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Social Reforms "The major challenge facing us is to elevate
our national life to the highest level of civilization and prosperity."
Atatürk's aim was to modernize Turkish life in order to give his nation a new
sense of dignity, equality, and happiness. After more than three centuries of
high achievement, the Ottoman Empire had declined from the 17th to the early
20th Century: With Sultans presiding over a social and economic system mired in
backwardness, the Ottoman state had become hopelessly outmoded for the modern
times.

Atatürk resolved to lead his country out of the crumbling past into a brave
new future.In his program of modernization, secular government and education
played a major role. Making religious faith a matter of individual conscience,
he created a truly secular system in Turkey, where the vast Moslem majority and
the small Christian and Jewish minorities are free to practice their faith.
As a result of Atatürk's reforms, Turkey -unlike scores of other countries-
has fully secular institutions.The leader of modern Turkey aspired to freedom
and equality for all. When he proclaimed the Republic, he announced that " the
new Turkish State is a state of the people and a state by the people." Having
established a populist and egalitarian system, he later observed: "We are a
nation without classes or special privileges."
He also stressed the paramount importance of the peasants, who had long been
neglected in the Ottoman times: " The true owner and master of Turkey is the
peasant who is the real producer."To give his nation a modern outlook, Atatürk
introduced many reforms:
European hats replaced the fez; women stopped wearing the veil; all citizens
took surnames; and the Islamic calendar gave way to the Western calendar. A vast
transformation took place in the urban and rural life.
It can be said that few nations have ever experienced anything comparable to
the social change in Atatürk's Turkey. |