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ights violations who worked regularly and patiently to force the disappeared thousands onto the<br />

agenda of the Turkish society.” 4<br />

For a long period of time, the state kept its silence. But as the protests continued and gained<br />

social and political support while the oppression of security forces went on, it became to a point<br />

where the government officials had to listen to the Saturday Mothers’ demands. In April 2011, after<br />

exactly 16 years, the Human Rights Research Commission of the Turkish Parliament decided to pay<br />

attention to them. “Although this political body does not have the power to initiate a trial of the<br />

perpetrators, it makes victims’ voices accessible to all of Turkey through the mass media.” 5<br />

Again in 2011, the Prime Minister of the day accepted two representatives of the Saturday<br />

Mothers to hear their stories and demands. As a result of this meeting, the state declared that these<br />

two people had been killed. 6<br />

Obviously these two attempts did not produce the desired outcomes. But within these long years<br />

of civil disobedience, the Saturday Mothers have become known at the global scale, just like the<br />

Argentinean Madres de la Plaza de Mayo, the Bosnian Mothers of Srebrenica, and the Committee of<br />

Families of the Disappeared and Detained in Lebanon. Recently, in September 2013, The Saturday<br />

Mothers received the Hrant Dink Foundation Award 7 , named in honor of the assassinated journalist<br />

Hrant Dink. The award is given to people or organizations that aim to make the world free “from<br />

discrimination, racism and violence, who take personal risks for achieving those ideals, who break the<br />

stereotypes and use the language of peace and by doing so give inspiration and hope to others.” 8 The<br />

award made them visible in mass media once again, but as it always has been, it was a time‐limited<br />

visibility again.<br />

Apart from the sporadic news appeared in mainstream media coverage, the Saturday Mothers<br />

received real attention from alternative media’s regular coverage of their protests. 2000s are also the<br />

time when the Internet and online alternative media became widespread in Turkey, which enabled<br />

the Saturday Mothers to raise their voices and tell their stories in public frequently. As a site of<br />

alternative communication, one of the major missions of alternative media is to open up a space for<br />

the subaltern and oppressed groups to become visible and most importantly have a voice. In the case<br />

of the Saturday Mothers also have a face, an image, a story, a life both for their disappeared loved<br />

ones and for themselves.<br />

I reviewed four representatives of alternative media to see how they narrate the stories of the<br />

Saturday Mothers, namely BIA (Independent Communication Network), Başka Haber (Other News),<br />

SoL (LefT) and Sendika (Union). There are surprisingly only a few news stories about Saturday<br />

Mothers in the feminist alternative media, i.e. Feminist Politics and Amargi. The coverage of peaceful<br />

sit‐ins and the Saturday Mothers in alternative media until September 2014 is as follows: 293 news<br />

stories via BIA since 2001; 153 news stories via Başka Haber since 2009; 117 news stories via SoL<br />

since 2007; and 65 news stories via Sendika since 2009. When I categorized and analyzed these news<br />

stories, I came up with four types of news content: First, calls that are made every week for joining<br />

the protests; second, opinion pieces of columnists from various media outlets including mainstream<br />

media; third, awards, visitors (i.e. Plaza De Mayo mothers, Bono), meetings (i.e. meeting with prime<br />

minister); and fourth, stories of the disappeared that are remembered every week at the Galatasaray<br />

Square, how they were taken away and, legal and political struggle of their families to find them<br />

and/or their remains.<br />

By focusing on the latter, I will try to summarize my findings about the stories that are delivered<br />

through alternative media on the Saturday Mothers. But before that I need to mention a few<br />

characteristics of alternative media. Small‐scale alternative media always have the downside of<br />

addressing an alternative ghetto, which means the audiences of alternative media outlets are a<br />

certain amount of people who are politically active and already aware of the unseen images and<br />

unheard voices. As Nick Couldry 9 argues, “having a voice requires both practical resources and the<br />

status necessary if one is to be recognized by others as having a voice. Narrative, as a process is<br />

219

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