Adnan Oktar, a Creationist preacher in Turkey, has been sentenced to 8,658 years in prison for a variety of crimes including running a criminal organization, sexual abuse, torture, and abduction. It comes after he was previously sentenced to over 1,075 years in prison, only to have that verdict overturned by an appellate court. The more recent jaw-dropping sentence came in a retrial.
If his name isn’t familiar to you, though, it’s worth going back in time a bit.
More than a decade ago, in 2006, the journal Science published this chart (attached to post) showing the acceptance of evolution in more than 34 countries:
The United States was waaaaaaay near the bottom of that list, with a paltry 40% of people who accepted that evolution is true. That alone sparked plenty of headlines, but also interesting was how Turkey managed to rank even lower than the U.S. when it came to science literacy.
That was largely due to Oktar, who wrote the “textbook” The Atlas of Creation (under the pen name “Harun Yahya&rdquo. He had been very effective in convincing people to ditch evolution. In 2017, Turkey removed evolution from the nation’s science classes entirely.
Beyond that, however, Oktar was also running a cult, surrounding himself with an army of virtually identical women and calling himself a feminist, a move that angered Islamic traditionalists. He said he had over 1,000 girlfriends because there was an “overflowing of love in my heart for women”… and also because he was “extraordinarily potent.”
Turkish Creationist Adnan Oktar sentenced to 8,658 years in prison | Adnan Oktar was sentenced after his conviction for multiple serious crimes
Adnan Oktar was sentenced after his conviction for multiple serious crimes (screenshot via YouTube)
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Adnan Oktar, a Creationist preacher in Turkey, has been sentenced to 8,658 years in prison for a variety of crimes including running a criminal organization, sexual abuse, torture, and abduction. It comes after he was previously sentenced to over 1,075 years in prison, only to have that verdict overturned by an appellate court. The more recent jaw-dropping sentence came in a retrial.
If his name isn’t familiar to you, though, it’s worth going back in time a bit.
More than a decade ago, in 2006, the journal Science published this chart showing the acceptance of evolution in more than 34 countries:
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The United States was waaaaaaay near the bottom of that list, with a paltry 40% of people who accepted that evolution is true. That alone sparked plenty of headlines, but also interesting was how Turkey managed to rank even lower than the U.S. when it came to science literacy.
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That was largely due to Oktar, who wrote the “textbook” The Atlas of Creation (under the pen name “Harun Yahya&rdquo. He had been very effective in convincing people to ditch evolution. In 2017, Turkey removed evolution from the nation’s science classes entirely.
Beyond that, however, Oktar was also running a cult, surrounding himself with an army of virtually identical women and calling himself a feminist, a move that angered Islamic traditionalists. He said he had over 1,000 girlfriends because there was an “overflowing of love in my heart for women”… and also because he was “extraordinarily potent.”
YouTube video
Over the years, he got into trouble with religious authorities for, among other things, selling alcohol and mixing belly dancers and religion on his TV show (the dancers were allegedly pressured against their will to appear).
In 2018, according to Turkish news sources, Oktar was finally arrested on charges ranging from “sexual abuse to military espionage.” And that was just the beginning:
According to the detention warrant, Oktar and his followers are accused of forming a criminal organization, sexual abuse of children, sexual assault, child kidnapping, sexual harassment, blackmailing, false imprisonment, political and military espionage, fraud by exploiting religious feelings, money laundering, violation of privacy, forgery of official documents, opposition to anti-terror law, coercion, use of violence, slander, alienating citizens from mandatory military service, insulting, false incrimination, perjury, aggravated fraud, smuggling, tax evasion, bribery, torture, illegal recording of personal data, violating the law on the protection of family and women, and violating a citizen’s rights to get education and participate in politics.
For a man who had run-ins with President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan before, it was just a matter of time before he was convicted.
And now we know how that story ends: