Muhammed Hamdi Yazñr also known as Elmalñlñ Hamdi Yazñr and Elmalñlñ (1878 â 27 May 1942) was a Turkish Maturidi theologian, logician, Qur'an translator, Qur'anic exegesis scholar, Islamic legal academic, philosopher and encyclopedist.
He was born in 1878, in Elmalñ district of Antalya province, then in the Ottoman Empire, and now in Turkey. He is nicknamed after his birthplace: Elmalñlñ. Elmalñlñ means "from Elmalñ" or "born in Elmalñ" in Turkish. His father, Hoca Numan Efendi, who is also a scholar of Islam, was from the Yazñr village of Gölhisar district of Burdur province. He is from Yazir sub-branch of Oghuz branch of Turkish nation. Hoca Numan Efendi, the father of Muhammed Hamdi, went to the Elmalñ district of Antalya for education when he was a child and settled there. Hoca Numan Efendi worked as a head clerk of lawsuit of the district. Yazñr's mother Fatma Hanñm was the daughter of Esad Efendi, who was a scholar of Islam living in Elmalñ.
After completing primary and secondary education in Elmalñ, to study Islamic sciences, in 1885, Yazñr went to Istanbul which was the capital city of the Ottoman Empire at the time. He completed his university education in Bayezid Madrasah. Then he completed his education in Mekteb-i Nuvvab and became a Qadi (judge). He also received Islamic calligraphy courses from Sami Efendi and Bakkal Arif Efendi. He learned Arabic, Persian, and French during his education. He was as fluent in French as in Arabic. He translated some French books to Turkish, one of them being Gabriel Seailles's Histoire de la philosophie.
Muhammed Hamdi Yazñr became a Qadi (judge) after completing his education in Mekteb-i Nuvvab. He worked as a full-time academic in Bayezid Madrasah from 1905 to 1908. Then, he got in the service of Sheikh ul-Islam of the time and started lecturing in Mekteb-i Mülkiye, Medreset-ul-Vaizin and Süleymaniye Madrasah. He gave "judgement of estates in mortmain" courses in Mekteb-i Mülkiye, logic courses in Süleymaniye Madrasah and fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence) in Medreset-ul-Vaizin (madrasah of preachers). He also served in the Darü'l-Hikmeti'l-ðslâmiye (high council of consultation working for Sheikh ul-Islam). After a while, he became the president of the council.
When he was working in service of Sheikh ul-Islam, the Committee of Union and Progress prepared a coup against the Sultan Abdul Hamid II. Yazir wrote the symbolic fatwa for the termination of the reign of Abdul Hamid II. He became a member of the senate of the Ottoman Parliament for Antalya. He strongly opposed CUP which held a nationalist and militarist position. Moreover, he served as Foundations (Vakñflar) Minister in the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed VI's Damat Ferid Pasha Cabinet.
When the republic was founded, he was giving logic courses in Medrese-t-ül Mütehassisin (a postgraduate school). When Mustafa Kemal's government abolished the medreses and replaced them with special Imam Hatip Schools, he started working for writing the first modern Turkish translation of the Quran, under Atatürk's orders. Later, he studied for 20 years in solitude. He died of cardiac deficiency on 27 May 1942 in Erenköy district of Istanbul. He is buried in Sahrayñ Cedit MezarlñÃÂñ (Sahrayñ Cedit Cemetery) in Kadñköy in Istanbul.
Muhammed Hamdi Yazñr worked on logic, philosophy, Islamic jurisprudence, and Islamic theology. In his philosophical works, he opposed the prevailing Western opinion that the human mind on its own is enough for reaching the absolute truth. He held the position that faith and mind together are capable of comprehending truth. In that case, his thinking is very similar to the 11th century Persian scholar al-Ghazali. He worked on Qur'anic exegesis in Maturidi context. He also worked on a dictionary of law. Additionally he translated western papers into Turkish.