Who are the Kurds? AT

Azerbaijan
from 500 thousand people
Lebanon Lebanon:
80 thousand people
Russia Russia:
300-500 thousand
Georgia Georgia:
12 thousand people
Armenia Armenia:
80 thousand people
Kazakhstan Kazakhstan:
50-60 thousand people (unavailable link) Retrieved December 13, 2016.
United Kingdom United Kingdom:
37 470 people
Israel Israel:
from 11 to 32 thousand people
Turkmenistan Turkmenistan:
6 thousand people Religion the majority have been Muslim since the 7th century (Sunni, as well as Shiism and Alevism),
Yezidism (among the Yezidis), Christianity and Judaism (among the Lahluhs)

Ethnogenesis

Various hypotheses of the origin of the Kurds are expressed - in particular, the Scythian-Medes. The version about the origin of modern Kurds from the Kurtians who inhabited Northern Mesopotamia and the Iranian plateau is also confirmed by ancient sources (ancient Greek. Κύρτιοι , lat. Cyrtii) . In particular, it is reported about the Kurti tribe, who lived in Persia since ancient times. The Kurtians inhabited the mountainous regions at the junction of Persia and Atropatena of the Media, as well as the Armenian Highlands and Kurdistan, in the Caspian regions and Iranian Azerbaijan, and were a pastoral and robber tribe. According to V. Minorsky, during the time of the ancient Persian monarchy, the Kurds, apparently, were part of the province of Armenia, where they lived in the region of Corduene.

Name of the Kurds ( kwrt) is mentioned in (Karnamak-i Ardasher-i Papakan), but, as the researchers note, in the early Middle Ages it was primarily a socio-economic term that meant among the settled Iranian population nomads living in the tents of the mountaineers in the west of the Iranian plateau and could be applied to any Iranian-speaking tribe that met these characteristics. That is why, until the New Age, under the name of "Kurds" united the Iranian peoples, widely settled in the mountains of Zagros, Upper Mesopotamia and the Armenian Highlands, speaking heterogeneous languages ​​/ dialects: Kurmanji, Zazaks, Sorani, Laks, Kelkhuri, Gorani, Avromani.

On the contrary, the origin of such "Kurdish" languages ​​as Gurani and Zazaks, also belonging to the northwestern subgroup and distributed respectively in the middle Zagros and in the sources of the Tigris and Euphrates, is not connected with the Kurdish dialects proper. These languages ​​originate from the Caspian region and their distribution is associated with the migrations of the Daylemites to the west of the Iranian plateau, where they later entered into close interaction with the Kurds. Guranian and Zazai influences are noticeable in Northern (Kurmanji) and Central Kurdish (Sorani) respectively.

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Ethnic structure and languages

Kurds are a collection of numerous and often heterogeneous tribes named after their eponyms. Tribal affiliation is still very important in social relations in traditional Kurdish society.

From a linguistic point of view, all languages/dialects now called "Kurdish" can be divided into the following groups:

  • Kurdish languages:
    • sorani (southern kurmanji),
    • South Kurdish (Kelhuri, Feili, Laki);
  • Dailemite languages:
    • gurani and avromani,

Despite the fact that both in everyday use and in scientific literature there is often talk of the “Kurdish language” and its dialects, mutual understanding is already very difficult between speakers of Kurmanji and Sorani, the closest Kurdish languages. Most Kurds are bilingual and speak the main language of the state of residence: Turkish, Arabic, Persian and others.

Kurds and Zaza

genetic research

Approximately Y-chromosomal haplogroup reaches 23.5%, haplogroup R1b - 11%, haplogroup R1a - 10.5%, 12% - y and 12.5% ​​- y, 6% - y, 5% - haplogroup , 5, 5% - y, 2% - y.

resettlement

There are currently at least 40 million Kurds [ ] . Most Kurds are settled in the Kurdistan region. Almost 2.5 million Kurds are scattered throughout Europe and America, where they have created powerful and organized communities.

In Turkey

The largest mass of Kurdish ethnic territory occupies the southeast and east of Turkey in the area of ​​Lake Van and the city of Diyarbakır. Separate Kurdish settlements are also scattered throughout Anatolia, large Kurdish diasporas are concentrated in large cities in the west of the country. Expert estimates speak of 20-23% of the country's population, which can be up to 16-20 million people. This number includes the northern Kurmanji Kurds - the main Kurdish population of Turkey, and the Zaza people (speaking the Zazaki language) - about 1.5 million people, as well as a significant proportion of the Turkic-speaking Kurdish tribes who switched to Turkish - over 6 million people). Turkish Kurdistan traditionally has the highest rate of illiteracy in Turkey.

In Iran

The settlement of Iranian Kurds in the provinces of Iran and their percentage of the population of these provinces according to a survey on the mother tongue conducted in 2010 by the Ministry of Culture of the Iranian Islamic Republic

The integration processes that took place in monarchical Iran itself were reflected in the nature of interethnic relations in Iranian Kurdistan. Before the overthrow of the Shah's regime, a certain rapprochement of the nationalities inhabiting the country was guaranteed by the policy of Iranian nationalism. It was aimed at destroying traditional forms of social relations; on the formation of the social structure and economy characteristic of capitalist society; dissemination of pan-Iranian forms of culture; the introduction of the Persian language into all spheres of life, etc. At the same time, the national and cultural needs of the non-Persian peoples of the country were ignored. The socio-political and economic dissatisfaction of the Iranian Kurds, the infringement of their national-state status and other reasons gave rise to claims against the authorities, representatives of the dominant ethnic group (Persian-speaking Iranians), with whom the ethno-cultural consequences of integration processes were associated. Meanwhile, the use of military and repressive institutions allowed the Shah's regime as a whole to maintain a certain balance of interethnic relations.

in Iraq

The Iran-Iraq war, which could have given the Kurds an opportunity to take advantage of the conditions created by the two Gulf countries' preoccupation with each other, has only exacerbated tensions between major Kurdish groups.

In Syria

In Russia and CIS countries

Religion

Also Kurds are christian. These are mainly Catholics and representatives of autocephalous churches: Chaldeans, Assyrians, Syro-Jacobites [ ] . They all speak Aramaic [ ] . Christian Kurds also live in the CIS countries, Europe and America, there are communities in Northern and Western Kurdistan.

Several thousand Kurds practice Bahaism.

Kurdish National Movement

Kurdish fighters in Syria

The geographic location of Kurdish areas in Turkey, Syria, Iran and Iraq is an important factor in determining the "viability" and strength of Kurdish political organizations opposed to the central governments of these countries. The Kurdish problem of settlement demonstrates how the geographical factor negatively affects the ethnic movement in the area of ​​great rivalry for power and inter-regional conflicts. It can be assumed that a solution to the Kurdish problem is not possible in the near future, but some degree of Kurdish autonomy is possible within the genuine federal systems of these states.

The use of the Kurdish language in Turkish media has been banned. The Kurdish alphabet was formed by English, Russian and French scholars in the last century. However, under the pressure of world public opinion, the gradual democratization of the country, and as a result of a decrease in the activity of the PKK, Turkey began to gradually soften the ban on the use of the Kurdish language. From January 2009, Turkey started regular 24-hour television broadcasts in Kurdish.

Currently, the Kurdish issue is one of the key issues in the discussion of Turkey's further European integration. Europe demands greater regionalization and autonomization of the Kurds, as well as respect for their rights in accordance with European standards.

History shows that Kurdish problems usually arose from an attempt to deprive this people, strongly attached to their own traditions, of their cultural and tribal autonomy. On the other hand, doubts arise that the creation of autonomy will be able to contribute to a practical solution to the problem of the Kurds.

Notes

  1. Konda Poll
  2. CIA World Factbook : 18% Kurds out of 81.6 million total population (2014 est.) - 14.7 million
  3. Beverley Milton-Edwards, "Contemporary politics in the Middle East" Polity, 2006. pg 231: "They form a population in all four states, making 23 percent in Turkey, 23 percent in Iraq, 10 percent in Iran and 8 percent in Syria (Mcdowell, 2003, p 3-4)
  4. Estimate based on 15% to 20% of 26,783,383: World Factbook
  5. Volume 2. Dabbagh - Kuwait University. - Iran, pages 1111–1112. // Encyclopedia of Modern Middle East & North Africa. second edition. Volume 1 - 4. Editor in Chief: Philip Mattar. Associate Editors: Charles E. Butterworth, Neil Caplan, Michael R. Fischbach, Eric Hooglund, Laurie King-Irani, John Ruedy. Farmington Hills: Gale, 2004, 2936 pages. ISBN 9780028657691

    Original text (English)

    With an estimated population of 67 million in 2004, Iran is one of the most populous countries in the Middle East. ... Iran’s second largest ethnolinguistic minority, the Kurds, make up an estimated 5 percent of the country’s population and reside in the provinces of Kerman and Kurdistan as well as in parts of West Azerbaijan and Ilam. Kurds in Iran are divided along religious lines as Sunni, Shi "ite, or Ahl-e Haqq.

  6. The World Factbook - Iran. Retrieved April 21, 2008.
  7. UNPO - Iranian Kurdistan
  8. Syria
  9. The Kurdish Diaspora
  10. The Kurdish Diaspora (unavailable link - story) . Retrieved March 31, 2010. Archived from the original on March 23, 2010.
  11. All-Russian population census 2010. Official results with extended lists by national composition of the population and by regions. : cm.
  12. Census-2009 (Kazakh). Archived from the original on April 23, 2015.
  13. Chernin V. Ethnic map of Israel: history, problems and development prospects.
  14. G. Asatrian, Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds, Iran and the Caucasus, Vol.13, pp.1-58, 2009
  15. Schmitt, Rudiger CYRTIANS. Center for Iranian Studies, Encyclopædia Iranica. New York: Columbia University. Retrieved May 9, 2009. Archived from the original on November 18, 2007. (unavailable link since 03-04-2011 )
  16. History of Iran / M.S. Ivanov. - M. : MGU, 1977. - S. 46.

    Of the Iranian nomadic tribes, the most frequently mentioned in ancient sources are the Mards and Kirtin (“Kurtians”), attested in the mountains of Iranian Azerbaijan and the Caspian Sea, in the Armenian Highlands, in Kurdistan, in the south of Zagros.

The history of the development of civilization on our planet continues its movement in a spiral erasing times and entire epochs from memory. But humanity in each historical period tries to reproduce as deeply and accurately as possible certain past events, many of which are riddles and tasks for enlightened thinkers.

In the material of our article, we will try to reveal some historical events about the most ancient people settled in the vast territory of Iraq, Turkey, Syria, Iran and other countries. The people numbering, according to various estimates, almost forty million people. But at the same time not having its own state. We are talking about the Kurds and Kurdistan.

Let us make a reservation right away that the materials of this article do not claim historical and scientific truth Let's leave this important work to learned historians. Our goal is to introduce you to an amazing and proud people, to tell in simple terms about their history and modern life, based on material taken from open public sources.

The title of our article has two questions, let's start with the first

Origin of the Kurdish people

The question of the origin of the Kurdish people is still did not receive a definitive and affirmative answer. Apparently, all existing versions will remain with the right to scientific recognition for our time.

Version one

The ancestral home of the Kurds was the ancient state of Media (V, VI centuries BC). It occupied a fairly vast territory of the northwestern part of Iran.

Some scholarly ethnographers consider the ancestors of the ancient Medes, to whom they include several compactly living Iranian-speaking tribes and possibly pastoralists from Eastern Europe, who crossed the Caucasus and eventually settled across the territory of Central Asia.

Iranian tribes began to establish these territories starting from the 12th century BC and continued until the 5th century BC. After the conquest of Media by the Achaemenid Persians, the Kurds - Medes already failed to restore their statehood. Later, approximately (5th to 9th centuries), Kurdistan will be absorbed by the Arab caliphate.

Second version

This is a variant of the possible history of the origin of Kurdistan, refers us to the period of existence Sumerian civilization, and this is no less, but the end of the IV millennium BC. era. The Kurdish tribes were supposedly part of the Hurrian people.

But there is an important detail here, ancient sources indicate that the Hurrian language is related to the ancient languages ​​of the peoples of the Caucasus. And the modern language of the Kurds has Persian roots. Assimilation of the language could occur due to the long cohabitation of Kurdish tribes under the administrative control of the Persians.

Third variant version

There are also such scientific hypotheses about the ancient origin of the Kurdish tribes. What's in the composition Indo-European group numerous settlers at the end of the first millennium settled part of the Asian territory.

The same group included the Palais. Researchers insist that the Palais formed the basis of the origin of the Armenian people. And after they conquered the territory, the ancient empires of Urartu significantly expanded the boundaries of their statehood.

This is one of the main alleged historical knots of possible interweaving. two ancient cultures Armenian and Kurdish. This theory arose in the same period of the same events in the same territory.

The "Peoples of the Three Seas" had a powerful influence on all the historical events of that time. It suffices to mention just a few of them.

First of all, of course, this was their conquest of the Hittite state, which, in addition to the Hittites, also included the Palayan tribes. As a result, most of the territory of the conquered state joined the Phrygian camp.

This is the historical period of the unification of the Hurrians - Kurds into the Urartian statehood. In the future, it will be a very powerful multinational state of Urartu.

It so pleased history that on a significant coastal and Asian territory, in the geographical proximity of their borders, three powerful state formations of Phrygians, Urartians and Assyrians arose. The tribes of the progenitors of the Kurds played a significant part in the history of development Urartian statehood.

It is simply impossible to squeeze many historical layers of the emergence and development of the ancient Kurdish people into the framework of this article.

Even those grains of material available to the public in our time speak of the Kurds as brave and courageous warriors, hard working and kind people. Let our modern history become more favorable to them and they will finally receive their full-fledged state of Kurdistan.

Few today know who the Kurds are and where they live? But a large number of people belong to the Kurds. Kurdistan is the southwestern territory of the Asian continent, which is inhabited by Kurds in an absolute or relative majority. Kurdistan is not a state-political, but an ethnographic name, since it is located on the territory of four states:


    Today there are Kurds, according to various estimates, from 20 to over 30 million people. There are 14-15 million Kurds in Turkey, about 4.8-6.6 million in Iran, about 4-6 million in Iraq and about 1-2 million in Syria. Almost 2 million Kurds are scattered throughout Europe and America, where they created powerful and organized communities. There are 200-400 thousand Kurds in the countries of the former USSR, mainly in Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    Kurds are an Iranian-speaking people living in the territories of Turkey, Iran, Syria, Iraq, and also partially in the Transcaucasus. The Kurdish people speak two dialects - Kurmanji and Sorani.
    Kurds are one of the oldest peoples in the Middle East. Ancient Egyptian, Sumerian, Assyrian-Babylonian, Hittite, Urartian sources began to report on the ancestors of the Kurds quite early. The well-known orientalist, doctor of historical sciences M. S. Lazarev, wrote that “it is very difficult to find a people who would have lived on their national territory for so long…”. From the point of view of N. Ya. Marr, “the Kurds retain elements of the ancient culture of the Near East because they are descendants of the autochthonous population…” wrote O. Vilchevsky (1-70). Scientists - Academicians N. Ya. Marr, I. M. Dyakonov, V. F. Minorsky, G. A. Melikishvili, I. Chopin, P. Lerkh, Professor Egon von Elktedt, Amin Zaki, Gurdal Aksoy and others among the ancestors the Kurds are called the ancient tribes of the Gutians, Lullubis, Hurrians, Kassites, Mads (Medes), Kardukhs, Urartians, Khalds, Mares, Kirti and other inhabitants of the gray-haired Middle East. Kurds, as descendants of these tribes, have their roots in the distant historical past.

    The Kurds are the largest people without their own state. Kurdish autonomy exists only in Iraq (Kurdish Regional Government of Iraq).

    This people has been fighting for the creation of Kurdistan for more than twenty years. It is worth noting that all world powers are playing the Kurdish card. For example, Israel and the United States, which are allies of Turkey, encourage its fight against the Kurdish movement. Russia, Greece and Syria support the PKK.


    Such interest of other states in Kurdistan can be explained by their interest in the rich natural resources of the territory inhabited by Kurds. Oil is one of the most important resources.

    Due to the rather favorable geographical and strategic position of Kurdistan, foreign conquerors have paid special attention to these lands since ancient times. Therefore, from the time of the formation of the Caliph to the present, the Kurds were forced to fight against the enslavers. It is worth noting that the Kurdish dynasties during the early feudal period had significant political influence in the Middle East and ruled not only in individual principalities, but also in such large countries as Syria and Egypt.

    In the 16th century, a series of ongoing wars began in Kurdistan, the cause of which was Iran and the Ottoman Empire, arguing over the possession of its lands.

    According to the Zohab Treaty (1639), which was the result of these wars, Kurdistan was divided into two parts - Turkish and Iranian. Subsequently, this event played a fatal role in the fate of the peoples of Kurdistan.

    The Ottoman and Iranian governments gradually weakened and then liquidated the Kurdish principalities in order to enslave Kurdistan economically and politically. This led to the strengthening of the feudal fragmentation of the country.

    The government of the Ottoman Empire dragged the Kurds against their will into the First World War, which subsequently led to the ruin of the region and its division into four parts: Turkish, Iranian, Iraqi and Syrian.

    Origin of the Kurds

    The origin of the Kurds is currently a subject of debate and controversy. According to several hypotheses, this people has:


    • Scythian-Median origin.

    • Japhetic.

    • Northern Mesopotamia.

    • Iranian plateau.

    • Persia.

    Obviously, many of the representatives of these areas took part in the formation of the Kurdish people.

    Religion of the Kurds

    There are several religions in Kurdistan. The bulk of the Kurdish population (75%) professes Sunni Islam, there are also Alawite and Shiite Muslims. A small proportion of the population professes Christianity. In addition, 2 million adhere to the pre-Islamic religion of "Yazidism" who call themselves Yezidis. However, regardless of religion, every Kurd considers Zoroastrianism to be his original religion.

    Speaking of the Yezidis, one should always remember:


    • Yezidis are one of the ancient peoples of Mesopotamia, they speak the Kurmanji dialect of the Kurdish language - the culture is identical to Kurdish, the religion is Yezidism.


    • A Yazid is born from a Yezidi Kurdish father, and any decent woman can be a mother.

    • YAZIDISM is practiced not only by Yezidi Kurds, but also by other representatives of the Kurdish people.

    • Yezidis are ethnic Kurds who profess the ancient Kurdish religion Yezidism.

    Sunnism is the dominant branch of Islam. Who are Sunni Kurds? Their religion is based on the "Sunnah", which is a set of rules and principles that were based on the example of the life of the Prophet Muhammad.

    The Kurdish people are the largest in number, having the status of a "national minority". The number of Kurds in the world does not have accurate data. Depending on the sources, these figures vary greatly: from 13 to 40 million people.

    Representatives of this nationality live in Turkey, Iraq, Syria, Iran, Russia, Turkmenistan, Germany, France, Sweden, the Netherlands, Germany, Britain, Austria and many other countries of the world.

    Kurds in Turkey today

    Currently, there are about 1.5 million Kurds living in Turkey who speak the Kurdish language.

    In 1984, the Kurdistan Workers' Party entered into a war (which continues to this day) with the Turkish authorities. Kurds in Turkey today demand the proclamation of a single and independent state - Kurdistan, which will unite all the territories inhabited by Kurds.

    Today, the Kurdish issue is one of the key issues in discussions on the further path of Turkey's European integration. European demands to grant the Kurdish people autonomy and rights in line with European standards remain unfulfilled. These circumstances largely explain the reason why the Turks do not like the Kurds.

    Traditions and customs of the Kurds

    Due to the fact that the Kurds do not have their own official state, a certain political status in the world, not many people know who the Kurds are. The history and culture of this people, meanwhile, is distinguished by its richness and versatility.


    • With the consent of the girl, the groom can kidnap her. If this happens against the will of the parents, he has to take her to the sheikh's house, and, if the relatives overtake the fugitives, they can kill them. If the young people have time to take refuge in the sheikh's house, then the latter gives the bride's parents a ransom, and the parties reconcile.

    • A Kurdish woman has the right to choose the man she loves as her husband. As a rule, the choice of the daughter and parents coincides, however, otherwise, the father or brother can forcibly marry the girl to the person who is considered a worthy candidate for husbands. At the same time, the refusal of the girl to this candidate is considered a terrible shame. It is also considered shameful to divorce your wife, and such cases are extremely rare.

    • A Kurdish wedding can last up to seven days, and its duration depends on the financial situation of the owners. This is very reminiscent of Turkish wedding traditions.

    • If the groom's relatives live far from the bride's relatives, then two weddings are played, and in cases where the young people live at a short distance from each other, they celebrate one big wedding.

    • Kurdish wedding celebrations are lavish and expensive, so the son's parents have been saving money for the wedding for a long time. However, the expenses are paid off by the gifts of the guests, which, as a rule, are sheep or money.

    • Treats for weddings or other celebrations consist of rice and meat. Men and women celebrate holidays separately in different tents.

    • Blood feud is relevant among the Kurds to this day. The reasons for quarrels can be the lack of water, pastures, etc. However, modern Kurds are increasingly resolving conflicts with the help of payment. There are also known cases when a woman or a girl who was given in marriage to the enemy acted as a payment, and the parties were reconciled.


    • Many Kurdish women and girls wear trousers, which is explained by the convenience of riding horses. Jewelry for women are gold and silver coins.

    • In marital relations, the Kurds are monogamous, with the exception of the beks, who may remarry in order to strengthen family ties.

    • This people is also distinguished by its respectful attitude towards representatives of other religions, regardless of what faith the Kurds have, they can participate in religious ceremonies of other faiths.

    • Kurds are also distinguished by their friendliness towards other nationalities, but they do not tolerate situations related to the oppression of their languages, customs and orders.

    Kurdish struggle for independence


    The first attempt to create an independent Kurdish state was made in the 1840s by Badrkhan-bek, the emir of the Bokhtan region (with the capital Jazire). In the year he began to mint a coin on his own behalf and completely ceased to recognize the power of the Sultan. However, in the summer, the city of Bokhtan was occupied by Turkish troops, the emirate was liquidated, Badrkhan-bek himself was taken prisoner and exiled (he died in 1868 in Damascus).

    A new attempt to create an independent Kurdistan was made by Badrkhan's nephew Yezdanshir. He raised an uprising at the end of the year, taking advantage of the Crimean War; he soon managed to take Bitlis, followed by Mosul. After that, Yezdanshir began to prepare an attack on Erzurum and Van. However, the attempt to connect with the Russians failed: all his messengers to General Muravyov were intercepted, and Yezdanshir himself was lured to meet with Turkish representatives, captured and sent to Istanbul (March). After that, the uprising came to naught.

    The next attempt to create a Kurdish state was made by Sheikh Oyidullah in the city of Oyidullah, the supreme leader of the Naqshbandi Sufi order, who was highly respected in Kurdistan both for his position and for his personal qualities, convened in July 1880 in his residence Nehri a congress of Kurdish leaders, at in which he put forward a plan: to create an independent state, and in order to first attack Persia (as a weaker enemy), seize Iranian Kurdistan and Azerbaijan and, relying on the resources of these provinces, fight against Turkey. The plan was accepted, and in August of the same year, the Kurdish invasion of Iranian Azerbaijan began. It was accompanied by an uprising of local Kurdish tribes; detachments of the rebels approached Tabriz itself. However, Obeidullah with his main forces slowed down during the siege of Urmia, was eventually defeated and forced to return to Turkey. There he was arrested and exiled to Mecca, where he died.

    At this time, the ideology of nationalism is increasingly penetrating into Kurdistan from Europe; its propaganda was conducted by the first Kurdish newspaper, Kurdistan, which was issued from the city of Cairo by the descendants of Badrkhan.

    A new upsurge of the national movement in Kurdistan came after the Young Turk Revolution of the year. The nationalist society “Revival and Progress of Kurdistan” arises and immediately gains popularity, the head of which was Sheikh Abdel-Kader, the son of Obeidullah, who returned from exile; after that, the “Kurdistan League” arises, which aimed to create a “Kurdistan beylik” (Kurdish principality) either as part of Turkey, or under the protectorate of Russia or England - there were disagreements in this regard. The sheikh of the Barzan Abdel-Salam tribe, who raised a number of uprisings in 1909-1914, and especially Molla Selim, who became the leader of the uprising in Bitlis in March 1914, was associated with her.

    As for Turkish Kurdistan, the Kurds, who were afraid of falling under the rule of Armenians and Western powers, succumbed to the agitation of Mustafa Kemal, who promised them complete autonomy in a joint Kurdish-Turkish Muslim state, and supported him during the Greco-Turkish war. As a result, in 1923, the Lausanne Peace Treaty was concluded, in which the Kurds were not mentioned at all. This treaty defined the modern borders between Iraq, Syria and Turkey, cutting through the former Ottoman Kurdistan.

    After that, the Kemalist government began to pursue a policy of "Turkization" of the Kurds. The answer was an uprising raised in early 1925 by Sheikh Said Piran. The rebels captured the city of Gench, which Sheikh Said proclaimed the temporary capital of Kurdistan; further, he intended to capture Diyarbekir and proclaim an independent Kurdish state in it. However, the assault on Diyarbekir was repulsed; after that, the rebels were defeated near Gench, the leaders of the uprising (including Sheikh Abdul-Qadir, son of Obaidullah) were taken prisoner and hanged.

    A new uprising of Turkish Kurds began in the city of Ararat mountains. It was organized by the Khoibun (Independence) society; the rebels tried to form a regular army under the command of the former colonel of the Turkish army, Ihsan Nuri Pasha; A civil administration was also created under the leadership of Ibrahim Pasha. The uprising was crushed in the city. The last mass movement of Turkish Kurds was the movement of the Zaza Kurds (a tribe speaking a special dialect, professing Alavism and hating Muslims) in Dersim. Before the city of Dersim enjoyed de facto autonomy. The transformation of this area into the Tunceli vilayet with a special regime of government caused an uprising under the leadership of the Dersim sheikh Seyid Reza. The army corps sent against the rebels was not successful. However, the commander of the corps, General Alpdogan, lured Seyid Reza to Erzurum for negotiations, where the Kurdish leader was arrested and soon hanged. The uprising was suppressed only in the city. As a result of the regime of military-police terror established in Turkish Kurdistan, the ban on the Kurdish language, Kurdish national clothes and the very name "Kurds" (Kemalist scholars declared the Kurds "mountain Turks", allegedly running wild and forgetting the original Turkish language) , as well as mass deportations of Kurds to Western and Central Anatolia, the Kurdish movement in Turkey was destroyed for many years, and the Kurdish society was destructured.

    The center of the Kurdish movement at that time was Iraqi and Iranian Kurdistan. In the city of Suleymaniye, Mahmud Barzanji again raises an uprising. The uprising was crushed, but immediately after that, the uprising of Sheikh Ahmed broke out in Barzan (1931-1932). In 1943-1945, a new uprising led by 1975 took place in Barzan. During the uprising, Barzani managed to achieve formal recognition of the right to autonomy for the Kurds of Iraq; however, in the end he was defeated. The defeat of the uprising provoked a split in the movement of the Iraqi Kurds: a number of left-wing parties broke away from the Democratic Party of Kurdistan, in the summer of 1975 they took shape in the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan under the leadership of Jalal Talabani.

    At the beginning of the year, in connection with the Islamic revolution in Iran, power in Iranian Kurdistan was practically in the hands of the Kurds. However, already in March, armed clashes began between the detachments of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan and the Guardians of the Islamic Revolution sent from Tehran. In early September, the Iranians launched a massive offensive, accompanied by mass executions of residents of the captured villages from 12-13 years old. As a result, government forces managed to take control of the main part of Iranian Kurdistan.

    The Iranian and Iraqi Kurds found themselves in a tragic situation during the Iran-Iraq war of 1980-1988, when the former enjoyed the support of Baghdad, and the latter, Tehran; on this basis, there were armed clashes between detachments of Iraqi and Iranian rebels.

    In March of the year, as a result of the defeat of Iraqi troops, a new uprising broke out in Iraqi Kurdistan. In April, it was suppressed by Saddam Hussein, but then NATO forces, acting under a UN mandate, forced the Iraqis to leave part of Iraqi Kurdistan, where the so-called "Free Kurdistan" was created with a government of members of the KDP and PUK. The final liberation of Iraqi Kurdistan took place after the fall of Saddam Hussein. At present, there exists a formally federal, but in fact semi-independent state, whose president is

    At this time, the Kurdish Workers' Party appeared in Turkey, headed by Abdullah Ocalan, nicknamed "Apo" ("Uncle"), which is why its adherents are called "apochists". After the military coup, its members fled to Syria, where, having received help from the Syrian government, they began an armed struggle against the Turkish state under the slogan "A united, democratic, independent Kurdistan". The first armed action was committed in the year, by the mid-90s . The PKK has already bombarded several thousand (according to its own claims up to 20 thousand) “Guerillas” (guerrillas) and extensive political structures in the Kurdish diaspora around the world with an army. In total, more than 35 thousand people died as a result of hostilities. In Syria, under pressure from Turkey, she refused to support the PKK and expelled Ocalan, which inflicted the strongest blow on the parties, and as it turned out, an irreparable blow; Ocalan was captured by the Turks in Kenya, tried and sentenced to death; he is currently in prison on about. Imraly.

    Currently, the actual center of the Kurdish national movement is Iraqi Kurdistan. There is a widespread hope among Kurds that it will become the basis of a future independent and united "Greater Kurdistan".

Modern researchers of nation-forming processes and the very phenomenon of national identity assert that the most important factor in the formation of any nation is the formation of its own state, through which it can express its fundamental interests and life priorities. That is why the movements of the Basques, Catalans and some other minorities in Western Europe have lived so long. However, the Kurds are the most numerous people, who, obviously, are already ready to formalize themselves as a nation, but still do not have their own state. This nationality has more representatives than many European nations. According to various estimates, the Kurds are from thirty to forty million people living in different countries of our planet.

Who are the Kurds?

This nationality is a combination of a number of tribal groups of Turkic origin. Their homeland and the densest area of ​​modern settlement is the territory in the very east of Asia Minor. Modern Kurdistan (as this region is called) is divided between several states at once: Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Syria. Naturally, the vast majority of representatives of this people profess Sunni Islam. Although there are also Christians: Catholics and even Orthodox Kurds. also widespread in other countries of the Middle East, as well as in Europe and the CIS.

Origin of the Kurds

This people is one of the most ancient in Asia Minor. Its origin today is a highly controversial issue. So, there are opinions that the Kurds are the heirs of the Scythians. Other scientists deduce their genealogy from the tribes of Kurtians who inhabited Persia and Mesopotamia in ancient times. Genetic studies of haplogroups indicate the relationship of modern Kurds with the peoples of the Caucasus: Azerbaijanis, Georgians and Armenians, as well as Jews.

Kurdish issue in Turkey

Actually, it consists in the discrepancy between such a large number of people and their actual status as a national minority in several eastern states. Thus, the Kurds, whose nationality was denied for a long time by the Turkish government, were subjected to cultural oppression until the 2000s. For many years it was banned in the local media. The situation is also aggravated by the fact that the Kurds in Turkey for the most part are at a fairly low stage of social development in comparison with the Turks themselves. At the same time, according to some expert estimates, their number reaches 20% of the country's population. Intensive growth of national consciousness took place here after the entire 20th century, a weak unorganized struggle was waged in Kurdistan. It was able to take shape in earnest only under the influence of Marxist ideology already in the late 1970s - the first half of the 1980s. Under the influence of Kurdish separatist paramilitary organizations and under pressure from European states pushing for the democratization of Turkey, the local government was forced to make concessions in the 2000s. Bans on the use of their language and the manifestation of culture are being relaxed. For some time now, regular TV channels in Kurdish have appeared, and national schools have been opened.

Kurdish issue in other countries of the Middle East

Kurds in Iraq, as in Turkey, live in compact groups in certain territories. For a long time they fought for their identity with the local monarchy, and later with the regime of Saddam Hussein. In the early 1990s, the Kuwait War even almost helped them create their own independent state. However, the attempt of the separatists failed. In the 2000s, he received a very wide autonomy within the state. live in the northern regions of the country, accounting for 9% of the population. The cultural situation of this people here is still worse than in Iraq and Turkey, since the use of the Kurdish language, names, private schools, books and other printed publications is still prohibited in Syria. At the same time, there are local paramilitary organizations that tend to create autonomy.

The Kurds are the world's largest nation without a state. At the same time, the ordinary man in the street knows practically nothing about this proud and mysterious people.

Who are the Kurds?

Kurds are an ancient people uniting many tribes and inhabiting mainly the mountainous region of Western Asia, called Kurdistan. Modern Kurdistan is located in the territories of Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Syria. Kurds lead a semi-nomadic lifestyle, their main occupations are cattle breeding and agriculture.

The exact origin of the Kurds has not been established by scientists. The ancestors of the Kurds are called both the Scythians and the ancient Medes. Scientists prove the closeness of the Kurdish people to the Azerbaijani, Armenian, Georgian and Jewish peoples.

Most Kurds are Muslim. There are also Christians, Jews and Yezidis among them.

The exact number of Kurds is unknown.

In total, from 20 to 40 million Kurds live in the world: 13–18 million in Turkey, 3.5–8 million in Iran, more than 6 million in Iraq, almost 2 million in Syria, and about 2.5 million more Kurds. live in communities in Europe, Asia and America. The exact number of this people is unknown, since in the areas inhabited by Kurds, a population census has never been conducted.

Mark on history

Kurdistan, due to its central geopolitical location in the Middle East, has been a theater of wars of conquest, civil strife and predatory raids since the time of Mesopotamia. During the Arab conquest, most of the Kurds converted to Islam.

Under the Abbasid dynasty of Arab caliphs, which came to power in 750, all Muslims of other nations were equalized in rights with the Arabs. This led to peace in the Caliphate, and representatives of non-Arab peoples had more opportunities to make a political career. Apparently, the Kurds got along well with the Arabs, because their compatriot Jaban Sahabi was an associate of the Prophet Muhammad.

After the collapse of the Caliphate and the invasion of the Turks, the national state of the Kurds was never created. At the same time, natives of this people often became rulers of other peoples. They founded the Ayyubid dynasties, which ruled in the Middle East in 1169-1525, and the Sheddadids, which ruled in Transcaucasia in the 11th-12th centuries.

In the XVI century, Kurdistan was divided between the Turks, who captured almost the entire Middle East, and the Persians. For centuries, the Kurds have played a significant role in the border wars between Turkey and Iran, and the rulers of both countries have not interfered much in the internal affairs of Kurdistan, where tribal leaders managed local affairs.

But the Safavid dynasty founded by the Kurds ruled from the beginning of the 14th century in the Iranian province of Azerbaijan, and in 1501-1722 and 1729-1736 - all of Persia.

The famous eastern ruler and commander Saladin was a Kurd.

Few people know that Sultan Salah ad-Din, the founder of the Ayyubid dynasty, the ruler of almost the entire Middle East and North Africa in the 12th century, was a Kurd. He is known in Europe under the name of Saladin, primarily as a talented commander and leader of the Saracens in the confrontation with the crusaders.

For example, in the battle of Hattin, Saladin utterly defeated the crusaders, the entire color of chivalry either died or was captured by him, including the king of Jerusalem. After the victory, he captured Jerusalem, acting extremely noble for those times in relation to the vanquished: everyone who wished was allowed to leave the city and keep property (which they could take with them) for a small ransom.

Subsequently, despite the variable success of the war with the odious leader of the third crusade, Richard the Lionheart, the peace treaty was signed nevertheless on the terms of Salah ad-Din.

The image of the noble and wise Saladin is often used in films about the Crusades and literature.

Did the Kurdish nation-state never exist?

History knows several national Kurdish states. The most durable of them was the Ardalan Khanate, which was located in the border regions of the Ottoman Empire and Persia and ceased to exist only in the 19th century. At various times, starting from the 16th century, the khanate became a vassal state in relation to the Ottoman Empire or Persia, and at times it was completely independent.

The later state formations created by the Kurds were not recognized by the world community and did not last long.

Ararat Kurdish Republic - the self-proclaimed state of the Kurds, located on the territory of modern Turkey, existed in 1927-1930.

The Kingdom of Kurdistan - a self-proclaimed state created on the territory of modern Iraqi Kurdistan, existed in the years 1921-1924

The Mahabad Republic, a self-proclaimed Kurdish state in Iranian Kurdistan, lasted only 11 months in 1946.

Kurdish question

The organized resistance of the Kurds for the purpose of self-determination and the creation of an independent Kurdistan clearly begins to manifest itself only in the 19th century and intensifies in the 20th century. This was due to the oppression and repression of the Kurdish people by the ruling regimes, sometimes with the aim of forced assimilation. The most serious clashes occurred in Turkey during the reign of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.

Promises made to the Kurds of expanded freedoms and autonomy in exchange for support in the War of Independence were not fulfilled after the victory. The subsequent uprisings were brutally suppressed, the Kurds were officially forbidden to speak their native language, the words "Kurdistan" and "Kurds" were tabooed - since then they were supposed to be called mountain Turks.

Iraqi Kurdistan currently has the most autonomy, which it received after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, and the Kurd Jalal Husamaddin Talabani was the president of Iraq from 2005 to 2014.

The war in Syria, or rather its end and the subsequent possible democratization, opens up the possibility of gaining autonomy for the Syrian Kurds. Turkey remains the most ardent opponent of Kurdish self-determination, fearing Kurdish separatism in Turkey itself.

Who are the Peshmerga?

Often in the news feeds about military events in the Middle East, information about the Peshmerga - Kurdish self-defense units flashes.

Life in conditions of constant danger has taught the Kurds to always be ready for war, and in recent decades, the threat from radical Islamists has increased many times over.

Self-defense units were created at the end of the 19th century and since then have shown themselves in all conflicts that in one way or another affected the territory of Kurdistan. Literally, peshmerga means "facing death."

The image of a modern Peshmerga warrior as a bearded man with an AKM is not true. To date, these are well-equipped fighters, and the units themselves represent an almost regular army with heavy artillery and armored vehicles. Peshmerga formations are recognized as one of the most combat-ready forces in the Middle East and number 150,000 - 200,000 fighters.