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  • Throughout early 2016, Turkey’s Parliament struggled to agree over the country’s proposed

  • constitutional overhaul.

  • The Parliamentary Speaker suggested that Turkey adopt a religious constitution, as it would

  • reflect the country’s majority Muslim population.

  • But the president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, dismissed the idea of a religious constitution while

  • supporting the country’s Muslim culture.

  • Caught between East and West, Turkey has grappled with its religious and cultural identity for

  • as long as it has existed.

  • So, is Turkey a Muslim nation?

  • Or is it Secular?

  • Well, according to its current constitution, Turkey is secular, and has been since its

  • birth as a nation in the early 1920’s.

  • Turkey’s founder and first president, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, transformed the former Ottoman-Turkish

  • state into a secular republic, with the belief that Western politics and values were the

  • only way the new country would modernize.

  • This Western, secular ideology, calledKemalism”, came to define Turkey’s identity, and remained

  • largely unchallenged until a coup d’etat in 1980.

  • The country’s new military government reversed course and encouraged the practice of Islam

  • in public life, in an attempt to drum up nationalism and prevent communist or leftist sympathies.

  • This effectively brought Islam back into the political conversation, and paved the way

  • for Islam-focused politicians like Erdogan to gain popularity.

  • One of the best representations of Turkey’s ongoing religious debate can been seen in

  • its public school system.

  • Throughout the second half of the 20th century, religious education was gradually integrated

  • into public schools.

  • But the 1980 military coup made such Islamic studies mandatory, and also facilitated a

  • sharp increase inImam Hatipschools, which base their curriculum on the teachings

  • of Islam.

  • After Erdogan took power in 2002, the number of students attending these religious public

  • schools nearly doubled, as many secular ones were converted into religious schools.

  • The change has been met with resistance from secular parents, many of whom have no choice

  • but to place their child in such an institution.

  • This and countless other attempts by Erdogan and his ruling party toIslamizethe

  • country have been met with widespread public opposition.

  • This may come as a surprise, as official reports show that the country’s population is somewhere

  • between 95 and 99 percent Muslim.

  • However, these numbers have raised questions, as every Turkish citizen is automatically

  • registered as Muslim at birth.

  • We spoke with Istanbul-based Journalist Suzy Hansen, who told us that many Turks self-identify

  • as Muslim, but are not religious, just as many Americans call themselves Christian,

  • even if they don’t follow Christianity.

  • It’s safe to say that Turkey is a predominantly Muslim country.

  • However, a 2016 Pew Report showed that only 13 percent of Turks believe that the Quran

  • should directly influence their country’s laws.

  • Suzy Hansen says that most of Turkey’s current polarization is not along religious lines,

  • but political and ethnic ones.

  • That is, those who are for Erdogan versus those who oppose him, and those who support

  • Kurdish rights versus those who do not.

  • As the ruling party continues to wield power, the debate will undoubtedly continue.

  • The growing sovereignty of Erdogan and his ruling party recently led to a failed attempt

  • at a coup d’etat.

  • For an explainer on why President Erdogan is so controversial, watch our video.

  • Thanks for tuning in to Seeker Daily, make sure to hit subscribe for new videos daily.

Throughout early 2016, Turkey’s Parliament struggled to agree over the country’s proposed

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土耳其是伊斯蘭國家還是世俗國家? (Is Turkey An Islamic Or Secular Country?)

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    gotony5614.me97 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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