Ataturk's Life

National Liberator

Founder of the Republic

Legal Transformation

Social Reforms

Economic Growth

New Language

Women's Rights

Strides in Education

Culture and Arts

Peace at Home, Peace in the World

UNESCO Resolution on the Ataturk Centennial

Address to the youth

 

 

Mustafa Kemal Atatürk

1881 - 1938


Women's Rights

 

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

With abiding faith in the vital importance of women in society, Atatürk launched many reforms to give Turkish women equal rights and opportunities. 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.


In all walks of life, 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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Hakan Kocaturk is now the manager/owner of Apricot Hotel Istanbul
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