“Can a Serial Killer Become a Doctor?”

Doctor Hannibal Lecter is a fictional character in the book series by Thomas Harris, an intelligent psychiatrist and cannibal serial killer (portrayed on screen by Brian Cox and Anthony Hopkins). In real life, it is possible to come across non-fictional news about doctors who can be like one of us, who are prone to violence and brutality because they cannot control their urge to kill (the case of British Dr. H. Shipman, etc.). Can a "serial killer" who is prone to kill people become a doctor? Let alone being a doctor, can he be a person to be empathized with and given human value?

What about the other person to whom we entrust our lives? How will we evaluate in our minds people in professional groups who do not have their share of humanity? What do we say about the murderer who tried to rape the last passenger in his minibus, stabbed her and then burned her? How do we discuss the man who plays the role of the father, who stands by his son to protect his son who murdered an innocent and who is a party to the atrocity?

Is it possible to find answers to these questions? Can someone with a slightly human side find alternative answers to these questions? Can the criminal think in a focused manner?

In order not to remain a spectator to the brutality, and to prevent new grievances for Özgecan and other innocents, authorized persons must fulfill their responsibilities and make decisions by putting themselves in the place of the victims and their relatives in their evaluations. It is required.

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