#56: Gezi

Published: June 4, 2013, 8:35 p.m.

When a government is doing wrong by its citizens, it never knows in advance the moment that will prove to be the last straw.\n\nSometimes, it's a new tax on stamps on the colonies in North America.\xa0\n\nSometimes, it's the harrassment of a fruit vendor on a Tunisian street.\xa0\n\nAnd sometimes it's the arrival of bulldozers to rip out hundred-year-old trees in a Turkish park, and build yet another shopping mall in its place.\xa0\n\nYou never know the last straw in advance. But once it's happened, there's no going back.\xa0\n\nOn today's show, we land in the streets of Istanbul, Turkey, scene of a historic uprising\u2014a people's revolt that began in Gezi Park and has engulfed the nation.\xa0\n\nOur first guest, Yigit Aksakoglu, speaks to us live from Gezi Park and tells us how it felt to be a part of the resistance.

Second, Defne Suman, whose blog post\xa0What is Happening in Istanbul?\xa0brought the protests to a worldwide audience, talks about the affect the protests are having in Turkey and their affect on participatory democracy there.

Third, we're joined by an anonymous activist who was one of the first hundred people on the ground in Gezi Park, before the bulldozers came. She describes what it felt like to be a part of the protests in those first few days and what the protestors want to have change.

Finally we talk to Omer Madra,\xa0a lifelong activist and radio host, who brings us his\xa0ears and his eyes, but more importantly, his insight: the inside story of the years-long leadup that made this moment so explosive.\xa0\n\nThe arc of a fiery Turkish\xa0scimitar\xa0is short, and it bends towards justice\u2014right here, in a dispatch from the heart of the revolution.