Ayaz İshaki

10 February] 1878 — 22 July 1954), better known by the Turkish form Muhammed Ayaz İshaki,[3] was a leading figure of the Tatar national movement, author, journalist, publisher and politician.

According to researcher Azat Akhunov, İshaki believed that the progress of the Tatar nation was possible only in close cooperation with the Russian world, primarily its enlightened part.

[8] İsxaqi[9] (Iskhakov) was born in 1878 in the village of Yaushirma near Kazan to a Mishar Tatar parents, father Ğiləcetdin and mother Qaməriyə.

Throughout his life İshaki traveled to Poland, Germany, Japan, China and Turkey where he tried to establish Tatar-language press and unite disparate Tatar émigré communities.

When İshaki organized a memorial service for Idel-Ural State in Warsaw, a few Finnish Tatars took part; among them Aisa Hakimcan and Gibadulla Murtasin.

Ayaz İshaki, Said Şamil and Osman Kocaoğlu . (Warsaw, 1938).