Abolition of the office of caliphate held by the Ottomans since 1517 (March 3, 1924)
Please note here, then, that Ataturk proclaimed a Republic, in other words a government of the people, for the people and by the people. This proclamation did not lead directly to a Democracy, but it seems to have been Ataturk's intention to truly empower the people of Turkey.
Second, let us also note that Ataturk banished the former leaders of the Ottoman Empire into exile. And, he did away with the Caliphate. In other words, he made a clean sweep of the old, and brought in the new. He demonstrated little sympathy for the "traditional values" of Islam, or its adherence to a government without a church/state separation.
This would be the equivalent of our having exiled all Islamists from Iraq and Afghanistan, and banning the institution of Sharia law.
Did we do that?
No.
Now, let's look at the social reforms Instituted by Ataturk:
Social Reforms
Recognition of equality between the sexes (1926 - 1934)
Reform of headgear and dress (November 25, 1925)
Abolition of titles and by-names (November 26, 1934)
Adoption of international calendar, hours and measurements (1925 - 1931)
Yes, that's right, Ataturk banned the burqa. Well, not the burqa proper, but the traditional Islamic clothing such as the Hijab, and even the Fez, the pillbox hat that men traditionally wore. Why did he do this? As we read on, we will see that it seems that Ataturk had quite an appreciation for the role of individualism in the shaping of a true human-rights respecting democracy.
Well, who would of thunk it, huh? I mean, did we ban the burqa and the turban in Afghanistan? No.
And, why do you think Atatur did away with the traditional Islamic calendar, and units of measurement? Surely, they do not violate human rights. No, they don't. But, they do serve to help keep Muslims living in the own medieval corner of the universe. Simply put, they impede progress, and anything that impedes progress only serves to make tradition, no matter how malignant, seem all the more compfortable and inviting.
Now, let us look at reforms in the sector of justice:
Legal Reforms
Granting of first partial (1930), then full political rights (right to vote and be elected to parliament) to women (December 5, 1934), well before several other European nations. See Timeline of women's suffrage for more information.
Closure of Islamic courts and the abolition of Islamic canon law (1924 - 1937)
(That would be Sharia, my friends).
Transfer to a secular law structure by adoption from Swiss Civil Code and other laws (1924 - 1937)
Introduction of the new penal law modeled after Italian Penal Code (March 1, 1926)
Complete separation of government and religious affairs and the inclusion of the principle of laïcité in the constitution (February 5, 1937)
So, how is it that Mustafa Kemal Ataturk had the foresight, and the belief in Democratic principles to know that he would have to ban Sharia, that he would have to make sure that women had full equal rights, that he would have to do away with the burqa?
Why did Ataturk know all this, and yet our leaders do not?
How is it that we, who instituted drastic change in Germany and Japan in the wake of WWII by banning portions of the Japanese and German mythologies and state religions, do not understand that we need to do the same now, when the stakes are even higher, for us, and for the 1.2 billion people living under the oppression of Islamic totalitarianism?
What has happened to us that we have lost the courage of our convictions, of our belief that all men are created equal? What has happened to us that we don't understand the lessons of our own history, in WWII, and in the American Civil War, where we remade the society of the American South? What has happened to us that the President of the Republic of Turkey, circa 1930, had bigger vision for human rights and indiviualism than we do?
Listen, I am no expert in history. I may be getting some of this wrong about Ataturk. If I am, please let me know. My field of study was Philosophy and Literature. Therefore, I believe I have a decent grasp of the raw power of ideas. And, it is my opinion that Ataturk had it right in Turkey, and we have it exactly wrong in Iraq and Afghanistan.
I can assure you that, if I am right, this will have very tragic consequences. The world will lose what little trust they still have in American goodness and vision. The Europe Union - and its Machiavellian vision of the world, which is willing to get in bed with any surging fascism as long as it serves the interests of the French and German pocketbook - will be granted a victory. And, finally, time will have been lost in the progress towards resolving this war, and that only means that the momentum will have gone to the other side, the side which is now developing nuclear weapons with which to kill tens or million, if not hundres of millions of human beings.
What are we to do? I suggest we crack open our fucking history books, and use them as mirrors to remind us of who the fuck we are supposed to be.