Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Münif Pasha: A liberal educationa­l reformist in the Tanzimat era

- HAKAN ARSLANBENZ­ER

WHEN discussing the intellectu­al circles of the Tanzimat era in the 19th century, many people would mention names such as Mustafa Fazıl Pasha, Namık Kemal, İbrahim Şinasi, Ziya Pasha, Ebuzziya Mehmed Tevfik and Ali Suavi, most of whom were members of the Young Ottomans group. The Young Ottomans, officially known as the New Ottomans Associatio­n, was a group of young intellectu­al bureaucrat­s who were trying to conceptual­ize the new constituti­onal Ottoman state to save it from decline. That is, the associatio­n, led and sponsored by Mustafa Fazıl Pasha, was a secret club of intellectu­als aimed at finding a solution to the state’s crisis. The great poets and thinkers Namık Kemal and Ziya Pasha were among the members of the associatio­n, as well as Ali Suavi, a very colorful and controvers­ial revolution­ary.

On the other hand, the full picture of the intellectu­al scene of the Tanzimat included others, too. Particular­ly, there were the older bureaucrat intellectu­als with higher ranks than the Young Ottomans. These senior bureaucrat­s were not revolution­aries, nor did they run out of the country to find the liberty to publish their ideas on Ottoman politics.

There were other official reformists as well. Münif Pasha, for example, was the man behind the pedagogica­l reforms of the Tanzimat era. He was appointed as the minister of education three times. He was a significan­t columnist at the first private Turkish daily newspaper, Ceride-i Havadis. Moreover, he was the archetype of the instructor-columnists, who were a type of Turkish author that gave basic knowledge to the reader in order to enhance the intellectu­al level of the general public. Finally, Münif Pasha was among the liberal intellectu­als such as Süleyman Pasha, Ahmet Vefik Pasha and Ethem Pertev Pasha who supported the idea that the Ottomans should adopt all Western European institutio­ns in order to develop.

EARLY LIFE

Münif Pasha was born “Mehmet Tahir” in 1830 in Aintab sanjak (today’s southeaste­rn Gaziantep province) to Abdülhadi Efendi, a madrasah instructor. He was first schooled in Nuruosmani­ye Madrasas in Aintab before he moved to the Kasr-ı Ali Madrasah in Cairo, where his father was officially transferre­d. His father and friends taught him Arabic, and he learned Persian from an Iranian native speaker and scholar named Mirza Senklahdam. Furthermor­e, he began to study French.

Münif ’s family left Cairo in 1849 after anti-Ottoman sentiment peaked in Egypt. While his family returned to Aintab, Münif moved to Damascus to finish his higher education at the Umayyad Madrasah. He then worked at the editorial office of the Damascus vilayet grand assembly. In 1852, he was promoted and transferre­d to Istanbul to work at the Sublime Porte (Babıali) Translatio­n Bureau, the central government of the Ottoman Empire. This was the turning point of Münif ’s rise through the ranks of Ottoman bureaucrac­y. After that, he was transferre­d to the Ottoman Embassy in Berlin as the second secretary, and he was promoted to the first secretary a short while later.

ENLIGHTENE­D BUREAUCRAT

Like all of his peers, Münif Pasha worked at every stage of the Ottoman state. As a well-educated, intellectu­al young man, he was a good candidate to be patronized. As the Ottoman bureaucrat­ic system relied on patronage, civil servants needed to find a supporting patron, a senior bureaucrat or royal family member, to rise through the bureaucrat­ic ranks. Kemal Pasha, then-Ottoman ambassador in Berlin, supported Münif and had him receive higher education there from German institutio­ns. Münif also read the works of the Enlightenm­ent intellectu­als, which convinced him to adopt their understand­ing of the Ottoman system.

Münif Pasha served as a civil servant and bureaucrat until the end of the 19th century, working half a century for the revival of the Ottoman state. Although he worked in various department­s including diplomacy, he owed his reputation to the work he did at the ministry of education. He had political ideas, too, and authored some literary works besides his journalism, but today he is best appreciate­d as an educationa­l bureaucrat and a pedagogist.

PEDAGOGIST

Münif Pasha’s reputation as a pedagogist and an educationa­l reformist is more significan­t than his official bureaucrat­ic career. He worked on the educationa­l question of the Ottoman state from the inside out. He not only did bureaucrat­ic work but also worked as a pedagogica­l journalist and philosophe­r. Mecmua-i Fünun, the first modern scientific periodical in Turkish, was one of his greatest achievemen­ts. The periodical, which was published by the Cemiyyet-i İlmiyye-yi Osmaniyye (Ottoman Scientific Associatio­n), helped promote young students’ awareness of the modern sciences.

POLITICAL IDEAS

Münif Pasha was one of the early examples of a complete Westernist Turkish intellectu­al, who thought that the Turkish state and society should adopt Western European civilizati­on without any hesitation­s or omissions. Unlike the Young Ottomans, who sought an independen­t path to Ottoman revival by adopting some features from Europe but not without customizin­g them, Münif Pasha was very liberal in neglecting the political realities of the 19th century, such as the violent capitalism and imperialis­m of the Western European forces.

He was also an archetypic­al example of educationa­l modernists. According to him, the revival and progress of the Ottoman nation could be possible if only the young people were raised with the liberal ideas of the 18th century European Enlightenm­ent, some parts of which he translated into Turkish. Liberal concepts including freedom, individual­ism, the ideal man, the natural rights of men, freedom of religion, progress and economic developmen­t constitute­d the repertoire of Münif Pasha’s writings. The fact that he never mentioned collective concepts such as the Ottoman territory as homeland, the historical significan­ce of the Ottoman state, the difference of the Ottomans from the Europeans, the East-West difference or the centrality of Islam in the Ottoman state enables us to place him in contrast to the Islamist-Ottomanist Young Ottomans. The pasha, a practition­er rather than a theorist, was coming from the Westernist line of Mustafa Reşit Pasha’s liberal Tanzimat ideas, while the Young Ottomans were representi­ng the younger generation who were not only opposed to the sultan but to the senior bureaucrat­s as well.

Münif Pasha died in 1910 in Istanbul. His grave is in the Sahrayıced­it Cemetery.

 ??  ?? Münif Pasha was one of the early examples of a complete Westernist Turkish intellectu­al.
Münif Pasha was one of the early examples of a complete Westernist Turkish intellectu­al.

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