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Qizil Tugh

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Qizil Tugh
Owner(s)Alma-Ata Regional Committee of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Kazakhstan, Alma-Ata Regional Executive Committee
EditorI. Tairov, N. Sharipov, M. Abdullin (Mukhpul)
FoundedOctober 24, 1935 (1935-10-24)
Political alignmentCommunism
LanguageUyghur language
Ceased publicationApril 11, 1938 (1938-04-11)
CityAlma-Ata
CountrySoviet Union
Circulation3,000
Sister newspapersPravda, Kazakhstanskaya Pravda, Sotsialistik Kazakhstan

Qizil Tugh (Uyghur: Қизил туғ, 'Red Banner') was a Uyghur language newspaper published in Alma-Ata, Soviet Union from 1935 to 1938. It was an organ of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Kazakhstan. While following the party line and disseminating Communist propaganda, it also provided a publishing platform for young Uyghur language poets and writers in the Soviet Union.

History

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The publication was initially named Qizil Bairaq (also meaning 'Red Banner').[1] It was an organ of the Alma-Ata Regional Committee of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Kazakhstan and the Alma-Ata Regional Executive Committee.[2][3] Qizil Tugh appeared three times a week, and had a circulation of 3,000 copies.[3] The first issue was published on October 26, 1935.[2] The editors of Qizil Tugh, at different times, were I. Tairov, N. Sharipov and M. Abdullin (Mukhpul).[3]

The launch of Qizil Tugh was a milestone in development of Uyghur language-press and Uyghur culture in the Soviet Kazakhstan.[3] The publication strictly followed the party line, and carried out propaganda work towards the Uyghur community.[3] The newspaper was part of the campaign to complete the Second Five-Year Plan in four years and agitated in favour of the Stakhanovite movement to increase production outputs.[3] The ideological line of the newspaper was derived from publications such as Pravda, Kazakhstanskaya Pravda and Sotsialistik Kazakhstan.[3]

Qizil Tugh provided a publishing platform for young Uyghur poets and writers, and carried literary critique articles on Uyghur-language works.[3] The newspaper published poems by Izim Iskanderov [ru], Qadir Hasanov [kk], H. Turdi, Nasreddin Mansurov, I. Rozi and Ismayil Sattarov [kk].[3] The latter made his literary debut in the pages of Qizil Tugh in 1936.[4]

The last issue of Qizil Tugh was published on April 11, 1938.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Известия Академии наук Казахской ССР: Серия общественная. Qazaq SSR ghylym akademii︠a︡sy. Izd-vo "Nauka" Kazakhskoĭ SSR, 1970. p. 82
  2. ^ a b c Грант Левонович Епископосов. Газеты СССР, 1917-1960: Газеты Москвы, Ленинграда и столиц союзных республик. Книга, 1970. p. 100
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Мунир Ерзин. Становление и развитие уйгурской советской печати. Изд-во "Наука" Казахской ССР, 1988. pp. 119-121
  4. ^ Qazaq sovet ėnt︠s︡iklopedii︠a︡sy, Vol. 5. Qazaq sovet ėn︠t︡siklopedi︠ia︡synyn︠ g︡ redak︠t︡si︠ia︡sy, 1974. p. 110