Shamil Asgarov Şamil Əsgərov | |
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Born | 1929 |
Died | 20 April 2005 |
Nationality | Azerbaijani |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Poet, historian |
Shamil Asgarov or Shamil Askerov [1] ( Azerbaijani: Şamil Səlim oğlu Əsgərov, 1929, [2] Ağcakənd – 20 May 2005, Baku) was an Azerbaijani Kurdish scholar, poet, and researcher on the history of the Kurds in Azerbaijan. He was the leader of Kalbajar's large Kurdish community, [3] owned a 30,000 book library of books about Caucasian Kurds and their history [4] and was the founder and former director of the Kurdish Museum in Kelbajar before that town was occupied by Armenian forces and the former population forced to flee in 1993. [5] He was also editor of the Kurdish newspaper Denge Kurd published from 1991 to 2004 in Baku, Azerbaijan. [6] Shamil Asgarov translated the classic Kurdish love story Mem and Zin into Azerbaijani and was the author of 17 other books [7] among them one, Ferhenge, a Kurdish-Azerbaijani dictionary, was published in 1999 with the support of the Soros Foundation. [5]
Shamil's son, Khalid, a photographer for Reuters, documented the tale of Asgarov's harrowing escape from Kelbajar during the Armenian attacks of spring 1993 on a 2017 radio documentary for the BBC. [8]
Shamil Asgarov Şamil Əsgərov | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Born | 1929 |
Died | 20 April 2005 |
Nationality | Azerbaijani |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Poet, historian |
Shamil Asgarov or Shamil Askerov [1] ( Azerbaijani: Şamil Səlim oğlu Əsgərov, 1929, [2] Ağcakənd – 20 May 2005, Baku) was an Azerbaijani Kurdish scholar, poet, and researcher on the history of the Kurds in Azerbaijan. He was the leader of Kalbajar's large Kurdish community, [3] owned a 30,000 book library of books about Caucasian Kurds and their history [4] and was the founder and former director of the Kurdish Museum in Kelbajar before that town was occupied by Armenian forces and the former population forced to flee in 1993. [5] He was also editor of the Kurdish newspaper Denge Kurd published from 1991 to 2004 in Baku, Azerbaijan. [6] Shamil Asgarov translated the classic Kurdish love story Mem and Zin into Azerbaijani and was the author of 17 other books [7] among them one, Ferhenge, a Kurdish-Azerbaijani dictionary, was published in 1999 with the support of the Soros Foundation. [5]
Shamil's son, Khalid, a photographer for Reuters, documented the tale of Asgarov's harrowing escape from Kelbajar during the Armenian attacks of spring 1993 on a 2017 radio documentary for the BBC. [8]