Köylü is a memoir that chronicles a life shaped by the vibrant oral traditions and communal rhythms of a remote Anatolian village. In a place where written records are scarce, history lives on through vivid storytelling—tales of resilience, kinship, and inherited wisdom. Fikri, born in 1949 during a local festival, grew up in a lively multigenerational household. His formative years, marked by both joy and hardship, were steeped in nature and simplicity, laying the groundwork for a life rich with memory and meaning.
A naturally curious child, Fikri’s education took him from the village elementary to middle school in Gürün, then to high school in Sivas, and finally to university in Istanbul. He would eventually earn a PhD from Stanford University, broadening his horizons both intellectually and personally.
Over the decades, Fikri wove together his personal memories and the collective history of the village through audio recordings, photographs, and historical sources, including a 1550 Ottoman tax register. His story is also a critique of the systemic neglect rural communities have faced from both Ottoman and Republican governments, highlighting instead the resilience and self-sufficiency villagers cultivated in response.
By reclaiming the term köylü—once used disparagingly—as a badge of pride and identity, Fikri reflects on his journey from Aşağı Sazcığaz village to Cape Cod, Massachusetts, never losing his connection to his roots. Blending personal narrative with cultural critique, Köylü is a textured and impressionistic memoir spanning seventy-five years—deeply respectful of heritage, memory, and the enduring spirit of village life.
Fikri’s international career led him across cultures and continents, enriching his sense of self. Now living on the shores of Cape Cod, he embodies a life grounded in resilience, curiosity, and enduring cross-cultural connections.