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#ankara mosques
cileklipalet · 4 months
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melike hatun camii | ankara
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bercesteruh · 2 months
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Ahi Şerafettin camii
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bujene · 1 year
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melîke hâtun câmii
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buminval · 25 days
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Tan yeri ağarmaya başlayınca…
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Beştepe serisi 2
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saharathorn · 9 months
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Idk why you’re going to go to turkey and then complain abt people going to clubs etc. Turkey is kinda like the Muslim equivalent of France or the UK. It has a Muslim history and most people there consider themselves Muslims, but in actuality…
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paiyx7 · 2 years
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Istanbul is always a good choice. . . . . . . . #istanbul #turkey #bridge #bosphorus #bosphorusbridge #bluemosque #mosque #history #türkiye #ankara #izmir #vistturkey #travel (at Eminönü / Galataköprüsü) https://www.instagram.com/p/CivixMYvFRJ/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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randafalah · 2 years
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🕌🧡
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dolatshah · 2 years
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مسجد سبز Yeşil cami #yeşilcami #yesilcami #keçiören #ankara #turkey🇹🇷 #turist #cami #türk #turkiye #turk #turist #mohammaddolatshah #photographer #turista #iran #mosque #آنکارا #آنکارا_گردی #ترکیه #مسجد #مسجدکجاتپه ##محمددولتشاه #عکاس #معماری #architectphoto #architectures #nightphotography #mimari #gelenekseltıp #yuvarlak# (at Yeşil Camii) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cf1vPeVtT4y/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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masirat · 2 months
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BEYONDTRAVEL - PRO+
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Explore Turkey's Wonders with Beyond Travel
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Discover the historic city of Bursa tour, known for its stunning architecture, rich history, and natural beauty. Explore ancient landmarks, visit the famous Green Mosque and Green Tomb, and indulge in the city's renowned cuisine with Beyond Travel's Bursa tours.
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heretic-child · 1 year
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The Turkish Republic, founded in 1923, was a one-party state during the interwar period. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk (1881-1938) of the Republican People's Party (CHP) was omnipotent. Turkey’s state ideology was Kemalism. According to Dutch-Kurdish historian and genocide researcher Uğur Ümit Üngör, this was a combination of "republicanism, secularism, statism, populism, revolutionism and nationalism".
The Turkish government believed in one people, one language, one religion: their new Turkey was ethnically Turkish, linguistically Turkish, and the faith was Sunni Islam. This ideology was spread from the centre to the periphery. Everywhere CHP party buildings were erected, the new message was proclaimed.
In Kurdish areas of eastern Turkey, Turkish centralisation met with Kurdish resistance. Turkey crushed these uprisings and strengthened the power of its central authority in these areas, which used to be only nominally under Ottoman rule. One of the most problematic areas was Dersim, located around 400 km east of the capital Ankara. In this mountainous, difficult-to-access area, central government had only nominal authority. The actual rulers were the various Kurdish tribes, who regularly clashed with each other.
The Kurds in Dersim were also a triple minority. They were Kurdish, but spoke a different language to many Kurds: Zaza. In addition, they were Alevis.
According to Üngör, Kurds from Dersim can in a way be compared with the Yazidis, who were victims of a genocide by ISIS in 2014. "Yazidis also formed their own minority group, with their own ethnic and religious identity. And they were also killed for that," he said.
Dutch anthropologist Martin van Bruinessen, who has studied Turkish, Kurdish and Zaza cultures, said that the Turkish government compared the Kurds in Dersim with the Native Americans in the "Wild West".
"The Turkish rulers considered Dersim a desolate area where 'civilisation' was not yet ruling. This area had to be civilised. The Kurds in Dersim were barbarians in the eyes of the Turkish rulers. They were dehumanised and it was easy to kill them en masse in 1937-1938," he said.
"Children from Dersim who survived the slaughter were raised as Turks and as Sunni and in the Turkish language, with the aim of extinguishing their former identity."
In this context, Üngör speaks of three hammer blows that the Dersim Kurds had to deal with:
"The first blow was when Turkey decided in 1937-1938 to destroy the pilgrimage sites and to kill the carriers of its own Dersim culture. The second blow came when children from Dersim were raised Turkish and Sunni, and Dersim itself was filled with Sunni mosques. The third blow was the massive exodus of Dersim Kurds from Dersim, who immigrated to Istanbul, Izmir and abroad. New generations no longer learned Zaza. This language is now threatened with extinction. This also had to do with the nationalist education in Turkey after the 1980 coup. At school Zaza was banned."
The Dersim Massacre - Then and Now
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cileklipalet · 7 months
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bercesteruh · 3 months
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seyr eyledim eşkâl-i hayâtı
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nevzatboyraz44 · 7 months
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The good news keeps on coming! 5 mosques in Anatolia with wooden ceilings and columns are now on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
These mosques with wooden ceilings supported by wooden poles form a unique building group in Anatolian-Turkish architecture, where cut stone is generally preferred in architectural designs. How about adding these mosques to your new route?
📍Ankara Arslanhane Mosque, Ankara
📍Afyon Great Mosque, Afyonkarahisar
📍Kastamonu Mahmut Bey Mosque, Kastamonu
📍Konya Eşrefoğlu Mosque, Konya
📍Sivrihisar Great Mosque, Eskişehirq0
#GoTürkiye #UNESCO #WorldHeritage #History #Faith
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buminval · 28 days
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🫧🤍
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Beştepe serisi 5
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