Turkish-German surname used as a given name, from Turkish 'öz' meaning 'essence' or 'true self.'
Ozil — also rendered Özil with the Turkish umlaut — is a name rooted in the Turkic linguistic tradition, where the element "öz" carries a meaning of remarkable depth: "essence," "core," "true self," or "one's own." In Turkish, "öz" appears in compound words conveying authenticity and inner truth — özsaygı means self-respect; özgürlük, freedom. As a name element, it suggests a person who is genuinely themselves, undiluted, real.
The name became widely recognized internationally through Mesut Özil, the German-Turkish attacking midfielder who won the FIFA World Cup with Germany in 2014 and was widely considered one of the most technically gifted playmakers of his generation. Ozil's career — and the controversies around his retirement from the German national team in 2018, citing racial discrimination — made his name a flashpoint for broader conversations about identity, migration, belonging, and what it means to be German or Turkish in a globalized world. In this sense, the name Özil became culturally charged beyond football, associated with questions that millions of dual-heritage families navigate daily.
It is a name that carries history not just centuries old but decades new. For parents choosing Ozil as a given name today, it carries dual resonance: the ancient Turkish philosophical depth of its root meaning, and the contemporary cultural weight of its most famous bearer. It is a strong, two-syllable name that works across languages — recognizable in German, English, Arabic, and Turkish contexts alike. It honors a heritage without being obscure, and its meaning — essence, true self — is arguably the most beautiful aspiration any parent could hold for a child.