Since September 26, 1923, the first sample of the Azerbaijani emigrant press - the magazine "Yeni Kafkasya" was published in Istanbul.
[1] The main objective of this magazine, published by the founder of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic (ADR), Mammad Amin Rasulzadeh, was to support the struggle for national independence.
[2][3][4] In the first twenty issues of "Yeni Kafkasya" the text was written in Arabic, in the next 10 - in Latin.
However, the compilations "Azeri Turk" (1928-1930), "Yashil Yarpag" (1928), "Odlu Yurd" (1929-1931) and the newspaper "Bildirish" (1930-1931) continued to be published in Istanbul.
[7][8] There were also articles published by Azerbaijani researcher Mirza Mammadzadeh: "The eight-year journey" ("Yeni Kafkasya", 1926, No.
[11] Azerbaijani emigrants used to publish their works such countries as Turkey ("Azerbaijani Turks", "Khazar", Istanbul, 1990), Sweden ("Araz", Lund, 1991; "Azerbaijan", Stockholm), Great Britain ("Aydinlig", 1988, London; "Land of lights", 1988, Edinburgh), Germany ("Azer", Berlin, 1990; "Native Language", 1984, Bonn; "Savalan", 1967, Berlin, "Erk", 1975), Spain ("Dede Gorgud", 1988, Madrid), Belgium ("Emigrant", 1984, Brussels; "Fiery Motherland", 1992, Brussels), Russian Federation ("AzerRos", "Azerbaijan: XXI century", "Voice of the nation", "Azerbaijani diaspora", "Leisure", Moscow; "Azerbaijani media", Ivanovo; "Azerbaijan", Yekaterinburg; "Nasha gazeta", Kemerovo; "Yurd", Saratov;" Inam", St. Petersburg; "Azerbaijan", Vladivostok; "Derbent", Derbent), Estonia ("Hearth", Tallinn), Ukraine ("Savalan", Dnepropetrovsk; "Echo of Azerbaijan", "Voice of Azerbaijan", Kiev; "Nation", Simferopol), Moldova ("Araz", Chisinau).