again.
11:13And her mother also volunteered as a nurse at the hospital for a month.
11:16And friends.
11:18Regarding our veteran, he says the following there.
11:19He participated in the War of Independence.
11:20He succeeded.
11:21He received the Independence Medal in Dulu Pınar.
11:23But Mustafa Kemal himself presented the medal.
11:26Look.
11:26Yes.
11:27He's not writing about it.
11:29I've listened to a lot.
11:30I'll tell you about a recent incident involving your son.
11:33After stating the cause of death.
11:34What was the cause of death of our veteran?
11:36On July 25, 1994, four children in Anafartalar Village were going to cook corn, or as they call it in some places, millet.
11:45They light the fire.
11:46The wind has damaged 40,490 acres, folks.
11:49But what is the real reason?
11:52Look, it's 1994, about 80 years have passed since the war?
11:5779 years.
11:59Friends.
12:00The firefighters are about to spray water when war-related shells explode, and the firefighters retreat.
12:07Yes.
12:08They can't put out the fire because of the bullets left over from the war.
12:11They are still a danger.
12:12Two and a half years ago, my bomb-making friend and I took it and destroyed it.
12:16Another 260-kilogram projectile.
12:19And friends, we will also see the statue of Talat Göktepe, our veteran of that forest fire, while the regional forest director is firing.
12:26He too is caught between two wrongful complaints.
12:30When you see that forest fire on television, look, it was minus 94 on July 25th.
12:37He falls ill from grief and sorrow, crying out "Oh no!"
12:39The blankets and covers of my martyred comrades are burning.
12:43He couldn't get up for two months.
12:44The cause of death, he says, was that forest fire.
12:47He says it was perfectly fine.
12:49Look over there.
12:50And Turgut abi told me a story.
12:53That's an amazing event.
12:54He took revenge on the British.
12:55He is 107 years old and lives in England.
12:58What happened?
13:00My father, he says, was 107 years old in 1991.
13:04They invited them to their ceremony in England.
13:05I'll end it here and connect right away.
13:07And he says he's 107 years old.
13:09I went with her as a caregiver because she was elderly.
13:12We arrived at the ceremony area.
13:13There is a 100-meter uphill climb.
13:14I have some photos of our veteran with Queen Elizabeth.
13:17That photo was taken on the day of the ceremony.
13:19And he says.
13:20They brought a wheelchair for everyone.
13:22All the veterans.
13:23They have veterans too.
13:25You looked, he says.
13:27When my father saw the wheelchair, a young English girl was acting as his interpreter.
13:31What did he say?
13:32The young English girl said:
13:34We brought a wheelchair for each veteran.
13:37When he said, "You can't climb that hill on foot."
13:39My father roared in front of all the British dignitaries.
13:42I am Turkish and a soldier of Mustafa Kemal.
13:45No Turk would climb this hill in a wheelchair.
13:48Let me walk.
13:50And he says.
13:51Look without even stepping on that cane.
13:54He held up his cane like a weapon in the ceremonial area, as if to taunt the British, saluting them.
14:01He walked up that hill, standing tall, at the age of 107.
14:04I'm surprised, the British are shocked, I'm shocked.
14:06"Dad, what happened to you?" I asked.
14:08How did you walk up that hill?
14:10"My son," he said.
14:11My friends who were martyred in Çanakkale came to mind.
14:14Especially Galatasaray High School.
14:16There was a young man who was a senior student.
14:17The machine gun mowed him down and he fell into my lap.
14:20He passed away in my arms.
14:21He became a martyr.
14:22He came to mind.
14:23He would have walked another hundred meters.
14:26And he says the British liked it.
14:28That evening, they held a dinner in my father's honor at a military base.
14:31And that's where he got his revenge.
14:33They told me to leave.
14:34Give a speech as the world's oldest veteran.
14:39The British deeply regretted putting my father on the podium.
14:43Do you know what he said as soon as he stepped onto the podium?
14:45We ordered two ships from the British before the war.
14:48We don't have good relations with the Greeks.
14:50They ordered two ships from America, named Aydoha and Mississippi.
14:54He pays for it and takes delivery.
14:55They are gaining an advantage over us.
14:57The Greeks as a navy.
14:58We also collect 11 million gold coins and tell the British:
15:02How to gather the king?
15:03The dowry money of Anatolian women, Ottoman women, their earrings and bracelets, and young girls living in Istanbul.
15:12Hair is a matter of honor in our culture.
15:13Those who had no money cut their hair and sold it to Armenian and Greek barbers to make money.
15:18They also contributed.
15:20"We collected 11 million like this," says one of our veterans.
15:24But we are giving the ships to the British, we are giving them the money, 11 million gold coins.
15:28We ask them to build us two ships, one named Sultan Osman and the other Reşadiye.
15:33The ships are running out.
15:34When our officers went to collect them, the British said that war had broken out and they wouldn't give us the ships or the gold.
15:39Here, my father, look, they changed Sultan Osman's name to Aginkort, and Reşadiye's name to Erin, and they're bringing them here to wage war against us.
15:51As soon as my father stepped onto the podium, he said this:
15:54We ordered two ships for you on time.
15:57All the high-ranking government officials are there, pay attention.
15:59Their commanders are there, their ministers are there.
16:03But you did what you always do.
16:06Look, what does this mean?
16:08You did it again.
16:11British youth have already asked.
16:13Should I translate your father's statement verbatim, or should I soften it?
16:16My father is 107 years old but he is of sound mind, I asked you to translate it exactly as he said it.
16:20You, he says, have done it again.
16:23You didn't give us those two ships.
16:25If you had given us those two ships, we would have taken back the Greek islands that belonged to us.
16:30If you had given us those two ships, some of your soldiers who were on board would be here now, alive and well.
16:37But by the wisdom of God Almighty, we still sank those two ships in the deep waters of Çeratkale.
16:45They stayed here.
16:46He gave a lot of harsh criticism.
16:48The British were very upset.
16:50One of the veterans came up to the podium, and when he finished speaking, he handed my father a wad of pounds and said,
16:56Dad, what is this?
16:58"You spoke so beautifully," he said, giving her a wad of pounds as a gift.
17:01That's 60-70 billion in today's money.
17:03When my father doesn't buy it, I nudge him, saying, "God is my witness."
17:06Dad says, "Buy it."
17:07That's embarrassing.
17:08But my father understood what was happening.
17:10If I get this money, I'll be lecturing from this podium all this time.
17:14I'm talking about 11 million gold coins.
17:15I'm talking about two ships, but look, you Turks are a nation for sale.
17:20You forgot everything as soon as you saw a wad of money.
17:23He'll say, "I've relaxed."
17:24So that they'll call us a nation for sale.
17:26Mersi handed over the money for that reason.
17:28My father understood and said to the English veteran, "I am Turkish, under these circumstances I will not accept money from a foreigner."
17:35But the British veteran was determined to pay the money.
17:38Then they'll call us a nation for sale, trying to humiliate us.
17:41When he said, "Since you don't accept souvenirs, I'll give you this money as a souvenir," my father unfortunately took the money.
17:49I'll call your son in a minute.
17:50Our veteran's son is alive.
17:52Perhaps he can tell the story too.
17:54And do you know what happened?
17:55My father offered the money, and when he said, "Since you don't accept gifts, I'll give you this money as a souvenir," my father unfortunately took the money.
18:04But we haven't fallen into a situation where we're a nation for sale.
18:07Do you know why we didn't fall?
18:09He draws a single banknote from the deck.
18:11He is not receiving support.
18:13Pulling out a single banknote and doing it in front of all the British dignitaries is an insult, an abuse, a crime.
18:20"Especially right in front of the state officials," my father said, "he took the British money and tore it in half."
18:26Everyone froze, they committed a crime.
18:28But my father found a way to cover that up too.
18:29He handed half of the fara to the British veteran.
18:32Since you call it a memento, take half, keep the other half, we didn't fight for this money.
18:38"The British were disgraced," he said.
18:40Look at the lesson, look at the lesson.
18:42Look at that intelligence at 17 years old.
18:43This land is very expensive, folks.
18:45Its price has been paid with the blood of martyrs.
18:47I will now try to contact the veteran's son, God willing.
18:49But let me tell you what their faces are like.
18:50There were no monuments in the place where this monument now stands, back then.
18:53An interesting event occurs.
18:54Lieutenant Mustafa Asım from Kemah, Erzincan.
18:57Commander of the 6th company, 2nd battalion, 57th area.
19:00And opposite him was a British company commander.
19:02Captain Wojters is there.
19:04Fate brings two platoon commanders face to face.
19:07And their hands were clasped around each other's throats.
19:09At that moment, a machine knocks them both to the ground right in front of the monument.
19:12After the war, in 1918, with the Treaty of Lausanne, the British began the cemetery excavations.
19:19They look and see two skeletons with their hands around each other's throats.
19:22Their identities are obvious from their identification tags, but what do they see when they open their palms?
19:26A summary of the war.
19:28In the hands of Lieutenant Mustafa Asım is the cross that was around the neck of British Captain Wojters.
19:35Captain Wojters also holds the amulet that was around Mustafa Asım's neck in his hands.
19:40Yes, that's a summary of the war, folks.
19:43I am now hoping to find our veteran's son alive.
19:45If Turgut abi is available, I can somehow let you listen to it at the Conk lady's place as well.
19:51The place where his father's farm was located.
19:52Now, come a little closer for a live broadcast, guys.
19:54Live, God willing.
19:57The last music was recorded on this phone, friends, not a live recording.
20:02The veteran's son is speaking.
20:05Turgut, can you guess where I am?
20:07Can you guess where I am?
20:12My voice is cutting in and out.
20:13I'm right where your dad's plantation is, brother, but my voice keeps cutting in and out.
20:16Do you know what happened?
20:18We have three buses at the base right now, and I won't even go so far as to say how difficult our situation is.
20:22Can you tell us a few words about your father and about Çanakkale?
20:26We are completely opposed to the plant.
20:28Are you saying this now?
20:29Now, brother, this is very important right now.
20:34My father was born in 1884 in Kestan Üklüğü, Öreğli.
20:42When the military ambush occurred
20:44My grandfather wouldn't want to send me to the army by giving me gold either.
20:52My grandmother objected to this.
20:55Then, while I was rocking his cradle, I raised him thinking that he would either make me a martyr or a precious gem from the mountains.
21:04They're going to join the army.
21:05My father will at least go to Kasımpaşa on his way.
21:10He participated in the Balkan War.
21:12He returns to his village with his head bowed after the Balkan War.
21:17When the Gallipoli Campaign began
21:19Going to war together with fellow villagers
21:23His mother gives the following advice.
21:26You are going to war for your country, for your nation, for your flag, for your religion.
21:33Don't forget in the Balkans
21:36The meaning that is put forward to us
21:38Without deleting Karelik
21:40If you return to your village
21:42"May my pure milk be forbidden to you," she says.
21:45If in those lands
21:47If you become a martyr
21:49I bear a heavy burden in my heart.
21:51My head is held high.
21:53I walk with my head held high.
21:54In the streets of my village
21:56Hand in hand with your father
21:59Even if you get injured and crippled
22:02I'll look after you, son.
22:04Do not leave us in the hands of heaven.
22:06If you take one more step back from the sky
22:10My right to motherhood
22:12I will not give you my milk, she says.
22:14Go now, son.
22:16Let me remain without a son.
22:19He says, "I don't want to be left stateless."
22:21Take this Quran.
22:23Put her in your arms
22:24They were either martyrs or veterans.
22:27Your father in all the wars
22:29What his mother said
22:31In your ears
22:33And he feels it in his heart
22:35In 1915
22:39While fighting in Çanakkale
22:41On the very slope
22:42Injured
22:43He becomes a war veteran.
22:43Tümlü spring too
22:45By achieving great success
22:47Independence medal release
22:49In 1994
22:53110 years old
22:54The world's oldest
22:56As the last surviving Gallipoli veteran
22:59He/She dies
22:59I send my love and respect to all of you.
23:03God Almighty
23:04Whatever is in your heart
23:06May he die
23:07Brother, you seem to be in a crowded place.
23:09Thank you for taking the time for us.
23:10Thank you very much.
23:10Yes, that's it.
23:11I'm in a crowd
23:13I'm something too, he says.
23:14Speak briefly.
23:15I'm not meeting with anyone.
23:16It's no problem, bro.
23:17It's just about this thing
23:19If you say a few things
23:20In places like Çanakkale
23:21And also about the organization.
23:23Say a few sentences, brother.
23:25Sir
23:26A few sentences
23:28You're doing something related to the organization.
23:29One thing about him too.
23:30If you could tell me in a minute or two
23:31In Çanakkale in 1915
23:36In Sakarya in 1921
23:39In Dumlupınar in 1922
23:42Our ancestors, under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk
23:46If he didn't let this country be divided
23:48If he didn't take this flag down
23:51If they didn't silence these calls to prayer
23:53The Dead Heart Organization
23:56If it's even more stylish
23:57Even if it lands in the city
23:59Even if it lands in Europe
24:00Its strength in its veins
24:02Derived from the true bloodline
24:04Our glorious national army
24:07Our national police force
24:09Turkish nation
24:11We will not allow this country to be divided.
24:13He will not take this flag down.
24:15This will not silence the calls to prayer.
24:17All
24:18We are bigoted organizations
24:20You've split it.
24:21What makes flags flags
24:23It's blood on it
24:25Soil
24:27If someone dies in your presence
24:29It is the homeland
24:30I offer my respects to all of you.
24:32May God grant you whatever is in your heart.
24:34Let him give it
24:35Let's go and applaud our veteran's potential.
24:37Thank you very much.
24:42I will be coming to the conference tomorrow.
24:44Where are you right now?
24:45He asked
24:45I have a waiter.
24:47Okay, where are you right now, bro?
24:49I am currently
24:50Everyone to the meeting
24:52Rest from work
24:53Okay, fine.
24:54Okay, okay, you look into it, brother.
24:55Thank you very much
24:56Thank
24:57Your friends send their regards.
24:58They kiss their hands.
24:59They send their regards.
25:00Wa alaikum salam
25:02Okay over
25:02Role
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