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Uncancelling Hakan Şükür

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Hakan Şükür is Turkey’s greatest ever footballer, highest goalscorer, and still the man who holds the record for scoring the fastest goal in a World Cup after just 11 seconds in 2002. But for the last nine years, he’s been living in self-imposed exile in the US, moonlighting as an Uber driver, and having his legacy wiped from the records of Turkish football history. Turkey’s ruling AKP party has branded him a “terrorist”, and even saying his name on TV can get you the sack, as one commentator found out during the Qatar World Cup.

This is the story of a footballing hero who has suffered a humbling fall caused by politics, upheaval and a failed coup in Turkey. Şükür, whose father was born in Bosnia and his mother in North Macedonia, helped Turkey finish third in the 2002 World Cup and led his Galatasaray team to a UEFA Cup triumph in 2000 – the first European trophy won by a Turkish domestic side and the high watermark of Turkish football this century. Known as the “Bull of the Bosphorus” for his goal-scoring instincts, Şükür combined his football career with membership of Turkey’s Hizmet movement, a religious organisation led by Islamic scholar, Fethullah Gulen, which has been dubbed as part of Turkey’s “deep state”. The movement recruited lawyers, civil servants, politicians and footballers – and were active in the Galatasaray changing room in the 2000s, says author and anthropologist John McManus.

During the 90s and 2000s, Şükür is a Turkish superstar, and Gulen is allied with Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the leader of the conservative AKP party, who became prime minister in 2003 and the country’s current president. After retiring from football in 2007, Şükür became a member of parliament for Erdogan’s party while retaining his Gulen affiliations, but claims he was always a reluctant politician. In 2013, Gulen and Erdogan have a spectacular fall-out and Şükür, a national hero, is caught in the middle of an internecine struggle for power and influence in Turkey. In 2015, he flees to the US after being prosecuted over a tweet which “insults the president”. Şükür would never return to his homeland.

The episode charts the spectacular cancellation of a footballing icon whose political allegiances put him on the wrong side of an increasingly authoritarian government. In telling his story, Simon and Mehreen attempt to uncancel Hakan Şükür.

Timestamps:

00:00 - Introduction to the episode on Hakan Şükür

01:23 - Simon's first impression of watching Şükür play for Turkey

02:00 - Şükür's peak at the 2002 World Cup

04:25 - Şükür's background and early career

06:25 - The "Welcome to Hell" match between Galatasaray and Manchester United

11:23 - Şükür's performance at the 2002 World Cup, including scoring the fastest ever World Cup goal

14:04 - Explanation of the Gulen movement and Şükür's involvement

23:54 - How Şükür likely got recruited into the Gulen movement

27:52 - Şükür's career after retirement and move into politics

31:04 - Breakdown of Şükür's relationship with Erdogan starting in 2013

34:15 - The failed 2016 coup attempt and Şükür being branded a terrorist

38:20 - Şükür living in exile in the US and working jobs like an Uber driver

41:40 - Şükür continues to criticise Erdogan from exile despite threats

44:36 - Discussion on whether Şükür can ever return to Turkey

Follow @heroesandhumans everywhere.

Visit our website for news & updates heroesandhumans.com

  continue reading

37 episódios

Artwork
iconCompartilhar
 
Manage episode 416822169 series 3572842
Conteúdo fornecido por Immaterial. Todo o conteúdo do podcast, incluindo episódios, gráficos e descrições de podcast, é carregado e fornecido diretamente por Immaterial ou por seu parceiro de plataforma de podcast. Se você acredita que alguém está usando seu trabalho protegido por direitos autorais sem sua permissão, siga o processo descrito aqui https://pt.player.fm/legal.

Hakan Şükür is Turkey’s greatest ever footballer, highest goalscorer, and still the man who holds the record for scoring the fastest goal in a World Cup after just 11 seconds in 2002. But for the last nine years, he’s been living in self-imposed exile in the US, moonlighting as an Uber driver, and having his legacy wiped from the records of Turkish football history. Turkey’s ruling AKP party has branded him a “terrorist”, and even saying his name on TV can get you the sack, as one commentator found out during the Qatar World Cup.

This is the story of a footballing hero who has suffered a humbling fall caused by politics, upheaval and a failed coup in Turkey. Şükür, whose father was born in Bosnia and his mother in North Macedonia, helped Turkey finish third in the 2002 World Cup and led his Galatasaray team to a UEFA Cup triumph in 2000 – the first European trophy won by a Turkish domestic side and the high watermark of Turkish football this century. Known as the “Bull of the Bosphorus” for his goal-scoring instincts, Şükür combined his football career with membership of Turkey’s Hizmet movement, a religious organisation led by Islamic scholar, Fethullah Gulen, which has been dubbed as part of Turkey’s “deep state”. The movement recruited lawyers, civil servants, politicians and footballers – and were active in the Galatasaray changing room in the 2000s, says author and anthropologist John McManus.

During the 90s and 2000s, Şükür is a Turkish superstar, and Gulen is allied with Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the leader of the conservative AKP party, who became prime minister in 2003 and the country’s current president. After retiring from football in 2007, Şükür became a member of parliament for Erdogan’s party while retaining his Gulen affiliations, but claims he was always a reluctant politician. In 2013, Gulen and Erdogan have a spectacular fall-out and Şükür, a national hero, is caught in the middle of an internecine struggle for power and influence in Turkey. In 2015, he flees to the US after being prosecuted over a tweet which “insults the president”. Şükür would never return to his homeland.

The episode charts the spectacular cancellation of a footballing icon whose political allegiances put him on the wrong side of an increasingly authoritarian government. In telling his story, Simon and Mehreen attempt to uncancel Hakan Şükür.

Timestamps:

00:00 - Introduction to the episode on Hakan Şükür

01:23 - Simon's first impression of watching Şükür play for Turkey

02:00 - Şükür's peak at the 2002 World Cup

04:25 - Şükür's background and early career

06:25 - The "Welcome to Hell" match between Galatasaray and Manchester United

11:23 - Şükür's performance at the 2002 World Cup, including scoring the fastest ever World Cup goal

14:04 - Explanation of the Gulen movement and Şükür's involvement

23:54 - How Şükür likely got recruited into the Gulen movement

27:52 - Şükür's career after retirement and move into politics

31:04 - Breakdown of Şükür's relationship with Erdogan starting in 2013

34:15 - The failed 2016 coup attempt and Şükür being branded a terrorist

38:20 - Şükür living in exile in the US and working jobs like an Uber driver

41:40 - Şükür continues to criticise Erdogan from exile despite threats

44:36 - Discussion on whether Şükür can ever return to Turkey

Follow @heroesandhumans everywhere.

Visit our website for news & updates heroesandhumans.com

  continue reading

37 episódios

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