Türkan Saylan – The Woman that Changed the medical field
Dr. Türkan Saylan was a doctor, teacher and activist born on 13 December 1935, Istanbul.
While studying medicine at the University of Istanbul, she suffered from spinal tuberculosis.
She graduated from the University of Istanbul School of Medicine in 1963, still wearing the steel corset for her spine.
She became one of the first female dermatologists in Turkey, and began working at the University of Istanbul School of Medicine in 1968. She was made Associate Professor in 1972 and Professor in 1977. She began working with leprosy in 1976, and founded the Turkish Leprosy Relief Association. She worked in both medical research and humanitarian projects in leprosy, and worked as a consultant in leprosy for WHO. She founded the Istanbul Leprosy Hospital in 1981, and continued to work there voluntarily as the director until she retired in 2002. Although she continued to work on leprosy throughout her career, she began in 1989 to concentrate her efforts primarily on advocating for secularism and women’s rights in Turkey. It is for this work that she is best remembered. In 1989, with Aysel Ekşi, she cofounded the Association for the Support of Contemporary Living (Çağdaş Yaşamı Destekleme Derneği, or ÇYDD), a non-profit NGO devoted to promoting women’s rights, education, and the modernisation principles of Kemal Ataturk; its projects include building schools, donating resources such as books and musical instruments, and awarding scholarships to male and female students at all educational levels. Saylan remained the chairperson and public face of the society until her death.
In Istanbul in 1997, she organised the 4th International Leprosy Meeting its theme was ‘Where are we in the fight against leprosy while approaching 2000?’.
Her bibliography includes well over 400 articles and books, including studies and research reports published in medical journals, articles on political and social topics published in newspapers, a textbook on dermatovenereology, and two memoirs.
She remained politically active until her final days. Under the governance of the Islamic Justice and Development Party, which was investigating an alleged planned coup, she was placed on a watch list due to her secularist principles and involvement with ÇYDD, and her home was raided by police only weeks before her death. She condemned the police’s actions and publicly stated her opposition to a coup, saying ‘We want democracy and contemporary values to rule. Therefore, we are ready to fight for this cause as long as it takes.’
After a 19-year fight with breast cancer, she passed away in 2009, survived by two sons, Cinar Orge, a physician, and Caglayan Orge, a graphic designer, and two grandchildren.
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