In the novel, Nayman Ana, who appears as Jolaman's mother, is killed by her son. This is such a torture that the person cannot remember their mother, father, or even themselves. As a result, the completely mankurtized individual only listens to the person who mankurtized them. This method of torture persisted for many years in Turkistan.
However, later on, this concept transformed from something concrete to something abstract and began to be used in our century to describe "people who cannot think or make decisions on their own." Although this method of torture may not exist in practice today, the idea is still applied as a form of assimilation policy. The concept of mankurt has found its place in social psychology literature as a term representing "social identity transformation and alienation from one's roots."
The mankurt legend also appears in the famous Kyrgyz epic "Manas," where it is stated: "Shall we make him a mankurt by placing the skin of a young camel on his head?"
As can be seen, "mankurt" is a concept quite familiar to the Turkic world. Both Russians and Chinese have occasionally applied this method of assimilation. This term has even reached Anatolia, with a film titled "Mankurt" made in 1990.