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The New Language "The cornerstone of education is an easy
system of reading and writing. The key to this is the new Turkish alphabet based
on the Latin script."
The most difficult change in any society is probably a language reform. Most
nations never attempt it; those who do, usually prefer a gradual approach.
Under
Atatürk's Leadership, Turkey undertook the modern world's swiftest and most
extensive language reform. In 1928, when he decided that the Arabic script,
which had been used by the Turks for a thousand years, should be replaced with
the Latin alphabet. He asked the experts: " How long would it take ?" Most of
them replied: " At least five years." " We shall do it," Atatürk said," within
five months" As the 1920s came to an end, Turkey had fully and functionally
adopted, with its 29 letters (8 vowels and 21 consonants), has none of the
complexities of the Arabic script, which was ill-suited to the Turkish language.
The language reform enabled children and adults to read and write within a
few months, and to study Western languages with greater effectiveness. Thousands
of words, and some grammatical devices, from the Arabic and Persian, held a
tight grip over Ottoman Turkish. In the early 1930s, Atatürk spearheaded the
movement to eliminate these borrowings.
To replace the loan words from foreign languages, large number of original
words, which had been in use in the earlier centuries, where revived, and
provincial expressions and new coinages were introduced. The transformation met
with unparalleled success: In the 1920s, the written language consisted of more
than 80 percent Arabic, Persian, and French words; by the early 1980s the ratio
had declined to a mere 10 percent.
Atatürk's language reform -encompassing the script, grammar and vocabulary-
stands as one of the most far-reaching in history. It has overhauled Turkish
culture and education. |