After the First World War in which the Ottoman Empire was defeated, the Allies fired the railway workers.
After İzmir was occupied by the Greek army, he fled to Istanbul and then to Balıkesir, where he began to participate in the Turkish War of Independence.
[1] As soon as the Republic was proclaimed on 29 October 1923, Mustafa Necati became a government minister of İsmet İnönü’s cabinets.
As such he presented the draft bill which allowed the establishment of the Language Council to the Turkish Parliament in March 1926.
[3] Mustafa Necati died due to appendicitis on 1 January 1929, the very same day the Nation Schools were opened.
In 2006 Mustafa Necati’s 3 story house, in Ankara on Mithatpaşa Caddesi, was set to be handed over to a restaurant chain, which sparked vigorous protests.
Following an intense debate, the Turkish parliament decided, in 2008, to convert the house to a cultural center for MPs.