Bible translations into Turkish
Old translation
The Bible was first translated into Ottoman Turkish in the 17th century by Wojciech Bobowski, a Polish convert to Islam also known as Ali Bey. The New Testament from his manuscript was printed in Paris in 1819, then revised and printed with the Old Testament in 1827. A new translation was published in Istanbul in 1878 and entitled Kitabı Mukaddes ("Holy Book"). Revised several times, this was the only Bible in the Arabic alphabet of Ottoman Turkish that stayed in print until the end of the Ottoman period. In addition, Armeno-Turkish and Graeco-Turkish Bibles were produced in the Turkish spoken by these Ottoman minority peoples and written in their very different alphabets.
Modern translations
Following Atatürk's orthographic reforms in 1923, the Bible was rewritten in the new Latin alphabet. This project was completed in 1941. However, as the Turkish authorities were determined to remove as many foreign words from Turkish as possible, the language consequently underwent a dramatic transformation. In just sixty years, the language went through the equivalent of three hundred years of changes, thus many foreign words found in the old Turkish Bible were no longer used. Because of this the United Bible Society and the Translation Trust joined together to produce a translation suited to the new language. This work is a colloquial version. The translators included Ali Simsek, Behnan Konutgan and Mahmud Solgun. The translation consultants included the Rev. Dr. Manuel Jinbachian and Dr. Krijn van der Jagt. In 1989 the New Testament was published, one journalist saying the work "flows like music." The New Testament edition is called İNCİL: İncil'in Çağdaş Türkçe Çevirisi.[1] The complete Bible was dedicated on October 21, 2001.[2] It has the title, KUTSAL KİTAP Yeni Çeviri / Eski ve Yeni Antlaşma (Tevrat, Zebur, İncil)[3]
A Turkish translation of the New Testament into simplified language was published in 2012, with the title, Halk Dilinde İncil: Sadeleştirilmiş İncil Tercümesi.[4] The publication was launched at a reception at the Prestige Elite Hotel in Istanbul.[5] The publisher is called Yeni Yaşam Yayınları, which translates in English as New Life Publications.
In 2011, an organization published a Turkish translation of the Gospel of Matthew, which used a paraphrase methodology. This was part of a wider controversy that arose among several mission agencies during 2012 with regard to how to translate certain words and phrases at the heart of Christian belief.[6]
Thomas Cosmades translated the New Testament into Turkish in 2010.[7]
Jehovah's Witnesses released a translation of the Bible into Turkish, Kutsal Kitap Yeni Dünya Çevirisi, in 2008.[8]
Style comparison
Translation | John (Yuhanna) 3:16 |
---|---|
Old, transliterated translation | Zira Allah dünyayı öyle sevdi ki, biricik Oğlunu verdi; ta ki ona iman eden her adam helâk olmasın, ancak ebedi hayatı olsun. |
Lütuf Yayınları | Çünkü Allah dünyayı öyle sevdi ki, biricik oloğımış olan Oğlu'nu verdi; öyle ki, O'na ıman eden herkes mahvolmasın, ama sonsuz hayatı olsun. |
Modern Translation (1989) | Çünkü Tanrı dünyayı o kadar çok sevdi ki, biricik Oğlunu verdi. Öyle ki, O'na iman edenlerin hiçbiri mahvolmasın, ama hepsi sonsuz yaşama kavuşsun. |
Halk Dilinde İncil (2012) | Allah dünyayı öyle çok sevdi ki, biricik semavî Oğlu'nu feda etti. Öyle ki, O'na iman eden helâk olmasın, ebedî hayata kavuşsun. |
Thomas Cosmades translation | Çünkü Tanrı dünyayı o denli sevdi ki, biricik Oğlu’nu verdi. Öyle ki, her kim O’na iman ederse mahvolmasın, sonsuz yaşama kavuşsun. |
Kutsal Kitap Yeni Dünya Çevirisi | Tanrı dünyayı öyle sevdi ki, biricik oğlunu verdi; ona iman eden hiç kimse yok olmasın, hepsi sonsuz yaşama sahip olsun diye bunu yaptı. |
References
- ↑ http://www.amazon.com/Turkish-Testament-Incilin-Cagdas-Cevirisi/dp/B007YGQ656
- ↑ UBS Special Report 27, Romania & Turkey - November 2001 #16
- ↑ http://www.amazon.com/Turkish-Brownish-Bonded-Leather-Antlasma/dp/B007YQ26QE/
- ↑ Halk Dilinde İncil
- ↑ Halk Dilinde İncil Tanıtıldı/
- ↑ Wycliffe wades into wild waters
- ↑ The battle for accurate Bible translation in Asia Feb 25 2012 "Thomas Cosmades, a Turkish Christian who translated the New Testament into Turkish from the original Greek, mailed a letter to Frontiers at the end of 2007 after he saw a copy of the Turkish Matthew. (Several hundred were printed before the official publication in 2011). Cosmades died in 2010, at age 86, just after he published a new edition of his New Testament. In his letter he wrote that he was "highly disquieted" by the paraphrased Matthew and proceeded to analyze the debatable phrases in detail. "
- ↑ http://www.jw.org/tr/yay%C4%B1nlar/kutsal-kitap/nwt/kitaplar/