Molla Nasraddin (magazine)
Molla Nasraddin #22 (c. 1910) | |
| Editor-in-chief |
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|---|---|
| Staff writers | |
| Categories | Satire |
| Founder | Jalil Mammadguluzadeh, Omar Faig Nemanzadeh and Mashadi Alasgar Bashirzadeh |
| Founded | 1906 |
| Final issue Number | 1933 748 |
| Based in |
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| Language | Azerbaijani |
Molla Nasraddin (Azerbaijani: ملا نصرالدین, Molla Nəsrəddin; Russian: Молла Насреддин, old orthography: Молла Насреддинъ) was an eight-page Azerbaijani satirical periodical published in Tiflis (1906–17), Tabriz (in 1921) and Baku (1922–33). From the second issue of 1931, the magazine was called Allahsyz (Azerbaijani: Allahsız; Russian: Безбожник; meaning "Godless") in the Azerbaijani and occasionally Russian languages. The magazine was "read across the Muslim world from Morocco to East Asia". It was founded by Jalil Mammadguluzadeh (1869–1932) and Omar Faig Nemanzadeh (1872–1937), and named after Nasreddin, the legendary Sufi wise man-cum-fool of the Middle Ages. Columnists wrote articles that "boldly satirized politics, religion, colonialism, Westernization, and modernization, education (or lack thereof), and the oppression of women".