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Network of Students Logo

Network of Students Logo

Well done to NoS for going the extra mile this month (May 2013) by publishing a magazine for students, when they were already organising many educative and interesting events. A PDF version of the magazine can be found on the NoS and the University of Bristol Turkish Society website…

Who are Network of Students (NoS)?

They are a non-profit organisation which aims to organise socio-economic and cultural events and activities for university students all over the United Kingdom. Their purpose is to increase the key skills and help the development of university students by providing informative and enlightening meetings, seminars and networking events as well as organising social and sports activities.

NoS’s events can be found here

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Harvard Law School has recognised a verse from the Holy Quran as ‘one of the greatest expressions of justice in history’

 

“O you who have believed, be persistently standing firm in justice, witnesses for Allah , even if it be against yourselves or parents and relatives. Whether one is rich or poor, Allah is more worthy of both. So follow not [personal] inclination, lest you not be just. And if you distort [your testimony] or refuse [to give it], then indeed Allah is ever, with what you do, Acquainted”

[Surat’ul Nisa, 135]

 

Article: http://www.ciibroadcasting.com/2013/01/24/harvard-recognises-quranic-verse-as-one-of-the-greatest-expressions-of-justice/

Quran Verse at Harvard Law School

Quran Verse at Harvard Law School

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Nike-Mercurial-Magia-Football-SC2207_553_A

A PDF of my article on: How to be efficient in Football (click on the link to download the file)

 

Here’s a peek into it:

“To be a ‘great’ in any game, you must first understand what you’re capable of and what your weakness/strengths are. Then you must analyse your opponents to see what they’re capable of; and likewise, what their strength and weaknesses are. Then a decision must be made about how to approach the game. Making your decision is going to be complicated by deducing how much your opponent knows you and how this knowledge is going to affect their tactics. Also another major factor in deciding how to approach the game is going to be ‘how much is on stake’. If the game is massive then you may be a little more cautious whereas in a more comfortable position (where not too much is at stake) you may be determined to show what you’re truly capable of and go out all guns firing.

Football is no different! “

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Temel and Dursun are (semi!) fictional characters, originated in the Black sea region of Turkey known for their humour, wit and craziness (this last attribute is sometimes replaced by naivity) all at the same time; therefore many jokes have been told about them which fit their characteristics. For more info on Turkish sense of humour, click here.

Temel

How Temel is usually depicted in cartoons – especially with a big and long nose, a well-known characteristic of the ‘Laz’ people living in the Black sea region of Turkey


Here’s just a few of them; they’re much better in Turkish as there is a lot in these jokes which is lost in translation. Hope you enjoy them anyway!

Joke 1:

Dursun has made a lot of money in the USA and tells his beloved friend Temel to join him in LA. He tells him there are so many opportunities for him to earn his living here, going even further to say he’d be rich even if he picks up the money people throw/drop on the streets. So Temel jumps on the first plane and travels to the US; and with his first step he sees a $10 note on the floor. But he decides not to take it, saying: “I’m not going to start working on the first day!“.

Joke 2:

Temel owes a lot of money to the local shops. One day he wins the lottery and the locals wait for him to pay back what he owes – and maybe more. However three months down the line, Temel still hasn’t paid anything so the shopkeepers come down to ask why that is the case. Temel tells them: “I didn’t want you guys to think money’s changed me!

Joke 3:

Temel asks a cafe owner: “Do you have cold tea?” and he gets the reply “No“, so he leaves. He keeps asking the same question for the next three days so the cafe owner thinks I’ll make him cold tea the next day. Temel comes in and asks the same question, but this time the cafe owner says “yes”. Then Temel says: “well that’s great, heat it up and bring me some tea. I’ve missed drinking tea a lot!

Joke 4:

Temel enters a multi-choice matriculation exam. He flips a coin for each question and picks the choices accordingly. An hour into the exam – when all the students have given in their papers and he’s the only one left in the room, the invigilator sees that he’s still flipping coins; and tells him there isn’t much time left and asks him whether he is about to finish. Temel answers: “I’ve finished half an hour ago, just going through my answers!”

Joke 5:

Temel and Dursun love playing football. One day when they were contemplating about the afterlife, Temel asks Dursun: “Do you think there is football in Heaven?” and Dursun answers “I don’t know but whoever goes there first, will let the other know OK?“. So they agree and a few years down the line Dursun dies and appears in Temel’s dream: “Temel, I’ve got one good and one bad news for you“. Temel asks for the good one first and Dursun answers: “There is football in Heaven!

What about the bad one?

Your name is on the team sheet this week!

Joke 6:

When they’re young, Temel and Dursun try stealing a few apples from a tree in a garden nearby. While they’re at it, the owner sees them and they start to run. The owner shouts “stop you BASTARD!”; and Dursun stops and tells Temel “he recognised me, you keep running brother!”

Joke 7:

Temel and Dursun are stopped by a tourist in Istanbul. He asks: “Hi, do you speak English?“. Temel and Dursun look at each other, not understanding what he meant. The tourist also asks: “Parlez vous Francais?” and said the same thing in many other languages. The tourist then leaves not getting an answer.

Dursun turns to Temel and says: “I think it is time we learn a foreign language“.

Temel: “What’s the point? Look he knew 5 languages but still couldn’t explain what he wanted“.

Joke 8:

Temel appears in court as he has just killed a dozen or so people at a marketplace due to his truck’s brakes failing. The judge asks: “Explain why you did this?“.

Temel: “I am very sorry; it was not intentional. My brakes failed and I had no other choice but to hit somewhere to stop my truck. I noticed that if I swerved to the right I would kill a child. If I swerved to the left, I would enter the marketplace and potentially kill dozens. So I decided to kill the child.”

Judge: “How did you then kill all these people?!

Temel: “Unfortunately the kid ran towards the marketplace

Joke 9:

Temel and Dursun go to watch a movie, which has a horse racing scene. Just as the race is about to start, Temel bets Dursun that the white horse will win – and Dursun agrees to bet on the black horse. The white horse won, so Temel also won the bet. However, after the movie Temel feels uneasy and confesses:

I watched this movie before and knew which horse was going to win.

Dursun replies: I watched the movie too.

But I wanted to bet on the underdog this time!

Joke 10:

Temel is on Who Wants to be a Millionaire. He passes the first set of ‘easy’ questions…

£4000 question: How long did the ‘Hundred Years’ War’ last?

a) 99 years b) 116 years c) 150 years d) 100 years

He asks the audience and passes on to the next question

£8000 question: Where did the ‘Panama hat’ originate?

a) Panama b) Brazil c) Chile d) Ecuador

He phones a friend and passes on to the next question

£16000 question: When do the Russians celebrate the ‘October Revolution’?

a) October b) September c) November d) January

He uses the ‘fifty-fifty option’ and passes on to the next question

£32000 question: What animal were the ‘Canary Islands’ named after?

a) Canaries b) Seals c) Cats d) Kangaroos

Temel decides to take the money…

[Scroll down]

Funny eh? Thought you were more clever than Temel? Think again!

Answers: 1) 116 years, 2) Ecuador, 3) November, 4) Seals

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Department for Education and Skills’ (DfES) report for Children of Ethnic Minority in 2006/07 showed a bleak picture for students of ethnic minorities living in the UK – as they were all performing below the national average. However the picture was even more disturbing for Turks/Kurds because their children were the least performing out of all the groups that had a considerable size in the UK. I am hoping things have gotten better for the Turkish community since then as there have been many steps taken to stop this rot, especially by the Turks themselves. They have opened many supplementary and/or weekend schools all over the UK especially in London and Leicester where there is a considerable amount of Turkish/Kurdish migrants. In one of these weekend schools, called the Horizon supplementary school (located in Leicester), I obtained the Keystage 2 (KS2) and Keystage 3 (KS3) results of nearly 30 students (years 6 to 9) attending their classes and compared them with DfES’s findings. The results were surprising:

ks2 ks3

Overall, the Horizon school’s pupils had achieved higher in all subjects compared to the national average let alone other ethnic minority groups. The difference is greater in Maths and Science.

These results make it clear that given the opportunity, children of Turkish/Kurdish/Turkish-Cypriot background can perform as good as anyone, if not better. Therefore the Turkish/Kurdish community must carry on supporting the existing supplementary schools; and if possible improve on what they’re doing by opening more schools. This is why I’d recommend all ethnic minorities in the UK to follow the Turks’ example and support their children in achieving their academic potential. Educated children would not only be the source of good for the corresponding ethnic minorities, but also the British society as a whole.

Best wishes!

 

PS: To add to the comments above, the below newspaper article portrays my views in 2006 (when I had just turned 18). I do not agree entirely with it nowadays; would have worded some things differently…  🙂

Me in Leicester Mercury (August 2006)

Me in Leicester Mercury (August 2006)

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Hagia Sophia in Istanbul

Hagia Sophia in Istanbul

BBC’s Turkish language page is great! I’d recommend it for anyone!

Also see:

Learn Turkish Now

Handbook of Students of Turkish by National Middle East Language Resource Centre (NMELRC)

Hugo’s Simplified System (a little advanced)

Teach Yourself Turkish (advanced)

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Bad Science Book

Bad Science Book

‘The Doctor Will Sue You Now’ chapter in Ben Goldacre’s book ‘Bad Science’ available free: click here

Just a reminder that there are many things going on behind the scenes even in the most objective sectors, such as the scientific community; imagine what goes on behind the scenes in World Politics…

Some people corrupt everything (even science) for money (and the power that comes with it)! We – the ‘normal’ people – must not let them have it their way!

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Don’t you worry child

There was a time, when I used to look into my supervisor’s eyes

In a happy lab, I was a king, I had a golden throne

Those days are gone, now the papers are on the wall

I still hear the sound, of the articles that were torn

 

In the room with the recording tape

That’s where I had my first heartbreak

I still remember how it all changed

My supervisor said:

 

Don’t you worry, Don’t you worry child

See science can play games on you

Don’t you worry, Don’t you worry now

A Nobel’s waiting for you

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images

Ingiltere’de (ingiliz) arkadaşlarım bana ‘Secret Santa’ (Gizli Noel Baba) adındaki faaliyetlerine katılmamı istediler. Yapılan şey ise bir kagıda adını yazıyorsun ve diger katılan kişilerinde isminin bulundugu bir kutuya atıyorsun. Sonra cekilişte kimin ismi sana cıkarsa, ona gizlice hediye alıyorsun ve o kişi hediyenin kimin tarafından alındıgını bilmiyor (soylemek yasak!). Hediyeler arasında bir ayrım olmasın diye de en baştan kac liralık limit oldugu belirleniyor (mesela 10 sterlin).

Fikir cok guzel ama ruhu yok; insanlara ogretebilecegi cok şey var ama etkisiz. Neden bu isin ‘bizce’ versiyonunu yapmayalım diye duşundum; ve boyle birşeyi kendi aramızda neden mesela ‘Gizli Zeyneller’ olarak yapmayalım? Bu sayede tanışmamıza, birbirimizle hediyeleşmeyi teşvik etmemize ve yaptıgımız iyilikleri gizli tutmamız gerektigini daha iyi anlamamıza vesile olur. Eminim daha cok Zeynel Abidin (r.a.) gibi insanların yetişmesine de vesile olur…

 

Zeynel-Abidin (r.a.)’la ilgili…

Zeynelabidin (r.a.), Hz. Hüseyin’in (ra) oğlu ve Hz. Ali’nin (ra) torunudur. Fakir ve kimsesizlere yardım konusunda büyük bir gayret gösterirdi. Çok sayıda fakire yardım ettiği halde, ihlas düsturu gereği bunu hiç kimseye fark ettirmezdi. Gece karanlığında sırtında un taşıyarak bunu muhtaçlara yetiştirirdi. Sürekli bu işi yaptığı halde hiç kimse bilemedi. Ancak, vefatından sonra cenazesi yıkanıp sırtındaki nasırlaşmış yerle karşılaşılınca durum öğrenilebildi.

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Mehmet II 'The Conqueror' of Istanbul

Mehmet II ‘The Conqueror’ of Istanbul


The below is a Ahdnama (Declaration) from Sultan Mehmed II El Fatih (The Conqueror) in 1463 – I am not a Ottoman or Turkish nationalist but am only sharing it because I like it – seen rarely in history:

(Mehmet – son of Murat Khan, The victorious)

The command of the honorable, sublime Sultan’s sign and shining seal of the conqueror of the world is as follows:

“I, Sultan Mehmet Khan inform the world that the ones who possess this imperial edict, the Bosnian Franciscans, have got into my good graces, so I command:

Let nobody bother or disturb those who are mentioned, nor their churches. Let them dwell in peace in my empire. And let those who have become refugees live and be safe. Let them return and let them settle down their monasteries without fear in all the countries of my empire.

Neither my royal highness, nor my viziers or employees, nor my servants, nor any of the citizens of my empire shall insult or disturb them. Let nobody attack, insult or endanger neither their life or their property or the property of their church. Even if they bring somebody from abroad into my country, they are allowed to do so.

As I have graciously issued this imperial edict, I hereby take my great oath: In the name of the Creator of the earth and heaven (Allah), the one who feeds all creatures, and in the name of the seven Mustafas and our great Messenger (Muhammad PbuH), and in the name of the sword I have, nobody shall do contrary to what has been written, as long as they are obedient and faithful to my command.”


See a similar one – over 700 years before the above – from the Prophet Muhammad (PbuH): Letter to all Christians – again, sharing it as I like the message.

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