The triumph of faith, love and determination: Çanakkale

The triumph of faith, love and determination: Çanakkale
Date: 18.3.2021 13:00

Today is the 106th anniversary of the Çanakkale Victory, one of our most glorious victories in our history. We respectfully commemorate our heroic ancestors who stood like a fortress against the Crusader armies and made them say “Çanakkale is impassable”.

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Despite the insufficient and insensitive policies of the Unionists, which dragged the Islamic world into disaster, hundreds of thousands of homeland children who fought with the consciousness that "Islamic land is sacred, Crusaders cannot enter" flocked to Çanakkale.
 
Turkey on March 18 marked the 106th anniversary of Çanakkale Victory and Martyrs’ Day and commemorated the fallen soldiers who lost their lives during naval and ground battles in Çanakkale (Gallipoli Campaign) during World War I.
 
Tens of thousands of soldiers martyred in one of the world's most ferocious battles 105 years ago in the Gallipoli Campaign in Ottoman Turkey during World War I.
 
The Allied Forces started their attack on March 18 - the day commemorated as Çanakkale Naval Victory Day - but the waters were filled with a network of mines laid by Ottoman vessels and some greatest battleships sank as a result.
 
The events leading up to the momentous battle started in February 1915, when Britain and France decided to launch the Gallipoli Campaign to knock the Ottoman Empire out of the war as quickly as possible by reaching and capturing its capital, Istanbul.
 
On April 25, 1915, nine months into World War I, Allied soldiers landed on the shores of the Gelibolu peninsula.
 
The troops were there as part of a plan to open Çanakkale Strait on Turkey's Aegean coast to Allied fleets, allowing them to threaten the then-Ottoman capital, Istanbul.
 
The Allied Forces, however, encountered strong and courageous resistance from the Turks and the campaign turned out to be a costly failure.
 
Tens of thousands of Turkish nationals and soldiers died, along with tens of thousands of Europeans, plus around 7,000-8,000 Australians and nearly 3,000 New Zealanders.
 
Victory against the Allied forces boosted the morale of the Turkish side, which then went on to wage a war of independence between 1919 and 1922, and eventually formed a republic in 1923 from the ashes of the old empire.
 

YEREL HABERLER

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