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Islam in Turkey - Secularist Policies

Islam in Turkey - Secularist Policies: Encyclopedia II - Islam in Turkey - Secularist Policies

In 1922 the new nationalist regime abolished the Ottoman sultanate, and in 1924 it abolished the caliphate, the religious office that Ottoman sultans had held for four centuries. Thus, for the first time in Islamic history, no ruler claimed spiritual leadership of Islam. The withdrawal of Turkey, heir to the Ottoman Empire, as the presumptive leader of the world Muslim community was symbolic of the change in the government's relationship to Islam. Indeed, secularism or laicism (laiklik ) became one of the "Six Arrows" of Atatürk's program f ...

See also:

Islam in Turkey, Islam in Turkey - Islam's history in Turkey, Islam in Turkey - Sufism and Folk Islam, Islam in Turkey - The Alevi, Islam in Turkey - Secularist Policies, Islam in Turkey - Retreat from Secularism, Islam in Turkey - Status of Religious Freedom

Islam in Turkey, Islam in Turkey - Islam's history in Turkey, Islam in Turkey - Retreat from Secularism, Islam in Turkey - Secularist Policies, Islam in Turkey - Status of Religious Freedom, Islam in Turkey - Sufism and Folk Islam, Islam in Turkey - The Alevi, Islam by country, Diyanet İşleri Başkanlığı

Islam in Turkey: Encyclopedia II - Islam in Turkey - Secularist Policies



Islam in Turkey - Secularist Policies

In 1922 the new nationalist regime abolished the Ottoman sultanate, and in 1924 it abolished the caliphate, the religious office that Ottoman sultans had held for four centuries. Thus, for the first time in Islamic history, no ruler claimed spiritual leadership of Islam. The withdrawal of Turkey, heir to the Ottoman Empire, as the presumptive leader of the world Muslim community was symbolic of the change in the government's relationship to Islam. Indeed, secularism or laicism (laiklik ) became one of the "Six Arrows" of Atatürk's program for remaking Turkey. Whereas Islam had formed the identity of Muslims within the Ottoman Empire, secularism was seen as molding the new Turkish nation and its citizens.

Atatürk and his associates not only abolished certain religious practices and institutions but also questioned the value of religion, preferring to place their trust in science. They regarded organized religion as an anachronism and contrasted it unfavorably with "civilization," which to them meant a rationalist, secular culture. Establishment of secularism in Turkey was not, as it had been in the West, a gradual process of separation of church and state. In the Ottoman Empire, all spheres of life, at least theoretically, had been subject to religious law, and Sunni religious organizations had been part of the state structure. When the reformers of the early 1920s opted for a secular state, they removed religion from the sphere of public policy and restricted it exclusively to that of personal morals, behavior, and faith. Although private observance of religious rituals could continue, religion and religious organization were excluded from public life.

The policies directly affecting religion were numerous and sweeping. In addition to the abolition of the caliphate, new laws mandated abolition of the office of seyhülislam ; abolition of the religious hierarchy; the closing and confiscation of Sufi lodges, meeting places, and monasteries and the outlawing of their rituals and meetings; establishment of government control over the evkaf, which had been inalienable under seriat ; replacement of seriat with adapted European legal codes; the closing of religious schools; abandonment of the Islamic calendar in favor of the Gregorian calendar used in the West; restrictions on public attire that had religious associations, with the fez outlawed for men and the veil discouraged for women; and the outlawing of the traditional garb of local religious leaders.

Atatürk and his colleagues also attempted to Turkify Islam through official encouragement of such practices as using Turkish rather than Arabic at devotions, substituting the Turkish word Tanri for the Arabic word Allah, and introducing Turkish for the daily calls to prayer. These changes in devotional practices deeply disturbed faithful Muslims and caused widespread resentment, which led in 1933 to a return to the Arabic version of the call to prayer. Of longer-lasting effect were the regime's measures prohibiting religious education, restricting the building of new mosques, and transferring existing mosques to secular purposes. Most notably, the Hagia Sophia (Justinian's sixth-century Christian basilica, which had been converted into a mosque by Mehmet II) was made a museum in 1935. The effect of these changes was to make religion, or more correctly Sunni Islam, subject to the control of a hostile state. Muftis and imams (prayer leaders) were appointed by the government, and religious instruction was taken over by the Ministry of National Education.

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1071, 1453, 1922, 1924, 1930s, 1933, 1935, 1940s, 1946, 1950, 1950s, 1951, 1960, 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1982, 1990, 1990s, 1994, Alevi, Allah, Anatolia, Ankara, Armenian Orthodox, Atatürk, Battle of Manzikert, Bektasi, Central Asia, Constantinople, Diyanet, Diyanet İşleri Başkanlığı, Greek Orthodox, Gregorian calendar, Hagia Sophia, Hearth, Iran, Islam, Islam by country, Islamic calendar, Islamist, Ismet Özel, Istanbul, Izmir, Jews, Kemalism, Kurds, Marxist, Mehmet II, Mevlevi, Muhammad, Muslim, Muslims, Naqshbandi, Nationalism, Ottoman Empire, Ottomans, Populism, Qadiri, Qur'an, Reformism, Republicanism, Safavid, Secularism, Shi'a, Six Arrows, Statism, Sufi, Sufism, Sunni, Syria, Tanri, Thrace, Turkey, Twelver, caliphate, citadels, dervish, fez, gazis, laicism, seriat, shaikhs, tarika



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Secularist Policies", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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