The country's powerful Department of Religious Affairs has commissioned a team of theologians at Ankara University to carry out a fundamental revision of the Hadith, the second most sacred text in Islam after the Koran.
The Hadith is a collection of thousands of sayings reputed to come from the Prophet Muhammad.
As such, it is the principal guide for Muslims in interpreting the Koran and the source of the vast majority of Islamic law, or Sharia.
The reason for the reinterpretation is that many of the saying attributed to Muhammad appeared centuries after his death to serve contemporary social/political purposes, and others can be historically shown to have originated in other cultures before being injected into Islamic tradition.
This could be seen as being analogous to the beginnings of the protestant reformation in Christianity.
According to Fadi Hakura, an expert on Turkey from Chatham House in London, Turkey is doing nothing less than recreating Islam - changing it from a religion whose rules must be obeyed, to one designed to serve the needs of people in a modern secular democracy.
He says that to achieve it, the state is fashioning a new Islam.
"This is kind of akin to the Christian Reformation," he says.
"Not exactly the same, but if you think, it's changing the theological foundations of [the] religion."
"I cannot impress enough how fundamental [this change] is."
This really is incredibly important.