Singing, poetry competitions of Turkish Olympiad held in İstanbul, Ankara

Youth and Sports Minister Suat Kılıç with medalists of the poetry final
Youth and Sports Minister Suat Kılıç with medalists of the poetry final


Date posted: June 10, 2013

Senegalese student Maty Diokhane, who recited a Necip Fazıl Kısakürek poem, won the poetry competition of the 11th International Turkish Language Olympiad on Saturday night, while Martin Yordanov from Bulgaria won the singing contest held in İstanbul on Friday night.

The 11th International Turkish Language Olympiad, which brings together hundreds of foreign students each year from Turkish schools established around the world, is organized by the International Turkish Education Association (TÜRKÇEDER). It is a festival that celebrates the Turkish language and which this year brought together 2,000 students from 140 countries. This year the Olympiad began on June 1 with a grand ceremony in Ankara and will end on June 16 with a closing ceremony to be held at Atatürk Olimpiyat Stadium in İstanbul. There have been also various stage shows performed by the Olympiad students in 55 cities of Turkey during the event.

The poetry final of 11th Turkish Olympiads took place at the Ankara Arena Sports Hall on Saturday night and thousands of people, including senior officials, politicians and high-profile guests from the world of the media and arts, were in attendance. Diokhane from Senegal, who recited a poem titled “Zindandan Mehmed’e Mektup” (A letter from prison to Mehmet) by famous Turkish poet Necip Fazıl Kısakürek, received the highest scores from the jury members in the contest and was named the winner of the poetry final of the Olympiads. Azerbaijan’s Türkan Memmedova, who recited a poem titled “Birazdan Gün Doğacak” (A new day will rise soon) by Turkish poet Erdem Beyazıt, came second, while Georgian student Natali Todadze came third by reciting a Turkish poem titled “Yağmur Musikisi” (Rain Music) by well-respected Turkish Scholar Fethullah Gülen.

Youth and Sports Minister Suat Kılıç, who was among attendees of the event, expressed his gratitude and admirations to the teachers who leave their homeland and go to many countries across the world to teach the students at Turkish schools. He also saluted Gülen for all his contributions to the organization of the Turkish language Olympiads.

Among the jury members of the poetry contest were author and poet Bedirhan Gökçe, former Turkish Language Association (TDK) President Şükrü Haluk Akalın, Professor Ali Fuat Bilkan, the general manager of the Yunus Emre Foundation, and writer and scholar İskender Pala.

The singing final of the Olympiads was held at İstanbul Sinan Erdem Sports Hall on Friday night. Thousands of people attended the final and the foreign students fascinated thousands of spectators with their performances. Yordanov from Bulgaria won the 11th International Turkish Language Olympiad’s most prestigious medal for singing on Friday night before a crowd of tens of thousands in İstanbul, beating 14 competitors from various countries.

The Bulgarian student delighted jury members with the song “Deli Gönlüm” (My Mad Heart) and received his award from Turkish pop diva Ajda Pekkan, who was also a jury member of the contest.

Yordanov then performed the winning song once again to a cheering audience. Azerbaijan’s Ayhan Bunyadzade came second, while Guinevere Camacho from the Philippines came third.

Among the nearly 20,000 attendees of the Friday event were a number of well-known figures from politics, the arts, business, media and sports. Economy Minister Mehmet Şimşek said that Turkish is the language of love, peace and brotherhood. “Now, students from 140 countries are able to interact with each other in the Turkish language, they are able to talk about peace, love and brotherhood in Turkish. We watched a great show tonight. These Olympiads being held each year are great examples of success,” Şimşek noted.

Among the jury members of the song contest were Arabesque singer and composer Orhan Gencebay, pop singer Pekkan, Turkish folk singer and songwriter Fatih Kısaparmak, classical Turkish music performer Muazzez Ersoy, director Hamdi Alkan, producer Birol Güven, Lebanese-Swedish singer Maher Zain and Turkish pop singer and composer Sinan Akçıl.

Source: Today’s Zaman, 9 June, 2013


Related News

“Hizmet” movement, the current tensions and self-criticism (Interview with Ihsan Yilmaz)

My fourth criticism is the lack of empathy. We haven’t empathized enough with Kurds, Armenians and Greeks. In 2011, Journalists and Writers Foundation said to the commission of Constitution in the parliament that, besides Turkish, using Kurdish as a language of education should be considered a human right.

Disabled teacher, husband removed from job as brothers under arrest

Fatma Koyun, a teacher with an 82 percent physical disability who was dismissed from his job as part of a post-coup investigation, says her husband as well as her brothers have been under arrest for months.

Scapegoating: Turkish PM again blames Gülen movement for worsening economy

As the Turkish lira plunged even further on Friday, Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım claimed the Gülen movement was responsible for the deterioration in the country’s economic outlook. According to Yıldırım, “separatists” and sympathizers of the Gülen movement are working hard to ruin the Turkish economy in the eyes of the world.

Who is the winner?

The Gülen community is a movement of volunteers. The real reason for the row is not the community’s attempt to meddle in politics. It is due to its sheer size and public image. As he did with other groups or communities, Erdoğan sought to take full control of the Hizmet movement in an effort to consolidate his power. Following the defeat of the military tutelage, the government saw a convergence of power. However, the Hizmet movement was not a piece of cake which it could swallow easily. The government had previously purged itself of many bureaucrats who are close to the community.

The tragic story of a Turkish family fleeing to Greece from persecution

When the body of the 5-year-old Aylan Kurdi was found in the Greek island of Kos in 2015, Turkish president Erdoğan said: “What has drowned in the Mediterranean is not only the refugees. Humanity has drowned in the Mediterranean Sea.” However, President Erdoğan didn’t say a word about Turkish family’s tragedy, who were fleeing from the persecution of his own regime this time.

Alevi, Sunni businessmen will finance joint prayer complex

İLYAS KOÇ, ANKARA The first joint mosque-cemevi (Alevi house of worship) project in Turkey will be financed by businessmen from both parties, the head of the Hacı Bektaş Veli Culture, Education, Health and Research Foundation, Kemal Kaya, said on Thursday. The idea for such a project, which aims to strengthen will of peaceful coexistence, came […]

Latest News

Fethullah Gulen – man of education, peace and dialogue – passes away

Fethullah Gülen’s Condolence Message for South African Human Rights Defender Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Hizmet Movement Declares Core Values with Unified Voice

Ankara systematically tortures supporters of Gülen movement, Kurds, Turkey Tribunal rapporteurs say

Erdogan possessed by Pharaoh, Herod, Hitler spirits?

Devious Use of International Organizations to Persecute Dissidents Abroad: The Erdogan Case

A “Controlled Coup”: Erdogan’s Contribution to the Autocrats’ Playbook

Why is Turkey’s Erdogan persecuting the Gulen movement?

Purge-victim man sent back to prison over Gulen links despite stage 4 cancer diagnosis

In Case You Missed It

Hizmet will continue its mission regardless of attacks

Erdogan – Turkey’s desperate president

Fethullah Gülen calls on Muslims in the US to pray against Sandy

More Academics, Teachers, Charity Staff Detained Over Alleged Gülen Links

Fethullah Gülen calls for ‘bridges of peace’ in Eid al-Fitr remarks

CHP deputy asks PM to stop arrest of women after giving birth

Turkish editor hits out at media coercion under Erdoğan

Copyright 2025 Insightful Neighbor