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Happy Republic Day Turkey!

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The 4th Repbulic day...The honorable Turkish men, women at all age are together around the sign: ''This is how we won the republic.'', Taken in the city of Uşak,1933.

Hatırlayalım, değeri daha net anlaşılsın...

29 Ekim 1923 sabahı Türkiye
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  • 29 Ekim 1923 sabahı Türkiye Cumhuriyeti Devletinin nüfusu 13 milyon.
  • 40 bin köy var 37 bin’inde okul yok, postane yok, dükkan yok.
  • 30 bin köyde cami yok.
  • Traktör sayısı sıfır. Biçerdöver sayısı sıfır. Pirinç ithal. 5 bin köyde sığır vebası var.
  • 1 milyon kişi frengi. 2 milyon kişi sıtma. Verem, tifo, tifüs salgını var. Bitle başa çıkılamıyor.
  • Dünyaya gelen her iki bebekten biri ölüyor. Her 5 anneden 1’i doğumda ölüyor. Ortalama ömür 40. Memlekette sadece 337 doktor var. Osmanlı Torunları bunu iyi dinlesin.
  • 60 eczacı var sadece 8’i Türk. Memlekette sadece 4 hemşire var. 40 bin köy var sadece 136 ebe var.
  • Komple kül edilmiş köyün sayısı binin üzerinde.
  • Limanlar madenler yabancıya ait. Demir yollarının bir metresi bile bize ait değil.
  • Osmanlı’dan ayakta kala kala 4 fabrika kalmış. Sanayi denilen işletmelerin yüzde 96’sında motor yok. 10’dan fazla işçi çalıştıran sadece 280 kişi. bunların 250’si yabancıların. Kişi başı milli gelir 45 dolar.
  • Elektrik sadece İstanbul, İzmir ve Tarsus’ta var.
  • Kara yolu yok. Otomobil sayısı sadece 1490. Bunun üzerine zaten dökülüyoruz.
  • Mübadeleyle 400 bin insan geliyor. ceplerinde para yok yok başlarını sokacak ev yok. Sığınacakları akraba yok. Gelen her iki çocuktan biri yollarda at arabalarının sırtında ilk 2 ay içinde hayatını kaybediyor. Bir tanesi benim teyzem. Kendi ailemden biliyorum. Mağarada kalanlar var.
  • Kadın insan değil Cumhuriyet’ten önce, eşit eğitim hakkı yok, meslek hakkı yok velayet hakkı yok, miras hakkı yok. Kadın kendisine miras kalan mallar üzerinde tasarruf hakkına sahip değil.
  • Cumhuriyetten önce darbe yapmış bak kansızlar. Memlekette tiyatro, müzik, spor, heykel yok. Arkeolojik eserler padişahların hediyesi olarak Avrupa’ya kaçırmış. Kimi alaturka saat kullanıyor. Güneşin battığı anı 12 kabul ediyor. Kimisi zevali saati kullanıyor. Kimisi güneşin tamamen battığı ezani saati esas alıyor. ‘Saat kaç birader?’ diyorsun herkes başka bir şey diyor. Kimisi hicri, kimisi Rumi takvim kullanıyor. Herkes aynı zaman diliminde ama farklı aylarda yaşıyor. Ne ağırlığımız dünyaya ayak uydurabiliyor ne de uzunluğumuz.”
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Kaynak/the source: http://www.sozcu.com.tr/2016/yazarlar/yilmaz-ozdil/cumhuriyet-mucizedir-1475895/

Mustafa Kemal Atatürk’s Revolutions
  • Abolition of the office of the Ottoman Sultan, November 1, 1922
  • Abolition of the capitulations with the Treaty of Lausanne, 24 July 1923
  • Proclamation of the Republic – Republic of Turkey, October 29, 1923
  • Abolition of the office of Caliphate held by the Ottoman Caliphate, March 3, 1924
  • The unification of education, March 3, 1924
  • The Weekend Act (Workweek: Monday to Friday become work days), 1924
  • Change of headgear and dress, November 25, 1925
  • Establishment of model farms; Atatürk Orman Çiftliği, 1925
  • The International Time and Calendar System (Gregorian calendar, Time zone), 1925
  • Introduction of the new penal law modeled after the Italian penal code, March 1, 1926
  • Introduction of the new civil code modeled after the Swiss civil code, October 4, 1926
  • The Obligation Law, 1926
  • The Commercial Law, 1926
  • The System of Measures (International System of Units), 1926
  • Establishment of the Turkish State Railways, 1927
  • Adoption of the new Turkish alphabet, November 1, 1928
  • Establishment of Turkish Education Association for supporting children in financial need and contributing to the educational life, January 1, 1928
  • Establishment of Turkish Language Association for regulating the Turkish language, 1931
  • Establishment of Turkish Historical Society for research on history, 1932
  • Regulation of the university education, May 31, 1933
  • First Five Year Development Plan (Planned economy), 1933
  • Second Five Year Development Plan (Planned economy), 1933
  • Law on family names, June 21, 1934
  • Abolition of titles and by-names, November 26, 1934
  • Full political rights to women, to vote and be elected, December 5, 1934
  • The inclusion of the principle of laïcité in the constitution, February 5, 1937

Mustafa Kemal Atatürk’s Revolutions

The Turk Women


"Everything we see in the world is the creative work of women." Mustafa Kemal Atatürk

  • The new Civil Code, adopted in 1926, abolished polygamy and recognized the equal rights of women in divorce, custody, and inheritance.
  • The entire educational system from the grade school to the university became coeducational.
  • Atatürk greatly admired the support that the national liberation struggle received from women and praised their many contributions:
" In Turkish society, women have not lagged behind men in science, scholarship, and culture. Perhaps they have even gone further ahead."
  • He gave women the same opportunities as men, including full political rights. In the mid-1930s, 18 women, among them a villager, were elected to the national parliament. Later, Turkey had the world's first women supreme court justice.
  • Atatürk's Turkey has produced tens of thousands of well-educated women who participate in national life as doctors, lawyers, engineers, teachers, writers, administrators, executives, and creative artists.
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Sabiha Gokcen (1913 - 2001), the world's first female fighter pilot


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Gul Esin (1901-1990), Turkey's first female mukhtar



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Semiha Es (1912-2012), war photographer


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Seventeen of the first Turkish female MPs


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Samiye Cahid Morkaya (1897 - 1972), racer, musician


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Halet Cambel (1916- 2014), Olympian and archaeologist


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Vasfiye Ozkocak (1923- 2014), journalist


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Sabiha Bengutas (1904 - 1992), sculptor

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The source: http://www.trtworld.com/turkey/nine-notable-firsts-for-women-in-turkish-history-378489
Wow women having lived those times were more beautiful than those living today! Very interesting!
 
. . . . . .
Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village, though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.

My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.

He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound's the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.

The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.

Robert Frost (Stopping by Woods on A Snowy Evening)

Tebrikler....
 
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Happy Republic Day.

Is it me or does Ataturk look so much more handsome with a beard. I hope one day we get a movie based on his exploits in Libya.

He even made friends with the leader of the Senussis.
 
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Gul Esin is a covered woman somehow you have idiots believing Ataturk banned the hijab lol

If so why is this woman covered? Another lie thrown down the drain. Ataturk did not ban it despite being a secularist.
 
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Gul Esin is a covered woman somehow you have idiots believing Ataturk banned the hijab lol

If so why is this woman covered? Another lie thrown down the drain. Ataturk did not ban it despite being a secularist.

There are a lot of pictures of headscarfed women fangirling on Ataturk, asking for autographs etc. I think it was only banned in parliament and for judges.
 
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After a quick check in Google everyone can see that Headscarves were never banned by Ataturk anywhere and in any form and that such a ban was issued after the Military Coup in 1980 and was implemented in the hardest way after 1997. Still it was a ban on clothing in public institutions only. The ban on wearing headscarves by public personnel was lifted in 2013.
 
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After a quick check in Google everyone can see that Headscarves were never banned by Ataturk anywhere and in any form and that such a ban was issued after the Military Coup in 1980 and was implemented in the hardest way after 1997. Still it was a ban on clothing in public institutions only. The ban on wearing headscarves by public personnel was lifted in 2013.
Also if i may add, any religious symbol such as cross or kippa was banned, but try explaining this to islamists.
 
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