TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「“I grew up with Erdoğan’s government, and at first, we were able to gather and protest without teargas,” Şeyma Çetin says. “Now our right to freedom of expression and protest is being met with violence. This government fears everything from everyone. We need a government that allows us to criticize it.”  23-year-old Çetin is among a growing number of women who call themselves Muslim feminists—and who aren’t going to be boxed in by stereotypes. They belong to a new generation of religious women marked by their increasingly vocal opposition to Turkey’s conservative government led by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.  Their mothers saw Erdoğan as an ally thanks to his lifting of a highly contentious ban on wearing the headscarf in government offices in 2013. Earlier that year, as the Gezi Park anti-government protests swept across Turkey, he had co-opted them as a constituency, describing them as “our sisters in headscarves.”   But in the decade that followed, many younger religious women like Çetin have shifted away from the President and his ruling Justice and Development Party. They accuse the government of trying to roll back the hard-won rights of Turkish women, including removing legal protections against gender-based violence and severely limiting access to abortion.  At the link in our bio, find out why a third of the women who voted for Erdoğan in the 2018 elections said they may not do so this year. Photographs by Özge Sebzeci (@ozgeseb) for the Fuller Project」5月13日 20時00分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 5月13日 20時00分


“I grew up with Erdoğan’s government, and at first, we were able to gather and protest without teargas,” Şeyma Çetin says. “Now our right to freedom of expression and protest is being met with violence. This government fears everything from everyone. We need a government that allows us to criticize it.”

23-year-old Çetin is among a growing number of women who call themselves Muslim feminists—and who aren’t going to be boxed in by stereotypes. They belong to a new generation of religious women marked by their increasingly vocal opposition to Turkey’s conservative government led by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

Their mothers saw Erdoğan as an ally thanks to his lifting of a highly contentious ban on wearing the headscarf in government offices in 2013. Earlier that year, as the Gezi Park anti-government protests swept across Turkey, he had co-opted them as a constituency, describing them as “our sisters in headscarves.”

But in the decade that followed, many younger religious women like Çetin have shifted away from the President and his ruling Justice and Development Party. They accuse the government of trying to roll back the hard-won rights of Turkish women, including removing legal protections against gender-based violence and severely limiting access to abortion.

At the link in our bio, find out why a third of the women who voted for Erdoğan in the 2018 elections said they may not do so this year. Photographs by Özge Sebzeci (@ozgeseb) for the Fuller Project


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