Latife Bekir

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Portrait of Latife Bekir Çeyrekbaşı
Caricature of Latife Bekir (page 1 crop)

Latife Bekir Çeyrekbaşı (1901-1952) (or with the surname given to her by Atatürk, Latife Işıkdoğdu) was a Turkish educator, politician, suffragist and women's rights activist.

Latife Bekir, one of the leading figures of the feminist movement in Turkey in the first half of the 20th century, was a member of the founding and management team of Women's People Party, founded in 1923, and its successor Türk Kadınlar Birliği. She entered the Grand National Assembly of Turkey as an İzmir deputy from the Republican People's Party in the 1946 general elections. Her grandfather was one of the Ottoman Ministers of Public Education Abdullatif Suphi Pasha, and her uncle Hamdullah Suphi Tanrıöver was one of the Ministers of National Education during the republic period. Her granddaughter Sema Çeyrekbaşıoğlu is an actress.

Latife Bekir was born in 1901 in Istanbul, the capital of the Ottoman Empire. Her father, a member of the Kocamemi family, Manager of the Forest and Mines, Yusuf Kamil Bey was son of one of the old Ministers of Public Education, Abdullah Suphi Pasha (1818-1886). Her mother is Nesime Hanım who was actively involved in Women's Associations in Thessaloniki and Istanbul during the Second Constitutional Era.

Latife was raised at home taking classical Ottoman-Turkish literature but also Arabic and Persian literature and science and language courses. She learned French from her nanny and then learned Greek.

Career

Private life and death

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