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Atatürk shaped the destiny of a nation which was alone and dying. He gave it a new future. Under his progressive nationalist
leadership his country broke free from its passive, inward-looking and parochial conservatism, ingrained through long centuries
of habit, and from the defeatism and apathy engendered by the inexorable decline of its imperial power. Aiming to replace the
image of Türkiye as "The Sick Man of Europe" with that of a dynamic and self-renewing non-imperialist country capable of winning
the respect of its more advanced European neighbours, he led his country out of the Middle Ages into the twentieth century in
a mere couple of decades. He achieved this through a coordinated series of sweeping reforms, all directed towards the creation
in Türkiye of a western-style democracy. These changes were so drastic that it is impossible to conceive that anyone could have
brought them about if he had not been, like Mustafa Kemal, a national hero twice over as a result of his leadership at Gallipoli
and his single-handed masterminding of the Turkish War of Independence, which ended with the departure of all foreign armies
from Turkish soil. The philosophy behind Ataturk's reforms is now known as Kemalism. In February 1937 he had the following six
principles written into Article Two of the Constitution of the Turkish Republic : (1) Republicanism, (2) Nationalism, (3)
Populism, (4) Revolutionism, (5)Secularism, and (6) Etatism (or Statism).
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