THE
PROSPECTOR
801 WEST KENSINGTON ROAD, MOUNT PROSPECT, ILLINOIS 60056
THE VOICE OF PROSPECT HIGH SCHOOL SINCE 1959
VOLUME 56, ISSUE 7
FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 2017
Turkish students escape fear, injustice BY AYSE ELDES Executive Opinion Editor *Name changed for confidentiality
O
ne day in the spring of 2016, Turkish sophomore Duru Kaya* was out shopping in Tblisi, Georgia, where she had been attending an international school in the country for a year. After not being able to reach her father for four months, Kaya finally received a call from him. Before that call, Kaya even had given thought to whether her dad was dead. “My dad said to me, ‘You have three days. You are coming here. Three days. Get ready.’” Kaya said. “Then he closed the phone. I was so mad; I was shocked at first. Then I started crying.” She didn’t know it at the time, but her family had just lost everything. Her father’s international shipping company had been try, civilians began taken over and shut down by the Turkish calling the police government. Kaya’s life had changed a lot on each other. For Aydin, already, but the worst was yet to come. This school year, Prospect has welcomed life began to change after police raided her two students who fled from the political un- family’s house in March of 2016 in search of secret anti-government files that her father rest caused by government corruption in was allegedly hiding. Turkey (see “CrackAfter being interdown”). Kaya and juCrackdown rogated by the police nior Deniz Aydin* both The Turkish government cracked about his affiliation came to the United down on civilians following a with the Gulen MoveStates in the summer failed coup in July. Since then: ment, Aydin’s dad faced of 2016 after enduring possible imprisonment. hardships, persecupeople have been He left the country the tion and human rights 92,554 detained very next day. violations at the hand “There was a risk of the Turkish governschools, dormitories of living,” Aydin said. ment. and universities have 2,099 “Freedom? Freedom Kaya and Aydin’s been forced to close had left a year earlier. families were both asjudges and Now, living was a risk sociated with the Gu4,070 prosecutors have been in Turkey.” len Movement, a civic Aydin says that unmovement that spoke dismissed til the police raid, she up against the corrupmedia outlets have had been oblivious to tion going on in the 149 been shut down the arrests and the new country. Kaya’s parinformation courtesy of TurkeyPurge.com political agenda in Turents were volunteers key. Around the same for the movement and had previously stated their support for it to time Kaya received the shocking call from her father in April, Aydin had already said the people around them. Aydin’s taught at goodbye to her dad in Turkey. schools that worked with the movement. “That’s when I became afraid in the full Unlike Kaya, Aydin had been in Istanbul throughout the developments. She was at- sense of the word,” Aydin said. tending an all-girls high school in Istanbul, where her mother was also a teacher at the A dad’s disappearance time. Because of mass paranoia in the counKaya had never attended a public school
SAYING GOODBYE: This school year, Prospect welcomed two students who fled from the political conflict in Turkey. An anonymous junior and her family managed to escape five days before the attempted coup. “There was a risk of living. Freedom? Freedom had left a year earlier; now, living was a risk in Turkey,” she said. (photo illustration by Elisabeth Rohde)
“If I had come here straight from Turkey, I would’ve gone through hysteria,” K a y a said. It was the end of her first year in Georin her life. Her family’s affluence allowed her attend private schools even for kinder- gia, and Kaya hadn’t contacted her dad since garten. Before leaving Turkey, Kaya’s mom January 2016. When she asked about him, her mom was evasive about was the head of a women’s his whereabouts. She startinstitution in Trabzon, “My dad said to me, ‘You ed to realize something had Turkey. changed in her home coun“Whatever I wanted, have three days. You’re I would get it. ... I mean coming here. Three days. try. It wasn’t until her cousanything — shoes, purses,” Get ready.’ … Then he in later told her that she Kaya said. “That’s how I was.” closed the phone. I was learned the family’s instiand company were Kaya’s older brother so mad; I was shocked at tutions being taken over. The Turkwas attending a private first. Then I started crying.” ish government dismissed school in New Jersey, and her parents from their jobs she planned on going to anonymous sophomore because they were volunLondon for high school. teers for and outspoken However, in pursuit of supporters of the Gulen Movement. When gaining experience in a poverty-stricken country, Kaya had went to Georgia in 2015 af- Kaya went to visit her mom in Turkey over a short school break in March 2016, she found ter eighth grade, where the rubble of World that her mom had already been emptying the War II still remains. house. Things had changed since she went to When looking back, Georgia’s poor living Georgia. conditions are what Kaya says prepared her for coming to the U.S. with a bad financial SEE GOODBYE, page 2 status.
Speech storms state tournament BY LEO GARKISCH Copy Editor
STATELY SPEAKING: Sophomore Katherine Jordan and senior Ben Marshall perform their Humorous Duet Acting piece that took fourth place in the state. Their finish was one of six top five finishes, leading to a third-place team trophy. (photo by Elisabeth Rohde)
STIGMA Stoppers
Mental Health Awareness Club began last year at Prospect and has worked towards expanding the conversation about mental health. To learn more, turn to ...
pages 6-7
The speech team placed third at the Illinois High School Association state tournament, which was held in Peoria and concluded on Feb. 18. Senior Jimmy McDermott took home first place in Prose Reading, and senior Ben Marshall and sophomore Molly McDermott placed first in Dramatic Duet Acting. The results culminated a season marked by consistent success, constant readjustment, team-wide assumption of leadership and new faces embracing the spotlight on a team looking to follow up on the success of last year’s state championship. Head coach Jonathan Kaminsky believes the team accom-
plished that goal — even if they didn’t achieve the same overall rank. Going into the year, he made it clear to the team that the success of last year’s team would not translate to this season without maintaining a high level of drive and commitment. “It’s a different year. It’s a different process,” Kaminsky said. “They also have different scripts. Some of them have different events, so I think a lot of it was reinforcing to them, reinforcing to us that it’s an incredibly new experience. You start as nothing as an individual competitor, and then you build it all up.” Kaminsky, who assumed the head coaching role after Fine Arts Director Jeremy Morton stepped down from the position last year,
credits the team’s continued success largely to the support team members provide one another. “I see really that peer coaching is one of the most important things, where the senior leaders really take ownership of the team,” Kaminsky said. “We don’t have captains. We don’t have anything formal like that because we’re really dealing with five, six, 10 amazing kids to where they’re all captains in their own right.” While several team members were returning state qualifiers, Kaminsky says one thing that makes this year’s team unique is its depth in terms of fully committed, high-achieving team members in combination with their willingness to push one another. SEE SPEECH, page 3
nerd is the word
ALL I DO IS WIN
Nerd culture has become mainstream, and in the eyes of proud nerd junior Cole Altmayer, this cheapens the meaning of the word. For his full thoughts, flip to ...
With strong senior leadership and consistent wins, the Knights’ boys’ basketball has grabbed another MSL East Title. To find out what fuels their success, turn to...
page 9
page 10