Sadi Irmak Explained

Sadi Irmak
Birth Date:15 May 1904
Birth Place:Seydişehir, Ottoman Empire
Occupation:Physician, politician
Death Place:Istanbul, Turkey
Restingplace:Aşiyan Asri Cemetery, Istanbul
Nationality:Turkish
Party:Republican People's Party (CHP)
Office1:Speaker of the Parliament of Turkey
Term Start1:October 27, 1981
Term End1:December 4, 1983
Predecessor1:Cahit Karakaş
Successor1:Necmettin Karaduman
President1:Kenan Evren
Office:17th Prime Minister of Turkey
Term Start:November 17, 1974
Term End:March 31, 1975
President:Fahri Korutürk
Predecessor:Bülent Ecevit
Successor:Süleyman Demirel
Office3:Minister of Labor
Term Start3:March 9, 1943
Term End3:September 9, 1947
Primeminister3:Recep Peker, Şükrü Saracoğlu
Successor3:Bekir Balta
Term Start4:28 February 1943
Term End4:14 May 1950
Constituency4:Konya (1943, 1946)

Mahmut Sadi Irmak (May 15, 1904[1]  - November 11, 1990)[2] was a Turkish academic in physiology, politician and former Prime Minister of Turkey.[3]

Biography

He was born in the town Seydişehir of Konya, Ottoman Empire in 1904. He became teacher for biology after finishing the college in Konya. However, he quit his job the same year and attended the Law School at Istanbul University. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk wanted to send 50 of his students abroad for a good education in 1925. A test was held for this throughout Turkey. Sadi was among those who took the exam and was chosen. When Sadi got on the train, he refused to go. Just then, a telegram arrived. Sadi read Atatürk's words: I send you as a spark, you should return as a flame. That words affected Sadi. And he decided to go again. He went to Germany on a state granted scholarship to study biology and medicine. He graduated from the University of Berlin in 1929 with a degree in medicine. After completing his study, Sadi Irmak worked as an assistant physician in hospitals in Hagen and Düsseldorf, Germany. Irmak was fascinated by the Nazis and was a prominent proponent of eugenics.[4]

Returned to Turkey, he worked as a government physician and teacher for biology. In 1932, he became a lecturer at the School of Medicine of Istanbul University, and in 1939, he was promoted to full professor for physiology.

Political career

Sadi Irmak entered politics in 1943 as deputy of Konya. Between June 7, 1945, and August 5, 1946, he served as minister of labor in the cabinet of Şükrü Saracoğlu, becoming the first Turkish politician to assume the post.[5] He returned to the faculty, however, in 1950, to lecture first in Munich, Germany and then in Istanbul again. In 1974, he was admitted to the Senate. The same year, Sadi Irmak was commissioned by President Fahri Korutürk to form the 38th government of Turkey on November 17, 1974. The caretaker government under his prime ministry lasted for 124 days until his resignation on March 31, 1975, when he lost a vote of no confidence in the parliament. After the military coup on September 12, 1980, he was elected to the Consultative Assembly. He acted as its speaker from October 27, 1981, until December 4, 1983.

Sadi Irmak died on November 11, 1990, in Istanbul, and was buried at the Aşiyan Asri Cemetery. He was survived by his wife and two children. His daughter, Prof. Yakut Irmak Özden, is director of the Institute for Atatürk's Ideology and History of His Reforms at Istanbul University.[6]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: International Who's Who, 1983-84. December 1983. 9780905118864.
  2. Web site: Index I.
  3. Web site: Sadi Irmak.
  4. Web site: Turkey's hard white turn. Aeon. Murat Ergin. 2019-04-27. 3 April 2019.
  5. Kaya. Muzaffer. ‘We Too Have a Word to Say’. The Journal of Interrupted Studies. 1. 1. 2018. 10.1163/25430149-00101002. 50. free.
  6. http://www.istanbul.edu.tr/4.boyut/cumhuriyet/dosyalar/birsen_enstitu.htm School of Communications at Istanbul University