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unimaginable except as part of an ongoing exchange of narratives with others. Voice, necessarily<br />

involves us in an ongoing process of reflection, exchanging narratives back and forth between our<br />

past and present selves, and between us and others. The voice of each of us, our history of reflection<br />

and self‐interpretation, is part of our embodied history.” 10<br />

Based on this, it is possible to argue that is history ‘missing’, or are we ‘missing’ an important part<br />

of our history as a society unless we hear their stories and their voices. Below are a few example of<br />

the stories that are lost in between the lines of alternative media coverage that majority of the<br />

Turkish public have never heard and most probably will never hear either:<br />

May 27, 1995 The Very First Gathering of the Saturday Mothers at Galatasaray Square: “Hasan<br />

Ocak was taken into custody. He disappeared just like hundreds of others, then found dead. We want<br />

the murderers” 11<br />

In 449th Week, the Saturday Mothers/People gathered to commemorate Abdülkerim Yurtseven,<br />

Mikdat Özeken and Münür Sarıtaş who ‘disappeared’ in 1995: “Why the eyes, which see us are so<br />

blind?” 12<br />

The 470th meeting of the Saturday Mothers was for Nurettin Yedigöl who disappeared while he<br />

was in custody 33 years ago: “He has disappeared 33 years ago, they still send election certificate to<br />

our address.” 13<br />

The Saturday Mothers gathered for the 415th time at Galatasaray Square for Rıdda Yavuz: “She<br />

was 24 when she was taken into custody with two others. They were all wounded after the soldiers’<br />

fire into the crowd during a protest. Her family’s legal attempts to find her yielded no results.” 14<br />

The Saturday Mothers and human rights activist gathered for the 313th time at Galatasaray<br />

Square to demand justice for Yusuf Erişti, who was taken into custody in 1991, in İstanbul. His sister<br />

Zeynep Erişti said: “We know he is dead, but we still wait for him.” 15<br />

The stories that I read while I was <strong>writing</strong> this <strong>paper</strong> were very heavy even just to read, the pain<br />

and suffering of people who lost their loved ones are beyond imagination. There are no words to<br />

explain the sorrow on their faces while they’re holding the photographs of their sons, daughters,<br />

husbands, wives, fathers, mothers, sisters and brothers. By showing the faces of the disappeared<br />

they are re‐humanizing them, taking them out of the inhumane and cold statistics and numbers,<br />

giving them a face and reminding the public that they are still loved and missed and they are there to<br />

reclaim justice for them, reclaim their stolen stories.<br />

To conclude, based on the above discussion about voice and narrative, I’d argue, it is clear that<br />

alternative media’s coverage and reports on the Saturday Mothers contribute to forcing the State<br />

and society’s collective memory keep on remembering the stories of the disappeared. By marking<br />

their faces, by telling their stories, by challenging the official records, by demanding justice and by<br />

reclaiming the recent history, which was attempted to be written by forgetting the <strong>lives</strong> that are lost<br />

all through the dark periods of the country.<br />

Keywords: Alternative media, Saturday mothers, Strategy of silence<br />

Associate Prof.Berrin YANIKKAYA<br />

Yeditepe University, Faculty of Communications, Department of Radio, Television & Cinema<br />

berriny@yeditepe.edu.tr<br />

220

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