Career
He wrote both in Persian and late Chagatay. Fitrat was born in Bukhara. In 1909, he went to Istanbul to study literature and history.
He returned in 1914, and became involved in cultural activities.
Fitrat was involved with the Yeni Bukharlylar or Young Bukharians, a revolutionary group modeled on the Young Turks movement which was active with the Bolsheviks during the Russian Revolution. In 1920, he became chief minister of economics and minister of education in the Bukharan People"s Soviet Republic, but was ousted in 1923.
He then worked as a scholar of Central Asian Turkic culture (a practice considered criminal in the Soviet Union), before being arrested in 1937 as part of the Great Purge. He was executed in 1938.