Ğälimcan İbrahimov

After İbrahimof was expelled from Ğäliä, he collaborated with various Tatar-language newspapers, such as Älislax, Yoldız, Waqıt, and Añ, and worked as a teacher in modern-day Qazaqstan, Ural, and vicinities of Ästerxan.

[1] In 1912–1913, İbrahimov attended Kiev University as a free listener but was arrested by the police for participating in the underground Muslim revolutionary circle and remained under surveillance until the February Revolution.

After the February Revolution, İbrahimov, together with Fatix Säyfi-Qazanlı and Şärif Sünçäläy began to publish a newspaper called İrek (Freedom); the same year he was elected to Millät Mäclese, where he was a member of the Tupraqçılar (supporters of territorial autonomy) faction and participated in the activities of its legislative and financial commissions.

He retired in 1927 due to illness in 1927 and lived in Yalta (Crimea) until 1937, when he was arrested as a part of falsified case of "right-wing Trotskyite anti-soviet nationalist organization."

[2] Other works indclude Yäş yöräklär (Young hearts, 1912), Bezneñ könnär (Our days, 1919), Qazaq qızı (Kazakh girl, 1924), Tirän tamırlar (Deep roots, 1928) novels, Tatar xatını nilär kürmi (Tatar woman's fate, 1910), Qızıl çäçäklär (Red flowers, 1921), Ädämnär (People, 1923, dedicated to events related to the famine in the Volga area) stories, Yaña keşelär (New people, 1920) play, etc.