Skip to content
  • n
    • Signed in as
    • Contributions
    • Campaigns
    • Organizations
    • Messages n
    • Account settings
    • Support
    • Sign out
  • Sign in

Ermek Tursunov

Individual
1 campaign Member since May 2025
Browse View Slideshow Add Hide comments Comments ✕

Uh oh!

Your media gallery is empty. That means you're missing a powerful opportunity to bring attention to your cause.

Add pictures now

(You can add videos, too.)

The media gallery is empty.

Add
Comment Delete Set as
Show more

Delete media item?

Are you sure you want to delete this item from the media gallery?

Cancel Delete

Set as ?

The campaign video will appear in social media and email.

The campaign cover picture will appear in social media and email.

The will appear at the top of your campaign page and in social media and email.

Cancel Apply

Reset ?

It won't be used as default in social media and email. The will remain in the media gallery.

It will be removed from the top of your campaign and won't be used as default in social media and email. The will remain in the media gallery.

Cancel Apply

Edit description

Cancel Save

Delete update

Delete this story update?

Any pictures or videos will remain in the campaign's media gallery.

Cancel Delete

Delete milestone

Delete this milestone?

Cancel Delete

 

PART 1

 

The Prayer of Doctor Mukhafal

“…In the latter half of the 13th century, the Egyptian army grew significantly due to the reforms of Sultan Baybars. It comprised 40,000 soldiers, of whom 4,000 were mamluks. By the early 14th century, the Mamluk army numbered 24,000 cavalry stationed in Egypt, 12,400 of them assigned to the emir’s units. In the provinces, there were 13,000 mamluks and 9,000 halqa troops. The most prestigious unit in the Mamluk army was the Sultan’s personal guard...

Baybars substantially increased the salaries of his mamluks.
In addition to monthly pay, they received regular allowances—once or twice a year—for clothing. Each warrior had a daily meat ration and a biweekly stipend for horse feed. On top of this, officers were granted lavish gifts before military campaigns or during the ascension of a new monarch. By the early 15th century, the pay for an ordinary soldier was 3 dinars, while an officer earned 7...”
(From historical records)

Doctor Moufaq Mukhafal.
Professor at Cairo University.
Sorbonne alumnus. Fluent in five European languages.
Seventy-six years old. Energetic as ever. I suspect he runs on solar panels. And here, the sun shines all year round...

We’re traveling across land soaked in the blood of prophets.
This is where the world’s three great religions were born—Christianity, Judaism, and Islam.
Why God chose this land for His divine dialogue, I do not know. But it was here that the longest conversation between man and the Almighty took place.

We drive across the plains of Moab, now a region straddling Israel, Palestine, and Jordan. We’re in search of traces of the mamluks—and there are many to be found.
We’re traveling through a rocky desert, guided by 13th-century maps. Modern ones are useless here.
The borders of the Arab Caliphate were different then.

We’ve passed Al-Maghtas, the baptismal site.
Skirted Bahr Lut—Lot’s Sea, the Dead Sea.
We drove by the fortress at Machaerus (now Mukawir), where Herod Antipas had John the Baptist beheaded.
Passed through Umm al-Jimal, a ghost city built entirely of black basalt.

These men—once slaves—eventually became defenders of their new homeland. And over time, they transformed from servants into sovereigns of this blessed land, leaving behind monuments to their greatness.
What could be nobler than that?
And yet, somehow, all of it has faded away.

Strange.
I don’t know if God heard me.
But the professor and I had to keep moving.

We were expected in the village of Sandanaya.
That’s already Syria.
In its central square stand two houses of God: a church and a mosque.
Both were completed by the mamluks…

Support this project

 

Following the Footsteps of Mamluk History

Ermek's activity

Nothing to show yet.
Show more

Ermek's campaigns

Telling the Legend of the Mamluk — From the Steppes to a Great Story

Discover the epic true story of a boy from the Great Steppe who became Sultan of Egypt. Help us bring Mamluk to the world — a powerful novel about freedom, identity, and Central Asian heritage. Join our campaign today!

$1,025 raised of $40k goal
28 Weeks running
Start a campaign like this

Profile privacy settings

Public profiles are indexed by Google and other search engines.
Show the number of campaigns run, contributions received, total raised, and date the organization started with FundRazr.
Show a chronological feed of contributions, campaigns milestones, etc.

Stats and activity can only be shown when the profile is public.

It might take up to 3 minutes until changes appear for visitors.

FundRazr
Laser-focused on your fundraising success
  • Nonprofits and Movements
  • Fiscal Sponsors
  • White Label Crowdfunding
  • Peer-to-Peer Fundraising
  • Donation Form
  • PayPal Fundraising
  • Corporate Responsibility
  • School Fundraising
  • Sports Fundraising
Powered by ConnectionPoint
  • About
  • Platform Tour
  • Help
Start your free campaign
  • Support
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
Powered by ConnectionPoint®