reporter: the cemetery in adiyaman gets bigger every day. more than 7,000 new graves have been added since the earthquakes in february. many are temporary, without headstones. memories, salvaged from the rubble. a bridal veil, a soccer jersey. sevda alacan comes here almost every day. she lost a large part of her family in the quakes. >> this is my niece's grave. she was nine months old. here are my father and my mother, here is one of my brothers, with his children and his wife. sometimes i wish i had died too. it's hard to go on living like this. reporter: adiyaman is considered a stronghold of president recep tayyip erdogan's party. but the quakes may have shaken confidence in the longtime turkish leader and his islamic-rooted akp. recently, erdogan came to adiyaman and promised a speedy reconstruction. but in the tent camps where many now have to live, skepticism is rife. >> after other earthquakes, they didn't rebuild everything either. so, i don't think they will do anything. they will just forget about us. >> they say they'll rebuild