Heydar Babaya Salam
Heydar Babaya Salam (Azerbaijani: حیدربابایه سلام) is an Azerbaijani poetical work by Mohammad Hossein Shahriar, a famous Iranian Azerbaijani poet. Published in 1954 in Tabriz,[1] it is about Shahriar's childhood and his memories of his village Khoshgenab near Tabriz. Heydar Baba is the name of a mountain overlooking the village.
In Heydar Babaya Salam Shahriar narrates a nostalgia from his childhood in a village in Iranian Azerbaijan.
In describing Heydar Baba, Shahryar uses the Azeri Turkish word regime toward Azerbaijanis. Here, in every part of Azerbaijan, a Heydar Baba rises up and becomes a gigantic wall that supports and protects Azerbaijan against its foes.[2]
Sources
- Brenda Shaffer. Borders and Brethren. Iran and the Challenge of Azerbaijani Identity. — MIT Press, 2002. — P. 58. — ISBN 9780262692779
- Hadi Sultan-Qurraie. Modern Azeri Literature. Identity, Gender and Politics in the Poetry of Moj́uz. — Indiana University Ottoman and Modern Turkish Studies Publications, 2003. — P. 221. — ISBN 9781878318183
Notes
- English and Turkish Translation of Heydar Babaya Salam (University of Michigan)
- Audio file (mp3) of Heydar Babaya Salam
- Salam bih Haydar Baba and Salam bé Heydar Baba: in Azerbaijani, with Persian translation by Bahman Fursi (1993) ISBN 0-9518042-7-8 - See: Copac library catalogue
- English translation
- Şəhriyar - Heydər Babaya salam-1 (audio) (in Azerbaijani)
gollark: Ah. I thought it didn't, because "keyless".
gollark: Especially a battery-operated one, unless you can charge it from outside.
gollark: I wouldn't really trust an electronic-only lock.
gollark: Wasn't there some similar xkcd about a "pet" made of a sphere thing and internal wheels? This has reminded me of that.
gollark: ```pythonwhile True: print("lemon") print("is", random.choice(config.things), "practical?") print(" ~~STRONK~~")```
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