Edip Polat

Edip Polat is a Kurdish writer and biologist from southeastern Turkey. He is the author of five books about Kurdish issues, and has been jailed three times for advocating for Kurdish rights. In 1994, at the time he won the PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award, he was serving an 18-month sentence on charges of producing “separatist propaganda” in his book We Made Each Dawn a Newroz (Newroz being the Kurdish New Year). That book, a work of nonfiction based on his experiences in a military prison between 1982 and 1985, chronicles the grim treatment meted out to inmates by their jailers. He was released in 1995, but was arrested again in 1998 and sentenced to 10 months in prison for an article published in 1993 criticizing the Turkish penal code.

CASE HISTORY

He immediately became a student activist at Diyarbakir University, where he organized rallies promoting human rights. At the completion of his studies, Polat assumed a post as a biology teacher at the Gumushane Teacher Training College. Following the publication of two memoirs about his time spent in prison, he was arrested in 1990, held for six weeks, and acquitted. He was arrested again in 1992 and convicted of producing “separatist propaganda” after authorities deemed that the second edition of We Made Each Dawn a Newroz promoted Kurdish separatism.

Polat was arrested again in April 1998 for an article he published in the Özgür Gündem newspaper in 1993. He was given a 10 month sentence and released on remission on August 3, 1998, under regulations that allow conditional release of Penal Code prisoners after serving 40 percent of their sentences.