Black Musa (Turkish: Zenci Musa) or Sudanli Zenci Musa Bey (1880âÂÂ1919) was a member of the Special Organization and a volunteer soldier in the Ottoman Empire; he participated in every war involving the empire from the Italo-Turkish War to World War I. He is known as Eà Âref Sencer Kuà Âçubaà Âñ's aide and amir.
Black Musa was born in Crete in 1880. He was originally from Sudan. Upon his father's death, who he was living with in Crete, he moved to Cairo with his grandfather, who was an Ottoman enthusiast, and grew up in a neighborhood with Turks. Musa became fluent in Turkish while living in this neighborhood. He voluntarily participated in the Italo-Turkish War with his grandfather in 1911. While in Tripolitania, he met , who came to Libya to galvanize the local people against the Italians, and became his amir. After the Italo-Turkish War, he participated in the Balkan Wars, the Sinai-Palestine Campaign, the Campaign in South Arabia during World War I, the Gallipoli campaign, and the Raid on the Suez Canal. According to KurdishâÂÂTurkish historian , during the occupation of Istanbul, a British Army general, Charles Harington, offered gold to lure Musa to the side of the British, but Musa did not accept it. He carried out both armed struggles and intelligence activities in the wars he participated in. He died of tuberculosis in 1919 while living in ÃÂsküdar à Âeyh Ata Efendi's . His body was buried in the cemetery next to the . Since the burial place still remains undiscovered, an epitaph was built in his memory in a designated place in the cemetery.
Famed poet, writer, academic, politician, and the author of the Turkish National Anthem, Mehmet ÃÂkif Ersoy, met Black Musa, who was with , in 1915 during his trip to Arabia. Ersoy later wrote the following lines of poetry about Black Musa: