Turkish Prisons Are Filled With Professors — Like My Father


Date posted: October 11, 2016

Merve Reyhan Kayikci

A Turkish professor who was my father’s colleague and frequently visited our house is now incapable of counting right amount of money to pay for a bottle of water at a prison canteen. He is traumatized as a result of days of harsh treatment during the interrogation. He is sharing a prison cell with my father, longtime friends, in western Turkey.

My father, a professor at Sakarya University for 16 years, is among nearly 2,500 academics who were dismissed and arrested in connection to the failed coup attempt on July 15. He would have never imagined that police would storm our house, just several days after the failed plot, and take him into custody. He was asked endless questions in 10 days under detention, for hours every day — questions that he has no answers for. He was rounded up just four days afterTurkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan signed a state of emergency rule that allows anyone to be detained up to 30 days without any charges. Turkey suspended European Convention on Human Rights and International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and there is no due process in a country that is still seeking to become a member of the European Union.

For weeks, his family and his lawyer could not meet with him. Because the investigation was confidential, he was refused to participate in his trial. How can one defend themselves if they have no idea with what they are charged with?

The pro-government Turkish media had a field day when they announced that “traitor academics were locked up,” including my father. Several weeks ago, Erdogan signed another decree with draconian measures that stripped 2,436 academics of their positions and revoked their benefits. We were eventually evicted from the house we had been living for years. My father lost every title he earned in his 30-year tenure as an academic. Passports of my entire family were revoked. My family cannot travel abroad, and because I am in Brussels, I cannot travel to Turkey either.

Our relatives stopped talking to us over fears that they might be labeled as coup supporters. Even a slight suspicion that a person is friendly with those who were rounded up on coup charges would be enough to accuse people. Our neighbors have stopped talking to my family, and they are completely alone during this personal drama. My family is completely segregated from the society. Although my father is yet to stand a trial on charges he is facing, his arrest has somehow socially stigmatized my family as “traitors.”

Like most Turkish citizens my father watched the awful events unfolding that night on TV. Little did he know that life would take a painful turn for him after that terrifying night. Ever since his arrest, more academics have been put behind bars from the same university, and now the numbers have reached more than thirty. Thousands more have lost their freedom and jobs all around Turkey.

One of them is a young associate professor. I have known this academic for years, and instead of teaching his students, he is now sitting in a prison cell. His father has terminal cancer, and he has two disabled sisters and a pregnant wife. I wonder who is taking care of his family now that he is in prison over “treason.”

Another colleague of my father is now going through another drama. She was arrested on July 26 and her husband, who is also an academic at the same university, was arrested days later. Their children are left to be taken care of by their 80-year-old grandmother.

I no longer see numbers in news outlets anymore. I personally know their stories and can vividly imagine what other families are going through. Because I know these life stories that are much worse than ours, and I can only be grateful even for the miserable state that my family is at.

My father was recently transported from the Sakarya state prison to Bandirma state prison, which is a 4-hour car trip my family has to take every two weeks to see him. His prison cell has the capacity for seven people but 20 people are sharing it. “We are all academics in the same cell so we found a way to work it out,” he told my mother.

Five in the morning, prison guards woke up my father and other inmates — professors — for a transfer to another penitentiary last month. No one knew where they were going. The families were not informed. Prison warden told my mother that the local authorities banned them from disclosing my father’s new location. “This is the kind of games they play on our minds,” my mother said. She eventually managed to find out where he was and rushed to see him before the visiting hours ended.

Even if my father is set free soon, he is banned from applying for a public job again in his lifetime. Although there is no court decision on charges he is facing, the government has stripped him of all his professional affiliations. He lost his title, his salary, and my family was forced to leave the house they had inhabited for years.

The government has doomed my family to absolute poverty. My father is only one of thousands of qualified, hard-working intellectuals whose lives were thrown into disarray. There is no future for them.

What is more horrible amid this ordeal is the deafening silence of relatives and other colleagues. They believe their family members and relatives will be tortured in prison if they speak up. They are afraid that police will show up on their doorstep if they raise their voice against this injustice. Their fear is not without reason: Everyone is making desperate efforts to distance themselves from critics.

But Turkish government has declared a full-fledged war on anyone it deems as critical. From journalists to academics, the government has not even a modicum of tolerance to an alternative academic thought.

The arrested people may appear in papers as numbers, but they are first and foremost our loved ones and what they are going through is a complete nightmare.


Merve Reyhan Kayikci, Researcher at KU Leuven University

Source: Huffington Post , October 10, 2016


Related News

In Erdogan regime western-oriented intellectuals, bureaucrats, liberals, Kurds, civil society activists in mortal danger

Those in prison—educated, Western-oriented intellectuals and bureaucrats, liberals, Kurds, civil society activists, and supporters of exiled cleric Fethullah Gülen—are in mortal danger. When blood flows from the prisons, it will be no accident nor should anyone believe Erdogan’s security forces were simply reacting to a crisis.

Feud between Turkey’s Erdogan and influential cleric goes public

A feud between Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan and an influential Islamic cleric has spilled into the open months ahead of elections, highlighting fractures in the religiously conservative support base underpinning his decade in power. The reclusive cleric drew parallels with the behavior of the secularist military in the build up to past coups.

Gülen appeals for steadfastness against gov’t ban on prep schools [in Turkey]

Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen has asked his followers to be resolute and not yield to despair in the face of a government attempt to shut down private educational institutions [in Turkey] that assist students to prepare for high school and university admission examinations, which was interpreted as a major blow to the right to an education and to free enterprise in the EU-candidate country.

Victims of forced disappearance in Turkey

On this ‘International day of the victims of enforced disappearances’ (August 30), let’s raise our voices for the missing people of Turkey. In the aftermath of the coup attempt last year, at least thirteen people have been abducted allegedly by elements linked to the Turkish government as part of an intimidation campaign targeting critics and opponents of Turkey’s president.

Claims about TİB plot to libel Hizmet spark massive reaction

Jurists and politicians reacted harshly to a claim in an email by an anonymous whistleblower from the Telecommunications Directorate (TİB), the agency responsible for carrying out legal wiretaps, that there is a conspiracy to bring the Hizmet movement under suspicion of infiltrating TİB.

Erdoğan: both asset and liability for AKP

“Very few people in Turkey could deny that the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government under the leadership of Tayyip Erdoğan has made a tremendous and positive transformation in the country. Now, he is on it again with his insistence on trying to close down tutorial centers that belong to the private sector. Everybody knows that with this he is trying to punish the Hizmet movement, which has resisted pledging absolute loyalty to him.

Latest News

Turkish inmate jailed over alleged Gülen links dies of heart attack in prison

Message of Condemnation and Condolences for Mass Shooting at Bondi Beach, Sydney

Media executive Hidayet Karaca marks 11th year in prison over alleged links to Gülen movement

ECtHR faults Turkey for convictions of 2,420 applicants over Gülen links in follow-up to 2023 judgment

New Book Exposes Erdoğan’s “Civil Death Project” Targeting the Hizmet Movement

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

ECtHR rejects Turkey’s appeal, clearing path for retrials in Gülen-linked cases

Erdoğan’s Civil Death Project’ : The ‘politicide’ spanning more than a decade

Fethullah Gülen’s Vision and the Purpose of Hizmet

In Case You Missed It

Jews and Muslims Break Their Fasts Together

Islamic scholar gave Buddhist point to ponder

UN and OSCE experts deplore crackdown on journalists and media outlets in Turkey

Turkish Schools in Niger

Alevi leader Kenanoğlu: Discrimination against Alevis increased in 2013

Turkish gov’t issues detention warrants for 121 women on Int’l Women’s Day

Kimse Yok Mu extends helping hand to Kyrgyz orphans

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News