Slanders On Muslims In History



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The New York Times published this map, prepared by the former US President Woodrow Wilson, on May 14, 2016, the 100th anniversary of the Sykes-Picot Agreement. The agreement was signed secretly during WWI to dismember the Ottoman lands. The picture was intended to give the message that Sykes-Picot Agreement was still effective and that the British deep state was still intent on its dismemberment plans.

(Left) The map of the secret project of an 'Independent State of Constantinople', according to document number 867.00/883 from the US National Archives.

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Mustafa Kemal Atatürk



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(Top) Forces of Order, that the Istanbul government set up to counter the Nationalist Forces during the War of Independence

(Top right) British intelligence officer Lieutenant-Colonel Edward William Charles Noel

(Bottom) Istanbul under occupation

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(Top) Parade of the Turkish Army on the Galata Bridge after the liberation of Istanbul



(Below) Brave Turkish army, led by Şükrü Naili Pasha, marches over the Galata Bridge and greets the residents of Istanbul on October 6, 1923.

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Children don't deserve wars, conflicts, destruction or tyranny. However the nightmare that the British deep state has created around the world can be clearly observed on the faces of the children that have to live in this cruel system.

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(Top) The final march of British soldiers in South Africa, following the Anglo-Boer War, started by the British deep state.

(Left) British soldiers in South Africa

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(Top) The British deep state enrolled selected African youngsters into European universities, who would later go on to represent the deep state's interests in Africa.



(Right) The British deep state brought Indian workers to South Africa. These people were identified only by the numbers they were carrying on them.

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Zulu workers were forced to work as slaves at De Beers diamond mines, Kimberley, South Africa. In 1887-1888, racist British diplomat Cecil Rhodes, amalgamated the diamond mines which included De Beers, into Consolidated Mines based in the UK.

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(Top left) The building where the Armistice of Mudanya was signed in 1922

(Bottom right) İsmet Pasha in front of the same building

(Bottom left) General Harington

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Turkish delegation in Lausanne, Switzerland, where the negotiations took place

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William Ewart Gladstone

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(Top) Picture taken in Izmir, the day after the Treaty of Sévres was signed

(Bottom) Damat Ferid and Sèvres delegation

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(Left) A caricature depicting the situation of the defeated countries after they signed treaties at the end of WWI



(Bottom) Venizelos signing the Treaty of Sévres

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İsmet İnönü and Mustafa Kemal Atatürk

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Turkish soldiers at the Mesopotamian front (present-day Iraq), in front of the Mosul Central Command

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Hamou Qado Mosque, the second oldest Ottoman mosque left in Mosul, was destroyed in a terror attack in 2015.

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(Top) Baghdad under the Ottoman rule

(Left page) Ottoman Cavalry Regiment in Iraq

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Mining facility controlled by private funds of Abdul Hamid II



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(Right) Baghdad people under the Ottoman rule

(Bottom) Turkish military posts in Baghdad

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(Left) Turkish soldiers in the Balkan War

(Bottom) Muslims who were forced to immigrate during the Balkan War

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(Right) Newspaper Vorwärts printed in Berlin on April 30, 1916 covers the news of the surrender of British troops at Kut Al Amara.



(Bottom) A caricature by Germans, depicting the British defeat at Kut Al Amara

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Turkish soldiers at the front at Kut Al Amara

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(Top) British and Indian soldiers in Kut

(Bottom) British soldiers taken as prisoners of war at Kut Al Amara

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Ali İhsan Pasha



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The delegates at the San Remo Conference, where the parties discussed how the oil in the former Ottoman lands should be shared as well as the respective mandates.

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Brave Turkish soldiers of the War of Independence



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During the Mosul negotiations with Britain, the Turks in Berlin were protesting with the slogan 'Mosul is going to remain a Turkish land'. (October 22, 1925)

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Arriving at Ankara on December 27, 1919, Mustafa Kemal counted Mosul, Kirkuk and Sulaymaniyah within the National Borders in the speech he gave the next day.



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(Top) İsmet İnönü and the Turkish delegation at the Lausanne talks

(Bottom) Lord Curzon during the Lausanne talks

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The hotel where the Turkish delegation stayed during the Lausanne negotiations

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