Mihri Belli
File:Mihri Belli.jpg
Born 1916
Silivri, Ottoman Empire
Died August 16, 2011
Istanbul
Cause of death Respiratory distress
Resting place Feriköy, Istanbul
Nationality Turkish
Ethnicity Turkish
Education Economics
Alma mater Robert College, University of Mississippi
Occupation Politician
Known for his thesis "National Democratic Revolution"
Influenced by Marxism–Leninism
Influenced '68 movement in Turkey
Political party Communist Party of Turkey (TKP),
Workers Party of Turkey (TİP),
Labour Party of Turkey (TEP)
Freedom and Solidarity Party (ÖDP),
Socialist Democracy Party (SDP)
Workers' Socialist Party (İSP)
Religion None (Atheist)

Mihri Belli (1916 – 16 August 2011) was a prominent leader of the socialist movement in Turkey.[1] He was legendary for having fought on the partisan side in the Greek Civil War.[2][3]

Belli was repeatedly prosecuted and sentenced to prison for his political views, and was altogether imprisoned for 11 years, and forced into exile for another 18.

Belli wrote several influential books on the Turkish left and was, for many years, a source of inspiration for leftist Turkish youths.

Contents

Early life [link]

Belli was born in 1916 in Silivri, then in the Ottoman Empire, to Mahmut Hayrettin Bey, later a prominent leader of the Turkish War of Independence in Urfa.

He was educated at Robert College in Istanbul, and in 1936 went on to study economics at the University of Mississippi in the United States of America. There he was introduced to Marxist thought and revolutionary action. He took part in the activities of the civil rights movement in Mississippi.

Return to Turkey [link]

Belli returned to Turkey in 1940, where he joined the illegal Communist Party of Turkey (TKP).

Turkey was at the time under a one-party regime. The government, under the influence of the German advances in the initial years of the World War II, had abandoned its policy of friendship with the USSR. The only opposition party in Turkey in these days was the underground TKP. Belli, after returning to Turkey, contacted the illegal party via his elementary-school friend David Nea, who was the party secretary for Istanbul at the time. Belli became a member of the central committee of the TKP in 1942.

He served as assistant professor with professor Fritz Neumark at the Faculty of Economics of Istanbul University in the years 1943–1944. There he was among the founders and organizers of the İlerici Gençler Birliği (Progressive Youth Union).[4] In 1944 he was arrested for these activities and sentenced to two years imprisonment and exile.

Greek Civil War [link]

Belli left Turkey in 1946, and joined the Greek Civil War as a guerrilla fighter. He rose to the rank of lieutenant-colonel in the Democratic Army of Greece. He was wounded twice in battle, and was treated in Bulgaria and the USSR.

In 1950 he was imprisoned in Turkey for a short while for entry without a passport and illegal possession of a handgun. Shortly after his release, he was imprisoned again in 1951 in a wave of TKP arrests. This time he was sentenced to 7 years in prison and two years and four months of forced relocation.

A documentary about his time in Greece, entitled "Καπετάν Κεμάλ, ο σύντροφος" ("Captain Kemal, A Comrade"; Turkish title "Kaptan Kemal, Bir Yoldaş") was made by the prominent Greek filmmaker Fotos Lamprinos.[5]

Turkish revolutionary movement [link]

During the 1960s, Belli could write and speak without having to use an alias. Nevertheless, also in that period he served prison time for various articles and speeches. He was part of the group who published the revolutionary magazines Türk Solu and Aydınlık Sosyalist Dergi. Expelled from the TKP, he joined the newly formed Workers Party of Turkey (TİP). At this time, he developed his well-known thesis known as Milli Demokratik Devrim (National Democratic Revolution), abbreviated MDD.[6] With his friends, he contacted Deniz Gezmiş and Mahir Çayan, who were at the time leaders of the youth movement amassing popular support. The ideas of MDD quickly gained prominence among the leftist youth movement; it became the main theoretical framework for most of the leftist groups that flourished in Turkey in that period[7] and played a key role in the '68 movement in Turkey, giving it a Marxist and revolutionary characteristic.[8]

Mihri Belli left Turkey after the 1971 military coup to avoid arrest, and was for a while a guest of the Palestinian Liberation Organization. He returned to Turkey briefly, en route to Western Europe. There he stayed for a while and helped with the magazine Yurtsever (Patriot). He was back in Turkey when the centre-left Republican People's Party (CHP) under Ecevit emerged as the largest party in the 1973 elections.

After the amnesty of 1974, he founded the Labour Party of Turkey (TEP) in 1975. Immediately after the founding of the party, the prosecutor's office of the Martial Law Court took notice and demanded the removal of the word Kurd from the party program and other documents. The Constitutional Court banned the TEP for demanding equal rights for Kurds.

In 1979, Belli faced an assassination attempt in which he was severely injured. After the 1980 military coup, he left for the Middle East. From there he moved to Sweden, where he followed the Kurdish movement closely until he returned to Turkey in 1992. In 1997 he met with Abdullah Öcalan, where they came to the common conclusion that a solution to the Kurdish issue under the umbrella of a unitarian state, instead of a federative solution, was possible on the basis of equality and voluntary union. The report of this meeting was later published in book form.

In 1996 Belli participated in the founding of the Freedom and Solidarity Party (ÖDP), and that of the Socialist Democracy Party (SDP) in 2002. He was a candidate for member of parliament for Istanbul in the 2002 elections.

In 2005, the portraits Belli had made 50 years earlier, while in prison, were presented in an exhibition "Lines From Prison". He was imprisoned for 11 years, and forced into exile for 18. Together with several other founding members he resigned from the SDP in 2007 and took part in the 2008 founding of the Workers' Socialist Party (İşçilerin Sosyalist Partisi), better known by the shortened name Socialist Party (Sosyalist Parti), along with others who left.

Death [link]

Mihri Belli died in his home in Istanbul from respiratory distress, on 16 August 2011.[1] He is buried in Feriköy, Şişli, Istanbul.[9]

References [link]

  1. ^ a b "Turkish Socialist Leader Mihri Belli Passes Away". Bianet. 17 August 2011. https://www.bianet.org/english/people/132179-turkish-socialist-leader-mihri-belli-passes-away. Retrieved 18 August 2011. 
  2. ^ Semih İdiz (29 April 2011). "Turks not gloating over Greek difficulties". Hürriyet Daily News. https://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=turks-are-not-gloating-over-greek-difficulties-2010-04-29. 
  3. ^ "Mihri Belli kimdir? [Who is Mihri Belli]" (in Turkish). https://mihribelli.com/kimdir/. Retrieved 18 August 2011. 
  4. ^ Not to be confused with the later Progressive Youth Association.
  5. ^ Maria Katsounaki (4 August 2009). "The Turk in the Greek ranks". I Kathimerini. https://archive.ekathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_civ_1_08/04/2009_106135. 
  6. ^ Igor P. Lipovsky (1992). The Socialist Movement in Turkey 1960-1980. Brill. p. 24. ISBN 90-04-09582-9. "Mihri Belli[,] presented the Second Congress [of the TİP] with his own concept, which envisaged a two-stage revolution in Turkey: first the national-democratic revolution and only then the socialist revolution." 
  7. ^ Bora Kanra (2009). Islam, Democracy and Dialogue in Turkey. Ashgate. p. 97. ISBN 978-0-7546-7878-6. 
  8. ^ Ahmet Samim (March–April 1981). "The Tragedy of the Turkish Left". New Left Review (126): 70. 
  9. ^ "Mihri Belli'yi kaybettik [We have lost Mihri Belli]" (in Turkish). BirGün. 16 August 2011. https://www.birgun.net/actuels_index.php?news_code=1313502225&year=2011&month=08&day=16. 

https://wn.com/Mihri_Belli

Belli

The Belli, also designated Beli or Belaiscos were an ancient pre-Roman CelticCeltiberian people who lived in the modern Spanish province of Zaragoza from the 3rd Century BC.

Origins

The Belli were of mixed Illyrian and Celtic (Belgic) origin probably related with the Bellovaci, who migrated to the Iberian Peninsula around the 4th Century BC and part of the Celtiberians. There is an overwhelming amount of evidence that the ancestors of the Celtiberian groups were installed in the Meseta area of the peninsula from at least 1000 BC and probably much earlier.

Location

Upon arrival, the Belli settled along the middle Jiloca and Huerva rivers in Zaragoza province with their territories stretching up to the Guadalope and upper Turia valleys, close to their neighbours and clients, the Titii. Their early capital was Segeda (Poyo de Maya – Zaragoza; Celtiberian mint: Sekaiza), subsequently transferred to nearby Durón de Belmonte and later offset by Bilbilis (Valdeherrera, near CalatayudZaragoza; Celtiberian mint: Bilbiliz). Other Belli urban centers included Nertobriga (La Almunia de Doña GodinaZaragoza; Celtiberian mint: Nertobis), Contrebia Belaisca (Zaforas de Botorita – Zaragoza; Celtiberian mint: Contebacom Bel), Beligiom (Piquete de la Atalaya de Azuara – Zaragoza; Celtiberian mint: Belikiom), Lesera (El Forcal) and Belgeda (Belchite – Zaragoza). It is plausible that by the 2nd Century BC they exerted some form of control over the strategic frontier towns of Belia (sited somewhere between the Huerva' and Aguas Vivas' rivers; Celtiberian mint: Belaiscom), Osicerda (El Palau de Alcañiz – Teruel; Iberian designation: Usercerte), Damania (Hinojosa de Jarque – Teruel; Celtiberian mint: Tamaniu) and Orosis (La Caridad de Caminreal – Teruel; Celtiberian mint: Orosiz), facing the Iberian Lobetani and Edetani peoples of the modern Valencia coastal region.

Belli (disambiguation)

The Belli were an ancient pre-Roman Celtic Celtiberian people that lived in the modern Spanish province of Zaragoza.

Belli may also refer to:

  • Belli (surname)
  • Belli (film), a 2014 Kannada-language Indian drama film
  • Belli dentro, an Italian comedy television series
  • Belli Moda, a 1967 Kannada movie by Puttanna Kanagal
  • Belli Modagalu, a 1992 Indian Kannada language drama film, directed by K. V. Raju
  • Belli Park, Queensland, suburb on the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia
  • Casus belli, a Latin expression meaning "An act or event that provokes or is used to justify war"
  • See also

  • Beli (disambiguation)
  • Belly (disambiguation)
  • Belli (surname)

    Belli is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Adriano Belli (born 1977), Canadian football player
  • Agostina Belli (born 1947), Italian actress
  • Alex Belli (born 1990), Italian model, media personality and actor
  • Carlos Germán Belli (born 1927) Peruvian poet of Italian parentage
  • César Belli (born 1975), Brazilian footballer
  • Domenico Belli (died 1627), Italian composer
  • Edo Belli (1918-2003), American architect
  • Francesco Belli (born 1994), Italian footballer
  • Gioconda Belli (born 1948), Nicaraguan poet and writer
  • Girolamo Belli (1552 – c. 1620), Italian composer
  • Giulio Belli (c. 1560 – 1621 or later), Italian composer
  • Giuseppe Gioachino Belli (1791 – 1863), Italian poet, famous for his sonnets in Romanesco
  • John Belli (died 1809), United States Army Quartermaster General
  • Laura Belli (born 1947), Italian actress and singer
  • Mary Lou Belli, American television director and writer
  • Melvin Belli (1907–1996), American lawyer, writer and actor
  • Mihri Belli (1916–2011), Turkish politician
  • Paolo Belli (born 1962), Italian singer and television presenter
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    K.O.

    by: Marble

    A proof of failure is right in front of me,
    somebody else's happiness to make my knees weak
    Acting like nothing ever happened
    I guess nothing ever did
    I could calm this storm,
    but I'm gonna turn my head instead
    I was out
    Then I was up
    And now I tripped and I'm falling again
    I was gone
    Then I was there
    And now I tripped and I'm falling again
    Down and out
    Even as a loser it's too difficult to move on
    This hope for something right is broken but not gone
    Maybe if I would've ignored you and not bothered digging the hole




    ×