The British Government refused to accept the large donation so he only donated a measly sum of 1,000 pounds, but he clandestinely sent five ships loaded with food!
The Irish Potato
Famine (1845-1849) was a huge catastrophe that occasioned in one million dying
from starvation and one million leaving their homeland, mostly for North
America.
It’s really hard to
put into words how mutilating this famine was for so many Irish people and the
suffering was tremendous. The psychological scars still impact Ireland’s psyche
today.
It almost sounds like
a fairy tale to hear how a Sultan from a far away land heard of this tragedy
and went out of his way to send ships crammed with food and medicine to
the Irish people dying from hunger and disease.
When Ottoman Sultan
Abdulmejid heard of the suffering from his Irish dentist, he felt great
compassion and sorrow for the plight of the Irish. The Sultan originally wanted
to donate 10,000 pounds to the starving populace but British diplomats were
aghast to hear this because Queen Victoria had contributed a small sum of 2,000
pounds.
The British Government
refused to accept the large donation so he only donated a measly sum of 1,000
pounds, but he clandestinely sent five ships loaded with food!
As you can imagine,
the British government wasn’t glad to hear of this and the navy attempted a
blockade to stop the aid from arriving. The ships made it through the lines and
arrived at Drogheda, Ireland where they dispersed the food.
The people of Drogheda were so thankful that they had the Islamic and
Ottoman symbols added to their city’s coat of arms.
It really does read like a fairy tale and
is a gesture of great empathy.
It’s easy to imagine how glad
the starving people were to see those Turkish ships arriving with food.
According to James Hack Tuke, people were, “living, or rather starving,
upon turnip-tops, sand-eels and seaweed, a diet which no one in England would
consider fit for the meanest animal."
But the
story does not end there.
During the Crimean War,
Britain linked the Ottoman Empire in their fight against the expanding Russian
Empire. About 30,000 Irish soldiers served in the war and it was observed that
the Irish people served enthusiastically in defense of the Sultan who had
helped them during their greatest times of need.
This highest form of
compassion was even remembered during the First World War. It was reported that
British officers complained that the Irish lacked the will to fight against the
Ottomans who recollected stories of the Ottoman Empire helping during a famine
when no one else would.
Sultan Abdulmejid is a model of faith in humankind
being restored.
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