right|thumb|300x300px|Authorities and a journalist from the United States posing with the bodies of Hekimoğlu and friend Alan Osman after their death in a shootout with arresting officers. Hekimoğlu's body is on the right. Hekimoğlu İbrahim (died 26 April 1913), known by his epithet Hekimoğlu ("son of a physician" in Turkish), was a Turkish outlaw and a folk hero. He was born in Fatsa, Ordu, Ottoman Empire (today's Blacksea region in Turkey)
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right|thumb|300x300px|Authorities and a journalist from the United States posing with the bodies of Hekimoğlu and friend Alan Osman after their death in a shootout with arresting officers. Hekimoğlu's body is on the right. Hekimoğlu İbrahim (died 26 April 1913), known by his epithet Hekimoğlu ("son of a physician" in Turkish), was a Turkish outlaw and a folk hero. He was born in Fatsa, Ordu, Ottoman Empire (today's Blacksea region in Turkey)
==Early years== According to the Turkish historians Mithat Sertoğlu and Ayhan Yüksel, Hekimoğlu İbrahim grew up in a Turkish farming family in the Yassıtaş village of Fatsa. In the early 1900s, while he was working for the local Chveneburi (Muslim Georgian communities who migrated to the lands of the Ottoman Empire as a result of the pressures of the Tsarist Russian Empire as a result of the Russo-Turkish War) landowner, Sefer Agha, he fell in love with his daughter, Fadime. Soon after, Fadime and İbrahim began to meet in secret. One day, a local Chveneburi man, Yusuf, saw the two lovers together and told them their meeting violated the social and religious code of the Chveneburi community, where, in those days, a single girl was forbidden from speaking to a man who was not a close relative.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).