Fatma Esma Nayman

Fatma Esma Nayman (1899 – 7 December 1967) was a female Turkish politician.

Fatma Esma Nayman
Fatma Esma Nayman
Personal details
Born1899
İstanbul, Ottoman Empire
Died7 December 1967(1967-12-07) (aged 67–68)
İstanbul, Turkey
Spouse(s)Zihni
ParentsMelek and Hasip
OccupationTeacher, translator, MP
Known forOne of the first female MPs of Turkey

Early life

Fatma Esma was born to Hasip and Melek in İstanbul, Ottoman Empire, in 1899. She taught French for seven years in Bezmialem Girls' High School. In 1927, she married an attorney named Zihni who later assumed the surname Nayman, and settled in Adana. The next year, she gave birth to a son Erdem.[1]

Politics

Turkish women achieved voting rights in the local elections on 3 April 1930.[2] Four years later, on 5 December 1934, they gained universal suffrage, earlier than most other countries.[2] Nayman joined the Republican People's Party (CHP), and was elected in the election held on 8 February 1935 from Adana Province, then known as Seyhan Province, as one of the first seventeen female politicians into the 5th Parliament of Turkey.[1] In the parliament, she worked on the projects to establish the reformatory schools for the juvenile delinquents.

Later years

After the term in the parliament, she also served in the municipal council of Adana. In 1946, she served in the state-owned news agency Anadolu Agency as a translator.[1]

Nayman died in 1967.

gollark: Anyway, the school's CS education was not great and/or some people in the class were quite bad at it.
gollark: But having us looking at screens and occasionally typing would be too boring, so they just had us press random buttons on the Arduino handheld games-consoley things we got a while to work on, and type nonsense in.
gollark: <@!236831708354314240> There was one fun time where they wanted some video of "computer science" happening for a school promotional video.
gollark: Okay, so I can't find the actual computer CS science tests.
gollark: We can ship you to GTech™ Oort cloud facilities.

References

  1. Who's who page (in Turkish)
  2. Türkiye'nin 75 yılı, Tempo Yayıncılık, İstanbul, 1998, p. 48, 59, 250.
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