Gökhan
Gültekin

19. February 2020

Hanau

Life of Gökhan Gültekin

Gökhan (born 31 March 1982) was the pillar of his family. He was the younger brother, but as soon as he was old enough, he took care of all the others. He was organised, hard-working and willing to take on responsibility.

He worked as a bricklayer during the day until he set up his own removal company. The 37-year-old wanted to get engaged soon. Gökhan was a very harmonious person. He got on with everyone, he was well-known in Hanau. His friends called him Gogo.

Gökhan was born in Hanau; his family came to Germany from Turkey over 50 years ago. His parents meant the world to him. Since his father was diagnosed with cancer years ago, Gökhan drove him to Frankfurt twice a week for his treatment.

Gökhan was the optimist in the family and was able to give everyone strength even in difficult times.

Forms of remembrance

In addition to the first anniversary of the attack, on which demonstrations and commemorative events took place in Hanau and nationwide (“Hanau is everywhere”), a monthly commemoration was established at the two crime scenes by the relatives of the 19 February Hanau Campaign group. In addition, a memorial with all the pictures of those killed was installed at both crime scenes. Later, the city of Hanau also installed memorial plaques at both crime scenes. On the Day of Civil Courage 2020, a cross was also erected in memory of Vili Viorel Păun, and a year later Vili was awarded the Hessian Medal for Civil Courage by the State of Hesse. Vili Viorel Păun had tried to stop the perpetrator on the night of the crime and paid for it with his life. In Dietzenbach, a memorial stele was also erected for Sedat Gürbüz after a long struggle by the Gürbüz family. A memorial plaque in Erlensee also commemorates Kaloyan Velkov, who lived there. in 2022, the Hamza Kurtovic Award was presented to 14 winners in Hanau in honour of Hamza.

“Remembering means changing”

The Campaign group 19 February Hanau worked together with Forensic Architecture/Forensis on the civil society investigation of the case and, together with the Campaign group in Memory of Oury Jalloh, initiated the exhibition “Three Doors”, which has since been shown at the Kunstverein Frankfurt, HKW Berlin, Depo Istanbul and other venues. The theatre play “And now Hanau”, which was created in collaboration with theatre maker Tuğsal Moğul, also serves to commemorate those affected by the attack. 2024 also saw the first “Say their names Cup”, a charity match between the U19 teams of Eintracht Frankfurt and FC. St. Pauli.

What happened

This memorial chronicle addresses right-wing, racist and anti-Semitic violence, including specific incidents, backgrounds and consequences. The content may contain incriminating descriptions of violence, discrimination and suffering.

The following fold-out section “Description of the offence” describes specific acts of violence. We would therefore like to point out to those affected and readers that dealing with this content can have a re-traumatising effect. Before accessing the content, please check whether you feel mentally and emotionally able to deal with such topics and, if necessary, do not do so alone.

In the terrorist attack in Hanau on 19 February 2020, nine people were murdered in two locations for racist motives. Ferhat Unvar, Hamza Kurtović, Said Nesar Hashemi, Vili Viorel Păun, Mercedes Kierpacz, Kaloyan Velkov, Fatih Saraçoğlu, Sedat Gürbüz and Gökhan Gültekin.

At the first crime scene in the city centre on Heumarkt, the perpetrator murdered Kaloyan Velkov in the La Votre bar, where Kaloyan worked as a bartender. He then shot Fatih Saraçoğlu on the street, who had brought a friend there. Sedat Gürbüz was murdered in his bar Midnight.

Vili Viorel Păun drove into the street looking for a parking space and the perpetrator fired several shots at his car. Vili chased after the perpetrator, first preventing him from parking and then following him to Kesselstadt. On the way, he tried to call 110 several times in vain. He was shot dead in his car in the car park at Kurt-Schumacher-Platz in Kesselstadt.

The perpetrator then murdered Mercedes Kierpacz, Gökhan Gültekin and Ferhat Unvar in the 24/7 kiosk. In the neighbouring Arena Bar, he shot Said Nesar Hashemi and Hamza Kurtović. There were numerous survivors at the crime scenes, some of whom were explicitly threatened or survived seriously injured.

The attack lasted just over 5 minutes in total. The perpetrator was known to the police and the public prosecutor and had a legal firearms licence despite self-disclosure. Days earlier, he had used graffiti to draw attention to his website, where his racist manifesto could be viewed. He later murdered his mother before killing himself. His father, who is known to have shared his son’s extreme right and racist worldview, was the only survivor in the house. He claimed not to have seen or heard anything. The police already knew the address of the perpetrator shortly after the attack, but they did not enter the house until four and a half hours later.