: Born in 1893 in Thessaloniki (Selanik), Fatma Çil fled to Anatolia with her husband, Ali Bey, in 1912. During the chaotic journey on crowded trains, the couple lost each other and were never reunited. Fatma later settled in Şarköy and eventually remarried, but she frequently sang this lament for her lost love, often weeping at the line, "Our reunion, oh my love, is left for the afterlife" .
: The recurring refrain, "O bizim kavuşmalarımız ah yarim mahşere kaldı" (Our reunion is left for Judgment Day), highlights the finality of their separation.
The song uses evocative metaphors to describe the pain of those uprooted from their homelands:
: Verses mentioning "rotting in prison" and "hazel eyes fading while looking out the window" symbolize the literal and metaphorical imprisonment of those waiting for a return or a reunion that would never come. Cultural Legacy
: The song is widely recognized as one of the favorite folk songs of Atatürk, who was himself born in Thessaloniki.
: Another narrative associated with the song involves two friends in Thessaloniki, Sabri and Dimitri, who fell in love with women from the opposite community (Sabri with a Greek girl named Angeliki, and Dimitri with a Turkish girl named Şefika). Their forbidden love led to conflict, imprisonment, and eventually permanent separation during the forced migrations. Symbolic Lyrics
(also known as the Selanik Türküsü ) is a poignant Rumelian folk song that captures the deep sorrow of separation, exile, and the population exchange between Turkey and Greece. It was formally compiled and transcribed by Yücel Paşmakçı in 1978 from Fatma Çil , a woman who experienced the migration firsthand. The Story Behind the Song