Süreyya Bedir Khan

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From left to right: Kamuran, Süreyya and Celadet Bedir Khan

Süreyya Bedir Khan (1883 in Constantinople – 1938 in Paris) was a Kurdish prince, a descendant of Bedir Khan Beg and a member of the Bedir Khan family. He was an influent supporter of Kurdish independence, a journalist and author of several books. His works are also known under his pen-name Bletch Chirguh.[1] Like other members of the Bedir Khan family, he claimed an ancestry to Khalid Ibn al-Walid, the Sword of Islam and general and companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.[2]

He was born into the noble Kurdish family of the Bedir Khans, as the son of Emin Ali Bedir Khan and his first wife. His mother died as he was still a child, in 1887. He attended the Galatasaray High school in Constantinople until 1906, as he had to abandon his studies when he and other male members of the Bedirkhan family were sent into exile to Isparta,[3] after his uncle Ali Şamil Bedir Khan was accused of being involved in the murder of the mayor of Constantinople, Rıdvan Pasha [tr].[4]

Political and journalistic career

Works

References

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