Mustafa Olpak (October 1953 in Ayvalık [1] - 4 October 2016 in İzmir[ citation needed]) was an Afro-Turkish writer and activist. His book Kenya-Girit-İstanbul: Köle Kıyısından İnsan Biyografileri has been compared to Alex Haley's Roots. [1]
Olpak's ancestors, of Kikuyu ethnicity from today's Kenya, [2] were enslaved around the year 1890, brought to Crete and sold in Rethymno. Following the population exchange between Greece and Turkey, the family settled in Ayvalık. [3] Olpak married a Turkish woman named Sevgi in İzmir after his military service. [4]
In 2006, Olpak founded the first officially recognised organisation of Afro-Turks, the Africans' Culture and Solidarity Society (Afrikalılar Kültür ve Dayanışma Derneği) in Ayvalık. [5] The opening ceremony was attended by Ali Moussa Iye, the Chief of UNESCO Slave Routes Project. [6] [7] A principal aim of the association is to promote studies of oral history of Afro-Turks, a community history of whom was usually ignored by official historiography in Turkey.
The Turkish film Arap Kızı Camdan Bakıyor [8] ("The Arab Girl Looks from the Window," released with the English title of Baa Baa Black Girl) [9] discusses how his grandfather was purchased as a household slave by a Turkish family, but later moved to Istanbul after the Turkish Revolution. [10]
Mustafa Olpak (October 1953 in Ayvalık [1] - 4 October 2016 in İzmir[ citation needed]) was an Afro-Turkish writer and activist. His book Kenya-Girit-İstanbul: Köle Kıyısından İnsan Biyografileri has been compared to Alex Haley's Roots. [1]
Olpak's ancestors, of Kikuyu ethnicity from today's Kenya, [2] were enslaved around the year 1890, brought to Crete and sold in Rethymno. Following the population exchange between Greece and Turkey, the family settled in Ayvalık. [3] Olpak married a Turkish woman named Sevgi in İzmir after his military service. [4]
In 2006, Olpak founded the first officially recognised organisation of Afro-Turks, the Africans' Culture and Solidarity Society (Afrikalılar Kültür ve Dayanışma Derneği) in Ayvalık. [5] The opening ceremony was attended by Ali Moussa Iye, the Chief of UNESCO Slave Routes Project. [6] [7] A principal aim of the association is to promote studies of oral history of Afro-Turks, a community history of whom was usually ignored by official historiography in Turkey.
The Turkish film Arap Kızı Camdan Bakıyor [8] ("The Arab Girl Looks from the Window," released with the English title of Baa Baa Black Girl) [9] discusses how his grandfather was purchased as a household slave by a Turkish family, but later moved to Istanbul after the Turkish Revolution. [10]