Shapur Zol Aktaf
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Mate that term and the terms which you shared before is not even in Turkish.
Leaving that aside, a quick research showed me that the term you shared, used by Palace folks against Nomadic Turkic tribes (Yörük) who had difficulties to adapt city life. It would be unfair to apply this statement to entire Turkish race. Es specially Ottoman Turks.
House of Osman (Osman Gazi) was direct decedents of Oghuz Tribes, Kayı Branch, it would have been insulting themselves.
Can't say much.... Let me give you a example.
During the Sword wielding ceremony of the Ottoman Princes. There is a sentence which they shout "Gök Girsin, Kızıl Çıksun" which means "Enters (Sword) sky (clean), exits red (covered with blood) "
This sentence is in old Turkic. Ottoman's never, ever forget about their Turkish ancestry. There are lots of examples from the curvy soil on graves or the Khan honorofic they used.
Look Sinan, could it be that ottomans were confused? We have been attacked by panturkists because of the term "donkey turks", while we have evidence that turk themselves and other nations used this term long time ago.
Bu konuda Ziya Gökalp‘ın ifadesi çok daha serttir, çünkü ona göre Osmanlı her zaman Türk‘e
yönelik olarak ―eşek Türk‖ sözünü kullanırmış (Gökalp, 1990: 33, 43)
Ziya Gokalp's saying about this(negative view about Turks in Ottomon empire)is more fierce.
He thought that every time the Ottoman's wanted to mention the Turks, they used the title
"donkey Turks".
We have the right to defence ourselves against false attacks making Iranians look like racists. There are other turkish sources that mention anti-turkism by ottomans and even by Seljuqs!
In the book Organised Crime In Europe: Concepts, Patterns and Control Policies in the
European Union and Beyond By Cyrille Fijnaut, Letizia Paoli(Published 2004, Springer, pg
206), this matter is also pointed to:
―The third structural problem had to do with the ethnic hierarchy that prevailed throughout the empire
(Ottomon empire). In the Seljuq periods, the authorities viewed Georgians. Iranians and Slavs as the top
ranking peoples, and Turks and Turkmens as the lowest. Turkish was a language only to be spoken by
people of humble descent, and it is not difficult to find offensive and racist comments in the writings of
Seljuq authors: 'Bloodthirsty Turks [...] If they get the chance, they plunder, but as soon as they see the enemy
coming, off they run'.' Matters were not much different in the Ottoman period, even though the empire was
governed by a small elite at the court, which was Turkish itself. According to Cetin Yetkin, one of the
major Turkish authors on the Seljuq and Ottoman periods. 'In the Ottoman Empire, though Turks
were a "minority", they did not have the same rights as the other minorities' (Yerkin, 1974: 175). In
fact the term 'Turk' was a pejorative. Ottoman historian Naima, who also wrote a book about the
Anatolian rebels, uses the following terms for the Turks: Tiirk-i bed-lika (Turk with an ugly face),
nadan Turk (ignorant Turk) and etrak-i bi-idrak (Turk who knows nothing).”According to Turkish history Handan Nezir Akmeshe, who describes the attempt to ingrain
self-conscioussness to Turks of the Ottomon empire prior to WWI ( Handan Nezir Akmeşe,
The Birth Of Modern Turkey: The Ottoman Military And The March To World War I,
I.B.Tauris, 2005. pg 50): (One consequence was to reinforce these officers sense of their
Turkish nationality, and a sense of national grievance arising out of die contrast between the
non-Muslim communities, with their prosperous, European-educated elites, and "the poor
Turks [who] inherited from the Ottoman Empire nothing but a broken sword and an oldfashioned plough." Unlike the non-Muslim and non-Turkish communities, they noted with
some bitterness, the Turks did not even have a proper sense of their own national identity, and
used to make fun of each other, calling themselves ―donkey Turk‖