
Rauf Orbay
'Huseyin Rauf Orbay' (1881–
16 July 1964) was a
Turkish sailor and
statesman, born in
Istanbul.
He served as a naval officer in the Ottoman Navy, he was the captain of the Hamidiye Battleship during the
Balkan War. On
October 31,
1918, he signed
Mondros ceasefire treaty as the Minister of Navy, in order to help national Turkish forces to regroup and reorganise. When the
Turkish War of Independence was started, he resigned from his position and went to
Ankara to collaborate with
Kemal Atatürk. He was elected as a member of the representative committee in the
Congress of Erzurum on
23 July,
1919. He joined the
Congress of Sivas as Sivas delegate on
September 4,
1919 and was elected deputy chairman.
When the War of Independence ended he became the first
prime minister of the new Republic of Turkey on
11 August 1922. In 1924 he was one of the founders of the first opposition party in Turkey "Terakkiperver Cumhuriyet Fırkasi" (
Progressive Republican Party). When this party was closed in 1925, he went to exile in
Europe for 10 years. Later, he was cleared of all accusations and became a member of the
Turkish parliament.
During
World War II he was the Turkish ambassador in
London. He always firmly believed in the Republic of Turkey and always stressed that
Kemal Atatürk was the only person who could have organised and lead the transformation of the crumbling Ottoman Empire into modern Turkey.
References
★ "Rauf Orbay, Siyasi Hatiralar", Örgün Yayinevi, Istanbul, 2003