@Jungibaaz Landed on this thread from yours....any views on this
Like I said, I do disagree with the following post and here is why:
I agree with that idea Mordor is Turkey as a Turk since I am very familiar with the book and movie. Sam try to save his friend under a crescent in mordor, characters implies dozens of times that is west-east issue, mordor on map very similar to Turkey, Rohan cavalry charge is the same as what happened in Ottoman siege of Vienna and lots of other things. Also writer himself was in ww1 and lost 3 friends,(check his biography) believing every British propaganda told to British soldiers(they were claiming we eat human flesh) furthermore after long allied bombardment some coasts of Turkey were exactly like Mordor(in real not so different from rest of continental Europe). It seems like he really believed that they were there to save western world from evil Turks. I respect the guy for his work, but in mind he is no different from Anders Behring Breivik the Oslo bomber or the Crusaders who were saving Constantinople by plundering it while it was still Christian. Scapegoat Turks are always there to blame
And here's why:
Firstly, before I state anything, Tolkien hated, disliked very much any allegory, people have claimed that LOTR is about WWI, especially since he fought in it, some say it's about WWII, which he lived through and that Hitler = Sauron. All of this is false, and said to be false by Tolkien himself. If you read any of his books, often in the prologue or notes on the text, there is quoted a letter from Tolkien to Stanley Unwin telling him about how much
he does not like allegory.
But I cordially dislike allegory in all its manifestations, and always have done so since I grew old and wary enough to detect its presence. I much prefer history, true or feigned, with its varied applicability to the thought and experience of readers. I think that many confuse 'applicability' with 'allegory'; but the one resides in the freedom of the reader, and the other in the purposed domination of the author. - J.R.R Tolkien
Now as for the points themselves, the races of Tolkien are not comparable to the races of earth. You have Elves (Eldar or Firstborn) that are like men, come in several sub races and can live forever should premature death or murder not take them. There are dwarves who were created by Aule, who are a completely different race and have no links with Elves or Humans (Edain or Secondborn). The Humans (Edain) are like us, and have races. The Hobbits are sub races. And Orcs were originally Elves that were captured by Morgoth and tortured and mutilated in mockery of God's work, and then later bred with humans and other races to make them better soldiers. So it is foolish to compare 'Turks' a people of our world to this complex and completely different world.
Sam tries to save Frodo form a crescent? This is false, I've also read the books, Sam does no such thing. The crescent moon reference is odd, and it's described to the best of my opinion to be 'waning' which means that he recalled the journey into Mordor and how the light of the moon, the last light left their sight, or perhaps how the terror of Minas Morgul (Minas Ithil = Tower of the moon) reminds him so. It has literally nothing to do with Islamic, or Turkic symbolism.
In fact, the moon is an object of great poetry and beauty in Tolkiens work. Before the Sun and the Moon were created, for a time, the lights of the world were broken, and the only thing lighting them were stars. And the Noldor came to Beleriand, and hosts of Fingolfin arrived at the rising of the moon, and the moon is said to be wrought of the last fruit of the silver Telperion.
Also, the rest of the post is, if you don't mind me saying, rubbish.... there is no link for what he is saying there, Rohan is this, and Mordor is that... totally baseless. I could easily say that the Mongol cavalry is Rohan, or perhaps the charge of the light brigade inspired him to make the horse lords. Thoughts like this is frankly insulting to one of the greatest story tellers of our time.
Besides, my last point is, once you know the depth of LOTR and the world he created, silly comparisons like this seem false then, there are books and books of history where he describes things that you cannot compare anything in our world to, it would be silly to assume he sets up this elaborate mythology only to go and add some silly allegory about Turks and WWI.
It's false, in it's entirety. I could go on for a few more pages if needed, but it suffices that this is false.