Huseyin Çelebî
Huseyin Çelebî was a pioneer of the Kurdistan Students’ Union (YXK) in Europe and a Kurdish writer.[1]
Following the Dersim Massacre in 1938, his family emigrated to central Anatolia. Later, they emigrated again to Istanbul before eventually moving to Germany in the 1960s.
He was born to a family from Dersim in 1967 in the city of Hamburg in Germany to a Turkish mother and a Kurdish father. He attended high school in Hamburg, and then went to the Fachoberschule for Social Pedagogy and started his studies at the beginning of 1986.[2]
Because of his father's political activism, Çelebî became interested in politics. At the age of 7, he went with his father and a family friend to a demonstration against the deportation of 169 Kurds from Turkey to Saddam Hussein’s Iraq.[3]
Çelebi was one of the first members of the Kurdistan Students’ Union (YXK) in Europe.[4]
In 1988 he was arrested for membership of the PKK, and in 1990 he was released. Huseyin Celebi joined the Kurdistan Freedom Movement in the summer of 1991, and was killed in 1992.
The Huseyin Çelebî Literature and Poetry Festival has been organised by the Kurdistan Students’ Union (Yekîtiya Xwendekarên Kurdistan - YXK) since 1993.
The 2017 Huseyin Çelebî Literature and Poetry Festival in London was dedicated to the memory of the British-Kurdish filmmaker Mehmet Aksoy, and was the first time the festival was held outside of Turkey.[5][6][7]
Resources
YouTube biography in German
References
- "Hüseyin Celebi Literature Festival". huseyin-celebi.blogspot.co.uk. Retrieved 2017-10-21.
- "Hüseyin Celebi". www.nadir.org. Retrieved 2017-10-21.
- Society, People’s Printing Press. "Revolutionising Kurdish identity through art". Retrieved 2017-10-21.
- Society, People’s Printing Press. "Revolutionising Kurdish identity through art". Retrieved 2017-10-21.
- "Literature Festival in London dedicated to Mehmet Aksoy". ANF News. Retrieved 2017-10-21.
- Question, Kurdish. "25th Huseyin Celebi Literature and Poetry Festival in London". Retrieved 2017-10-21.
- Society, People’s Printing Press. "Revolutionising Kurdish identity through art". Retrieved 2017-10-21.