Birth Date: | 1919 |
Birth Place: | Trabzon, Turkey |
Death Date: | October 6, |
Death Cause: | Letter bomb |
Alma Mater: | Ankara University |
Party: | Social Democratic Populist Party |
Bahriye Üçok (1919 – October 6, 1990) was a Turkish academic of theology, left-wing politician, writer, columnist, and women's rights activist whose assassination in 1990 remains unresolved.
Born in Trabzon in 1919, Bahriye Üçok finished her primary education in Ordu and then graduated from Kandilli High School for Girls in Istanbul. She was educated in Medieval Islamic and Turkish History at the Faculty of Philology, History and Geography of Ankara University. At the same time, she attended the State Conservatory and completed the Opera section.[1]
After eleven years working as a high school teacher[2] in Samsun and Ankara, she entered 1953 Ankara University as an assistant in the Faculty of Theology. She obtained her PhD in 1957, and became an associate professor with her thesis on Female Rulers in Islamic Countries in 1965. She subsequently became a professor, being the ever first female university teacher in this faculty. She was fluent in Arabic and Persian, and interpreted Islam in a modern and tolerant way focusing on the role of women in Islam.
In 1971, she was elected contingency senator by President Cevdet Sunay, and so her political career started. In 1977 Üçok joined the center-left Republican People's Party (Turkish: Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi, CHP). After the military coup in 1980, she co-founded the People's Party (Turkish: Halkçı Parti) and was elected deputy of Ordu into the Grand National Assembly of Turkey in 1984. In 1985, after a merger (with SODEP), her party was renamed the Social Democratic People's Party (SHP).
She also wrote an opinion column in the newspaper Cumhuriyet. After a TV forum, at which she declared that covered dressing in Islam (Hijab) is not obligatory, Bahriye Üçok received increasing threats from the militant organization "Islamic Movement" (Turkish: İslami Hareket). Not long after, on October 6, 1990,[3] she was killed by a letter bomb as she was trying to open a book package in front of her house.[4] The assassination remained unsolved. She was laid to rest at the Karşıyaka Cemetery in Ankara.[5]
Gülay Calap, known as the "parcel-girl" who had accepted the packet for delivery, disappeared for a long period after the assassination. On January 16, 1994 she was arrested in İzmir as the İzmir responsible of the Revolutionary People's Party, an organization that is aligned with the PKK. The court sentenced her to prison for 22 years and 6 months, of which she served 12 years. Calap joined the Democratic Society Party (DTP) in 2007, and became its vice president in November of that year.[6]