Abstract


МҰСТАФА ШОҚАЙ ЖӘНЕ ОНЫҢ ТҮРКІСТАН ЛЕГИОНЫНА ҚАТЫСЫ

Experts and historians of various fields defended their doctoral theses on the Second World War with great research. But when it comes to writing about the Legion, actual documentary research is almost non-existent. In the process of writing this article, we began to write about the legion, which is considered the most fair part of history and where human fate is evaluated in a complex and unfair way. Among these, we would like to point out that the archive data regarding the Turkestan Legion has not been fully disclosed. We are starting an article about the Turkestan Legion as a multi-series scientific study. In this article, we tried to examine and compare the works written about the legion. In the near future, we aim to go to the places where the Second World War took place, collect data from the large state, district and regional archives where the legions were formed and write materials that have never been published anywhere before. Apart from this, it is planned to take interview from the soldiers who are still alive in the Turkestan Legion or their descendants. In this article, we will not use the Second World War as the Great Patriotic War. This is the feature of the article. In an article he wrote in 1936, Mustafa Şokay wrote that the Soviet government is strong today, but one day it will collapse. After 55 years, the figure's words came true. The Soviet Union collapsed from within. In this article, we write that the status of May 9 Victory Day should be re-evaluated for various reasons for today's Kazakhstan, which had to participate in World War II, also known as the Great Patriotic War. The full list is unknown, as it is forbidden to even describe, let alone justify, the people in the Turkestan Legion. Mustafa Şokay, whose name is mentioned together with the Turkestan Legion, could not be completely destroyed by Soviet policy. As for the truth, Mustafa Şokay was taken prisoner by the Germans himself, and the Germans took him from his home in broad daylight. The task given to Mustafa Şokai was to separate hundreds and thousands of prisoners according to their nationalities in the first years of the war. He often brought political leaders who knew the language to the camp and served as a liaison between the two sides.



Keywords

Turkestan Legion, prisoner, Germany, Mustafa Shokay, Red Army.


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