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  • Ankara: The Names Erdogan Identified As Central To Turkey's Culture

    THE NAMES ERDOGAN IDENTIFIED AS CENTRAL TO TURKEY'S CULTURE

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Friday, October 9, 2009

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's speech on Oct. 3 at his party's
    convention made headlines the next day as he paid homage to a group
    of people who contributed to Turkey in one way or other.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's speech on Oct. 3 at his party's
    convention made headlines the next day as he paid homage to a group
    of people who contributed to Turkey in one way or other.

    His speech was considered to be groundbreaking because some of the
    names he mentioned were, at one stage, considered to be enemies of
    the state while others died in exile.

    "If you try to remove Ahmet Yesevi, Hacı BektaÅ~_, Pir Sultan
    and Hacı Bayram Veli from our culture, the country will become an
    orphan," Erdogan said. "Without Yunus Emre, Turkey will be without a
    voice. Without Mevlana, it would be without a soul. Without listening
    to Sabahat Akkiraz, Turkey will be without traditional music. If
    Turkey ignores Tatyos Efendi, it will lose half its songs.

    "Turkey missed Cem Karaca as much as he missed this country. Songs that
    do not pay respect to Ahmet Kaya, who wrote, 'Farewell, My Two Eyes,'
    are not complete songs. Just as one cannot imagine a Turkey without
    Mehmet Akif [Ersoy, the poet who wrote the national anthem], a country
    without Nâzım Hikmet is an incomplete Turkey," he said in his speech.

    "You may or may not accept their ideas, you may like them or not, but
    without Ahmed-i Hani or Said Nursi of Bitlis, Turkey's spirituality
    is deficient," he said. "We are Turkey with all its rivers, flowers,
    smells, mountains and stones," he said.

    His list immediately triggered a debate as well. For some, the list
    endorsed the right names, but others found it too narrow, arguing
    that it should have included more names.

    The following personalities were mentioned by Erdogan in his speech:

    Ahmet Yesevi

    Yesevi was born in 1093 in Kazakhstan. He was a Sufi poet as well
    as slamic sect. Although he never came to Anatolia, he became a
    beloved figure there as well. Together with other Anatolian figures
    like Mevlana Jelaleddin Rumi, Yunus Emre and Hacı BektaÅ~_ Veli,
    he had an influence on Alevi communities. He provided a philosophical
    perspective on Islam to Turkish communities that had recently accepted
    the religion. Although well versed in Arabic and Farsi, Yesevi also
    wrote in Turkish.

    Tatyos Efendi

    Tatyos Efendi was an Armenian with 47 songs including eight preludes,
    six saz semahs (special compositions for the saz, an Anatolian
    stringed instrument) and one major composition in Turkish classical
    music. Born in 1858 in Istanbul's Ortaköy district, he lived his
    last years in poverty and died on March 16, 1913. Ahmed Rasim Bey,
    another composer, said one of his own pieces was the consequence of
    Tatyos Efendi's life. Tatyos Efendi's parents wanted him to become
    an artisan but he chose music instead.

    Nazım Hikmet

    Nazım Hikmet was prosecuted several times because of his poems and
    articles. In 1938, he was sentenced to prison for 28 years and four
    months for attempting to provoke an army rebellion. A communist, he
    was imprisoned for more than 12 years before being released in 1950
    as the result of an amnesty. Fearing a new sentence, he escaped to
    the Soviet Union when he was 48 years old. Hikmet was then stripped
    of his Turkish citizenship in July 25, 1951. He was buried in Moscow
    after his death in 1963. On January 10, 2009, his citizenship was
    restored. He is one of Turkey's most internationally recognized poets
    even though his work was forbidden in Turkey for many years.

    Said Nursi

    Originally from Bitlis in southeastern Anatolia, Said Nursi was the
    founder of the Islamic Nur movement and was arrested in 1934 in the
    central Anatolian city of EskiÅ~_ehir on the charge of "launching
    a secret group aiming to change the system of the state." He was
    sentenced to 11 months in prison and then to internal exile in
    the province of Kastamonu. In 1948, he was sentenced to 20 m with
    illegal political aims. He died in the southeastern Anatolian city
    of Å~^anlıurfa in 1960 and was buried in Halil-ur Rahman Dergah. His
    remains, however, were transferred to an unknown place by the leaders
    of the 1960 military coup.

    Hacı BektaÅ~_ Veli

    Hacı BektaÅ~_ Veli was born in NiÅ~_abÃ"r in Khorasan (present-day
    Iran) in 1281. He came to Anatolia after finishing his education. In
    Anatolia, he led the locals to the "right way" by providing them
    mystical and philosophical instruction, later becoming popular among
    them. He and his students made contributions to Ahilik, a group
    composed of artisans who supported each other and shared religious
    and moral teachings. Beloved by Ottoman sultans, Hacı BektaÅ~_ Veli
    died in 1338. His followers became the BektaÅ~_is, a Sufi order still
    widespread throughout Anatolia today.

    Pir Sultan Abdal

    Pir Sultan Abdal was a legendary folk poet and Alevi, a liberal sect
    of Islam. He lived in the 16th century and received education in an
    Alevi dervish house. He reflected the social, cultural and religious
    life of the people. He was a humanist, and wrote about love, peace,
    death and God. Not influenced by Divan literature, an elitist style
    favored by the palace and composed of Turkish, Arabic and Persian,
    he went beyond the formulaic norms of Sufi poetry culture and wrote
    in a manner that could be appreciated by ordinary people. He was
    executed by the Ottoman state following an insurrection in the 1500s.

    Hacı Bayram Veli

    One of the main Sufi teachers in Anatolia, Hacı Bayram Veli lived in
    the 15th century and greatly contributed to the unification of Turks
    throughout Anatolia with his teachings. A folk poet born in the small
    village of Solfasol near present-day Ankara, he became a scholar of
    Islam. His life changed after he received instruction in Sufism from
    Somuncu Baba in the city of Kayseri. Two major religious orders emerged
    out of his teachings, the Bayramilik Å~^emsiye and the Melamiye.

    Yunus Emre

    Yunus Emre was a Turkish poet and Sufi mystic. He has exercis e
    on Turkish literature from his own day until the present. Like
    the Oghuz-language "Book of Dede Korkut," an older and anonymously
    written Central Asian epic, Turkish folklore inspired Yunus Emre in
    his occasional use of "tekerlemeler" as poetic devices handed down
    orally to him and his contemporaries. This strictly oral tradition
    continued for a long while. "Divan," a large collection of his
    poems, was published after his death but because experts believed
    the collection also featured other poets' works, its contents were
    later reduced to 357 poems.

    Mevlana

    Mevlana, known to the English-speaking world as Rumi, was a
    13th-century Persian poet, jurist, theologian and mystic. He was born
    in 1207 in present-day Afghanistan and came to Konya in 1228. Although
    Rumi's works were written in Persian, Rumi's importance is considered
    to transcend national and ethnic borders. His poems have been widely
    translated into many of the world's languages and transposed into
    various formats. He was buried at his dervish convent in Konya after
    his death in 1273, a site that is now a museum.

    Ahmed Khani

    Ahmedi Khani was a 17th century poet and philosopher who represented
    Kurdish literature. He was born amongst the Khani tribe in Hakkari
    province in present-day Turkey. Hani studied religion and wrote his
    works in Kurdish languages although he was also fluent in Turkish,
    Arabic and Persian. The prominent poet started writing when he
    was 14 years old and later opened a school in the eastern town of
    Dogubeyazıt. He worked as a teacher for a long time. His most
    important work is the Kurdish classic love story, "Mem and Zin"
    (Mem Ã" Zîn) (1692), a work widely considered to be the épopée of
    Kurdish literature.

    Mehmet Akif Ersoy

    Mehmet Akif Ersoy has been called Turkey's national poet because
    he wrote the country's national anthem, yet he was also a prominent
    author and academic. He worked as the editorial writer for Sırat-i
    Mustakimmagazine after the declaration of the second constitutional
    monarchy. He was a e Turkish War of Independence and was later
    awarded the Medal of Independence. He was labeled as the "unbeliever
    veterinarian" because of his personal opinions. In the last years of
    his life, he lived in Egypt and translated the Holy Koran into Turkish.

    Ahmet Kaya

    Ahmet Kaya was a Kurdish poet, singer, and a leading artist in
    Turkey. His works were labeled as "protest music" or "revolutionary
    arabesque." During his career, he recorded approximately 20 albums. He
    was sent into prison for printing illegal banners when he was 16
    years old. He was sentenced to three years and nine months in prison
    on charges of aiding and abetting the outlawed Kurdistan Workers
    Party, or PKK, after Turkish dailies released a picture taken during
    a concert in Berlin in 1993. He was forced to leave the country and
    later passed away in Paris in 2000.

    Cem Karaca

    Cem Karaca was a prominent Turkish rock musician and one of the most
    important figures in the Anatolian rock movement. The son of an
    Armenian mother and an Azeri father, Karaca recorded the leftist
    revolutionary album, "May 1," in 1977. Karaca was abroad when
    the military coup of Sept. 12, 1980 occurred. Because of a May Day
    statement he had given in Germany, the coup leaders issued a warrant
    for his arrest. After some time, the government stripped Karaca of his
    Turkish citizenship, but did not rescind the arrest warrant. Several
    years later, then-Prime Minister Turgut Ozal issued an amnesty for
    Karaca. Shortly afterward, he returned to Turkey. He died in 2004.
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