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Kadir Balcı was born in Rize in 1942. He worked as a counterperson at a bakery.
He was 35 years old when he lost his life. He worked at the bakery across from the French Consulate on İstiklal Street at the entrance to Taksim Square. He'd gone up onto the terrace to watch the demonstration and to call out to people, inviting them into the bakery. He lost his life when he was hit by a bullet shot from below.
According to the autopsy, Kadir Balcı died as a result of a gunshot injury. The autopsy report states the cause of death as internal bleeding resulting from a bullet wound that damaged the liver and heart.
Reaching the family
I was able to reach Kadir Balcı's daughter, Dilek Balcı, thanks to journalist Neşe Yeşiloğlu, who had spoken with Dilek and her twin sister Özlem Balcı in 2015.
Dilek Balcı was just five years old when she lost her father, but she remembers him from both her own memories, as well as from what her mother told her about him. She recalls what a joyful and playful person he was, and how much he loved to take photographs. She says it is perhaps from her father that she inherited her own passion for photography...
Dilek Balcı tells us in her own words about Kadir Balcı's 35 years of life, about how the family was thrown into turmoil following his death, and the difficulties they experienced.
Kadir Balcı's daughter speaks
There used to be a bakery across from the French Consulate, and he worked there as a counterperson. That day he'd gone up onto the terrace to watch the demonstration and to call out to people to come back into the bakery. My dad was struck by a bullet shot from below and lost his life right there.
I was very young when I lost my dad, and as far as I myself recall, and from what I remember my mum and his friends saying, he was someone who was full of life. He loved taking photos. I get my own passion for photography from him, I think. He was very funny, always playing jokes on people. That's how everyone spoke of him after his death too.
We really struggled
There were four of us kids. The only thing our father was able to leave us was his pension. It was such a struggle for my mum, especially back then, to raise four kids at once. She wasn't equipped to take on the financial burden of it by herself. I won't even speak of the emotional burden.
For years the bread in our home came from the local bakery. Our clothes were hand-me-downs from our relatives or our neighbours. That's what we wore. I can say that we grew up with the help of the people around us. Let me put it this way: We're from Rize, and most of our food for the winter would come from Rize. But we'd buy olives, for example, and we'd nibble at them to make them last as long as possible.
We were all able to finish school
My dad had bought a house before he died. There were still payments that had to be made on it. My mum would go to Tophane every month and make those payments. Back then of course we weren't aware of the gravity of the situation. Later we all came to understand that she had raised us under the most challenging of conditions, herself suffering such tremendous pain.
We were all able to finish school. My mum made that possible, despite the difficult circumstances. Our education was an advantage. My little sister and I both graduated from the School of Fine Arts, and we both work in design now.
My older sister and older brother are university graduates too. My older sister is a certified public accountant in Germany now, and my older brother works at a large firm. All of us have good lives, but the conditions we lived under back then...
It's thanks to my mum, thanks to the fight she put up, that we have the good lives we have today.
1 May was taboo
1 May was taboo for us. We were forbidden from going to the First of May demonstrations. And so I never went. I really wanted to, but my mum never let me.
And for years I was unable to gather the courage to go. I was able to visit Gezi Park only after my mum passed away. And after that, I was able to go to the First of May demonstrations just once. That was in 2014. Exactly 37 years after my dad's death.
He was buried in Rize
After my dad lost his life in Taksim, his body was sent back to Rize, as is our tradition, because his family is there. He was buried in Rize.
My mum wanted to go to Rize too when she was sick. We lost her also, in 2000, to stomach cancer. I mean, the cumulation of so much pain and suffering eventually got to her, and so that's how we lost my mum.
Why him?
For years it seemed unfair to me that my dad died the way he did. I was always asking myself: Why him? Why so much pain? Why all these difficulties?
But as I grew up, I decided that some things have to happen in order to make what comes after possible. There have even been times when I've thought it was a good thing my dad was there that day, and that he died the way he did.
I hope that we come to see brighter days, more fortunate times, but I just don't know. I can only hope that we, all of us together, get to see those days.
(TY/APA/KU/NÖ/VK)
About Tuğçe YılmazJournalist, editor, researcher. "1 May 1977 The Voices of Those Who Lost Their Loved Ones / 1 May 1977 and Impunity" she was engaged in this dossier as a researcher, reporter, editor and writer. Her articles, interviews and reports are published in outlets such as bianet, BirGün Book, K24, 5Harfliler, Gazete Karınca and 1+1 Forum. She graduated from Ege University, Faculty of Literature Department of Philosophy. She was born in Ankara in 1991. |
This text was created and maintained with the financial support of the European Union provided under Etkiniz EU Programme. Its contents are the sole responsibility of "IPS Communication Foundation" and do not necessarily reflect the views of the European Union. |
CLICK - 1 May 1977 e-book is online
The ones who lost their lives on 1 May '77The ones whose loved ones we could talk to: Ahmet Gözükara (34, teacher), Ali Sidal (18, worker), Bayram Çıtak (37, teacher), Bayram Eyi (50, construction worker), Diran Nigiz (34, worker), Ercüment Gürkut (27, university student), Hacer İpek Saman (24, university student), Hamdi Toka (35, Seyyar Satıcı), Hasan Yıldırım (31, Uzel worker), Hikmet Özkürkçü (39, teacher), Hüseyin Kırkın (26, worker), Jale Yeşilnil (17, high school student), Kadir Balcı (35, salesperson), Kıymet Kocamış (Kadriye Duman, 25, hemşire), Kahraman Alsancak (29, Uzel worker), Kenan Çatak (30, teacher), Mahmut Atilla Özbelen (26, worker-university student), Mustafa Elmas (33, teacher), Mehmet Ali Genç (60, guard), Mürtezim Oltulu (42, worker), Nazan Ünaldı (19, university student), Nazmi Arı (26, police officer), Niyazi Darı (24, worker-university student), Ömer Narman (31, teacher), Rasim Elmas (41, cinema laborer), Sibel Açıkalın (18, university student), Ziya Baki (29, Uzel worker), The ones whose loved ones we did/could not talk to: Aleksandros Konteas (57, worker), Bayram Sürücü (worker), Garabet Akyan (54, worker), Hatice Altun (21), Leyla Altıparmak (19, hemşire), Meral Cebren Özkol (43, nurse), Mustafa Ertan (student), Ramazan Sarı (11, primary school student) The ones only the names of whom are known: Ali Yeşilgül, Mehmet Ali Kol, Özcan Gürkan, Tevfik Beysoy, Yücel Elbistanlı The one whose name is unknown: A 35-year-old man |
The voices of those who lost their loved ones: 1 May '77 and impunity
Political panorama of Turkey-1977
Film industry worker Rasim Elmas, 41, died in Taksim
Construction Worker Bayram Eyi, 50, died in Taksim
Teacher Bayram Çıtak, 37, died in Taksim
High School Student Jale Yeşilnil, 17, died in Taksim
Teacher Kenan Çatak, 31, died in Taksim
Teacher Ahmet Gözükara, 33, died in Taksim
Teacher Hikmet Özkürkçü, 39, died in Taksim
Student-laborer Niyazi Darı, 24, died in Taksim
University student Nazan Ünaldı, 19, died in Taksim
Teacher Ömer Narman, 31, died in Taksim
Laborer Ali Sidal, 18, died in Taksim
Counterperson Kadir Balcı, 35, died in Taksim
Student Hacer İpek Saman, 24, died in Taksim
Factory Worker Kahraman Alsancak, 29, died in Taksim
Laborer Hüseyin Kırkın, 23, died in Taksim
Student Ercüment Gürkut, 26, died in Taksim
Public order police officer Nazmi Arı, 26, died in Taksim
Laborer Mahmut Atilla Özbelen, 26, died in Taksim
Factory worker Hasan Yıldırım, 31, died in Taksim
Itinerant salesperson Hamdi Toka, 35, died in Taksim
Security Guard Mehmet Ali Genç, 60, died in Taksim
Factory Worker Ziya Baki, 30, Died in Taksim
Laborer Mürtezim Oltulu, 42, Died in Taksim
Teacher Mustafa Elmas, 33, Died in Taksim
Student Sibel Açıkalın, 18, died in Taksim
Laborer Diran Nigiz, 34, died in Taksim
1 May 1977 & Impunity
'The state is implicated in this crime, perpetrators must be put on trial'
'If you can't find the killers, you can't remove the stain'
'The perpetrators of the 1 May 1977 massacre got away with it'
Remembrance as a matter of dignity and the fight against impunity
Who is hiding the truth and why?