Turkish-Canadian imam prayed, read to keep mind busy while in prison
Davud Hanci would tell inmates to treat their time as valuable when he was working as a chaplain in Alberta prisons and jails.
The imam tried to follow his own advice during the nearly three years he spent confined alone in a Turkish prison cell on allegations that he helped orchestrate an attempted military coup.
The Turkish-Canadian dual citizen prayed, read and exercised to keep his mind busy.
“I believe that really helped me to survive physically and psychologically,” Hanci, 44, said in an interview from Toronto, where he lives with his wife, Rumeysa, and sons Vedat, 13, and Cemil, 12.