The school in Istanbul keeping the Uighur language and culture alive

The school in Istanbul keeping the Uighur language and culture alive
Lokman Hira'i left Xinjiang to pursue further education in Turkey but instead opened up the first-ever Uighur school in Istanbul, with the mission of rescuing, reviving and creating a safe place to restore its cultural heritage.
4 min read
06 August, 2021
The school in Istanbul has taught over 2,500 students since it was established [Tasnim Nazeer, ]

Lokman Hira'i, a 31-year-old self-taught teacher , to pursue further education in Turkey, started the first-ever Uighur school in Istanbul to . The idea to start a Uighur school in Istanbul came to Hir’ai when he realised that many Uighur children did not know about their own language and culture.

“I decided to stop the university I was going to in Istanbul and instead teach Uighur to children. At first, I . We started the first Uighur language course with more than 10 students. Uighur parents who heard about the school began to bring their children to us,” Hir’ai told .

There are currently 217 Uighur children studying at the school which also offers classes for Turkish, English, IT, sewing and driving lessons for adults. Hir’ai says he has taught over 2,500 students since the school’s inception.

The Chinese government has placed over 1 million Uighurs in concentration camps resulting in many children being put into orphanages and having to adopt the Chinese language

In 2001, China abolished the teaching of the Uighur language in schools and .

“My childhood was spent in Xinjiang and I know the situation of the children there. Children must go to school but all the schools there teach in Chinese. ,”Hir’ai explains.

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The Chinese government has placed over onemillion Uighurs ,having to adopt the Chinese language and change their original Uighur names to Hans Chinese names.

“Most of the Uighurs in our school came in the years between 2014 to 2016. The parents of most of those children are in Istanbul but a small number of children have no parents at all or only one parent. .”

Uighur's fleeing Chinese repression often leave behind many family members []
Uighur's fleeing Chinese repression are often forced to leave behind many family members []

Hira’i was originally born in Urumqi where he lived most of his life. His parents had come to visit him on a trip to Turkey and were unable to return to China , but they have not heard from any of their relatives back in Urumqi.

“I don’t know if they are dead or alive. My mother died of coronavirus last year. My dad is 79-years-old this year but he remembers his homeland every day. He looks away from the window missing his motherland and his other children there.”

Hir’ai believes that the .

“I think the Chinese government is slowly trying to eradicate the Uighur language and culture and . We are doing our best to protect all of this.”

Qutayba is a ten-year-old student at the Uighur school Hir’ai runs and arrived in Istanbul in 2016 with his father and three brothers.

With fears of the Uighur genocide reaching reaching new levels of systematisation, Uighur's able to flee are the lucky ones []
With fears of the genocide reaching new levels of systematisation, Uighur's able to flee are the lucky ones []

“My mother stayed in our hometown because she didn't get a passport but if we had waited for my mother, our safety may be threatened,” Qutayba told .

Qutayba’s father has been working to support his sons whilst putting his children in the Uighur school and has now become an editor in Turkey.

The family .

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“I look at my mother's picture every day and miss her so much and long to meet her.. I always see her in my dreams, she hugs me and my brothers. I remember my parents when I see other kids waking on the street with their parents and I hope that I can walk with my parents like others altogether.”

Hira’ihopes that children like Qutayba will find solace and hope in .

There area number of missing Uighur children who have been separated from their parents, or vice versa after fleeingChina and movingto Istanbul, but Hir’ai wants to see them all reunited once again.

“I hope that friends around the world , . Uighur children abroad learn the language of the country in which they live but then they slowly forget their own language, but we will do our best to protect Uighur language (through this school).”

Tasnim Nazeer is an award-winning journalist, author, and Universal Peace Federation Ambassador. She has written for Al Jazeera, The Guardian, The Huffington Post, Middle East Eye, CNN, BBC, and others. She was awarded the FIPP the global network of media Rising Stars in Media Award 2018.

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