Following are excerpts
from an interview with Prince Orhan Aal Othman, grandson of Ottoman
Sultan Abdulhamid II, which aired on TRT Arabic on December 9, 2011.
Prince Orhan Aal Othman:
The Ottoman state did not collapse in a year or two, or even ten or
twenty years. It began when Sultan Abdulhamid made his decision in his
meeting with Dr. Herzl. Herzl made several requests to meet Sultan Abdulhamid,
and he was refused - once, twice, and three times. The fourth time,
he met him, and [Herzl] prepared the ground... he asked him for land
in Palestine, to serve as a place for settlement of the Jews. When the
Sultan rejected this request – that was the beginning of the fall
of the Ottoman state. A decision was made that there should no longer
be an Ottoman state, a caliphate, or a sultanate.
Interviewer: So
you are saying that Herzl was the cause of this.
Prince Orhan Aal Othman:
Exactly.
Interviewer: Some
Turkish history books maintain that the Arabs were the cause.
Prince Orhan Aal Othman:
No, of course not.
Interviewer: You
are clearing the Arabs?
Prince Orhan Aal Othman:
Absolutely.
[...]
I came back to Turkey
because I wanted to return to my country and live in it. Will the Ottomans
regain the country? I consider the new generation to be entirely Ottoman,
Allah be praised. The current ruling party bears the Ottoman spirit,
and rules in keeping with it. It doesn't have to be ruled by someone
from the Othman dynasty. It is the same spirit.
[...]
I am an Ottoman, of course,
come what may.
Interviewer: How
will you establish a political party as a member of the Othman family?
Prince Orhan Aal Othman:
It's not forbidden.
Interviewer: It
runs counter to Turkish ideology.
Prince Orhan Aal Othman:
Today, there is democracy in Turkey. We're getting into politics here...
Since we have a democracy in Turkey, I can establish a political party,
and nobody can tell me that I can't. The only thing the party cannot
do is to demand to restore the caliphate or the sultanate. As long as
you are in Turkey, and you enter parliament and establish a party -
there is no problem. You can form a party as long as you believe in
democracy, in a republic, in the premiership, and in parliament - and
we believe in all this.
Secularism is the only
thing that is a little far-fetched for us.
[...]