The Kurds are the largest ethnic group in the world without a country
of their own.
Kurds Land and Ecology
The vast Kurdish homeland of about
230,000 square miles is about the areas of Germany and Britain
combined, or roughly equal to France or Texas. Kurdistan consists
basically of the mountainous areas of the central and northern
Zagros, the eastern one-third of the Taurus and Pontus, and the
northern half of the Amanus ranges. The symbiosis between the Kurds
and their mountains has been so strong that they have become
synonymous: Kurds home ends where the mountains end. Kurds as a
distinct people have survived only when living in the mountains. The
highest points in the land now are respectively Mt. Alvand of
southern Kurdistan in Iran at 11,745 feet, Mt. Halgurd in central
Kurdistan in Iraq at 12,249 feet, Mt. Munzur at 12,600 feet in
western Kurdistan and Mt. Ararat at 16,946 feet in northern
Kurdistan, both in Turkey. There are also two large Kurdish enclaves
in central and north central Anatolia in Turkey and in the province
of Khurasan in northeast Iran.The mean annual precipitation is 60-80
inches per year in the central regions and 20-40 inches on the
descent to the lower elevations. Most precipitation is in form of
snow, which can fall for six months of the year, becoming the
resource for many great rivers, such as the Tigris and the Euphrates
in an otherwise arid Middle East. The overall mean annual
temperature is 55-65 degrees Fahrenheit, getting cooler as one
ascends the central massifs. The land, once almost totally forested,
has been massively cleared, especially in this century, with
inevitable soil erosion and parched landscape. Contrary to the heavy
damage sustained by the woodlands, the pasture lands remain in
reasonably good condition and continue to be a productive to a
nomadic herding economy alongside the basic agriculture. Despite its
mountainous nature, Kurdistan has more arable land proportionately
than most Middle Eastern countries. Expansive river valleys create a
fertile lattice work in Kurdistan. This may well explain the fact
that the very invention of agriculture took place primarily in
Kurdistan around 12,000 years ago. The revolution accompanied speedy
domestication of almost all basic cereals and livestocks in the
region(with the notable exception of cows and rice).
Race
Kurds are now predominantly of Mediterranean racial stock,
resembling southern Europeans and the Levantines in skin, general
coloring and physiology. There is yet a persistent recurrence of two
racial substrata: a darker aboriginal Palaeo-Caucasian element, and
more localized occurrence of blondism of the Alpine type in the
heartland of Kurdistan. The "Aryanization" of the aboriginal Palaeo-
Caucasian Kurds, linguistically, culturally and racially, seems to
have begun by the beginning of the 2nd millennium BC, with the
continuous immigration and settlement of Indio-European-speaking
tribes, such as the Hittites, Mitannis, Haigs, Medes, Persian,
Scythians and Alans. The process was more or less complete by the
beginning of the Christian era, by which time the Kurds had absorbed
enough Iranic blood and culture, particularly Median and Alan, to
form the basis physical typology and culturalidentity.
Language
Kurds are speakers of Kurdish, a member of the northwestern
subdivision of the Iranic branch of the Indo-Europian family of
languages, which is akin to Persian, and by extension to other
Europian languages. It is fundamentally different from Semetic
Arabic and Altaic Turkish. Modern Kurdish divides into two major
groups: 1) the Kurmanji group and, 2) the Dimili-Gurani group. These
are supplemented by scores of sub-dialects as well. The most popular
vernacular is that of Kurmanji(or Kirmancha), spoken by about
three-quarters of the Kurds today. Kurmanji divided into North
Kurmanji(also called Bahdinani, with around 15 million speakers,
primarily in Turkey, Syria, and the former Soviet Union) and South
Kurmanji(also called Sorani, with about 6 million speakers,
primarily in Iraq and Iran). To the far north of Kurdistan along
Kizil Irmak and Murat rivers in Turkey, Dimili (less accurately but
more commonly known as Zaza) dialect is spoken by about 4 million
Kurds. There are small pockets of this language spoken in various
corners of Anatolia, northern Iraq, northern Iran and the Caucasus
as well. In the far southern Kurdistan, both in Iraq and Iran, the
Gurani dialect is spoken by about 3 million Kurds. Gurani along with
its two major subdivisions: Laki and Awramani, merit special
attention for its wealth of sacred and secular literature stretching
over a millennium. In Iraq and Iran a modified version of the
Perso-Arabic alphabet has been adapted to South Kurmani (Sorani).
The Kurds of Turkey have recently embarked on an extensive campaign
of publication in the North Kurmanji dialect of Kurmaji (Bahdinani)
from their publishing houses in Europe. these employed a modified
form of the Latin alphabet. The Kurds of the former Soviet Union
first began writing Kurdish in the Armenian alphabet in the 1920s,
followed by Latin in 1927, then Cyrillic in 1945, and now in both
Cyrillic and Latin. Gurani dialects continue to employ the Persian
alphabet without any change. Dimili now uses the same modified Latin
alphabet as North Kurmanji for print.
Religion
Nearly three fifths of the Kurds, almost all Kurmanji-speakers, are
today at least nominally Sunni Muslims of Shafiite rite. There are
also some followers of mainstream Shiitem Islam among the Kurds,
particularly in and around the cities of Kirmanshah, to Hamadan and
Bijar in southern and eastern Kurdistan and the Khurasan. These
Shite Kurds number around half a million. The overwhelming majority
of Muslim Kurds are followers of one several mystic Sufi orders,
most importantly the Bektashi order of the northwest Kurdistan, the
Naqshbandi order in the west and north, Qadiri orders of east and
central Kurdistan, and Nurbakhshi of the south. The rest of the
Kurds are followers of several indigenous Kurdish faiths of great
antiquit and originality, which are variations on and permutation of
an ancient religion that can be reasonably but loosely labeled as
Yardanism or the "Cult of Angels." The three surviving major
divisions of this religion are Yezidism (in west and west-central
Kurdistan, ca 2%of all Kurds), Yarsanism or the Ahl-i Haqq (in
southern Kurdistan, ca 13% of all Kurds), and Alevism or Kizil Nash
(in western Kurdistan and the Khurasan, ca 20%).Minor communities of
Kurdish Jews, Christians and Baha'is are found in various croners of
Kurdistan. the ancient Jewish community has progressively emigrated
to Israel, while the Christian community is merging their identity
with that of the Assyrians.
History
Being the native inhabitants of their land there are no "beginnings"
for Kurdish history and people. Kurds and their history are the end
products of thousands of years of continuous internal evolution and
assimilation of new peoples and ideas introduced sporadically into
their land. Genetically, Kurds are the descendants of all who ever
came to settle in Kurdistan, and not any one of them. A people such
as the Guti, Kurti. Mede, Mard, Carduchi, Gordyene, Adianbene, Zila
and Khaldi signify not the ancestor of the Kurds but only an
ancestor. Archaeological finds continue to document that some of
mankind's earliest steps towards development of agricultural.
domestication of many common farm animals(sheep, goats, hogs and
dogs). record keeping (the token system), development of domestic
technologies (weaving, fired pottery making and glazing), metallurgy
and urbanization took place in Kurdistan, dating back between 12,000
and 8.000 years ago. The earliest evidence so far of a unified and
distinct culture (and possibly, ethnicity) by people inhabiting the
Kurdish mountains dates back to the Halaf culture of 8,000-7,400
years ago. This was followed by the spread of the Ubaidian culture,
which was a foreign introduction from Mesopotamia. After about a
millennium, its dominance was replaced by the Hurrian culture, which
may or may not have been the Halafian people reasserting their
dominance over their mountainous homeland. The Hurrian period lasted
from 6,300 to about 2,600 years ago. Much more is known of the
Hurrians. They spoke a language of the Northeast Caucasian family of
languages (or Alarodian), kin to modern Chechen and Lezgian. The
Hurrians spread far and wide, dominating much territory outside
their Zagros-Taurus mountain base. Their settlement of was
completed-all the way to the Aegean coasts. Like their Kurdish
descendents, they however did not expand too far from the mountains.
Their intrusions into the neighboring plains of Mesopotamia and the
Iranian Plateau, therefore, were primarily military annexations with
little population settlement. Their economy was surprisingly
integrated and focused, along with their political bonds, mainly
running parallel with the Zagros-Taurus mountains, rather than
radiating out to the lowlands, as was the case during the preceding
(foreign) Ubaid cultural period. The mountain-plain economic
exchanges remained secondary in importance, judging by the
archaeological remains of goods and their origin. The Hurrians-whose
name survives now most prominently in the dialect and district of
Hawraman/Awraman in Kurdistan-divided into many clans and subgroups,
who set up city-states, kingdoms and empires known today after their
respective clan names. These included the Gutis, Kurti, Khadi, Mards,
Mushku, Manna, Hatti, Mittanni, Urartu, and the Kassites, to name
just a few. All these were Hurrians, and together form the Hurrian
phase of Kurdish history. By about 4.000 years ago, the first
van-guard of the Indo-European-speaking peoples were trickling into
Kurdistan in limited numbers and settling there. These formed the
aristocracy of the Mittani, Kassite, and Hittite kingdoms, while the
common people there remained solidly Hurrian. By about 3,000 years
ago, the trickle had turned into a flood, and Hurrian Kurdistan was
fast becoming Indo-European Kurdistan. Far from having been wiped
out, the Hurrian legacy, despite its linguistic eclipse, remains the
single most important element of the Kurdish culture until today. It
forms the substructure for every aspects of Kurdish existence, from
their native religion to their art, their social organization,
women's status, and even the form of their militia warfare. Medes,
Scythians and Sagarthians are just the better-known clans of the
Indo-European-speaking Aryans who settled in Kurdistan. By about
2,600 years ago, the Medes had already set up an empire that
included all Kurdistan and vast territories far beyond. Medeans were
followed by scores of other kingdoms and city-statesQall dominated
by Aryan aristocracies and a populace that was becoming
Indo-European, Kurdish speakers if not so already. By the advent of
the classical era in 300 BC. Kurds were already experiencing massive
population movements that resulted in settlement and domination of
many neighboring regions. Important Kurdish polities of this time
were all by-products of these movements. The Zelan Kurdish clan of
Commagene (Adyaman area), for example, spread to establish in
addition to the Zelanid dynasty of Commagene, the Zelanid kingdom of
Cappadocia and the Zelanid empire of PontusQall in Anatolia. These
became Roman vassals by the end of the first century BC. In the east
the Kurdish kingdoms of Gordyene, Cortea, Media, Kirm, and Adiabene
had, by the first century B C, become confederate members of the
Parthian Federation. While all larger Kurdish Kingdoms of the west
gradually lost their existence to the Romans, in the east they
survived into the 3rd century A D and the advent of the Sasanian
Persian empire. The last major Kurdish dynasty, the Kayosids, fell
in AD 380. Smaller Kurdish principalities (called the Kotyar, "mountain
administrators") however, preserved their autonomous existence into
the 7th century and the coming of Islam. Several socio-economic
revolutions in the garb of religious movements emerged in Kurdistan
at this time, many due to the exploitation by central governments,
some due to natural disasters. These continued as underground
movement into the Islamic era, bursting forth periodically to demand
social reforms. The Mazdakite and Khurramite movements are
best-known among these. The eclipse of the Sasanian and Byzantine
power by the Muslim caliphate, and its own subsequent weakening,
permitted the Kurdish principalities and "mountain administrators"
to set up new, independent states. The Shaddadids of the Caucasus
and Armenia, the Rawadids of Azerbaijan, the Marwandis of eastern
Anatolia; the Hasanwayhids, Fadhilwayhids, and Ayyarids of the
central Zagros and the Shabankara of Fars and Kirman are some of the
medieval Kurdish dynasties. The Ayyubids stand out from these by the
vastness of their domain. From their capital at Cairo they ruled
territories of eastern Libya, Egypt, Yemen, western Arabia, Syria,
the Holy Lands, Armenia and much of Kurdistan. As the custodians of
Islam's holy cities of Mecca, Medina and Jerusalem, the Ayyubids
were instrumental in the defeat and expulsion of the Crusaders from
the Holy Land. With the 12th and 13th centuries the Turkic nomads
arrived in the area who in time politically dominated vast segments
of the Middle East. Most independent Kurdish states succumbed to
various Turkic kingdoms and empires. Kurdish principalities, however,
survived and continued with their autonomous existence until the
17th century. Intermittently, these would rule independently when
local empires weakened or collapsed. The advent of the Safavid and
Ottoman empires in the area and their division of Kurdistan into two
uneven imperial dependencies was on a par with the practice of the
preceding few centuries. Their introduction of artillery and
scorched-earth policy into Kurdistan was a new, and devastating
development. In the course of the 16th to 18th centuries, vast
portions of Kurdistan were systematically devastated and large
numbers of Kurds were deported to far corners of the Safavid and
Ottoman empires. The magnitude of death and destruction wrought on
Kurdistan unified its people in their call to rid the land of these
foreign vandals. The lasting mutual suffering awakened in Kurds a
community feeling a nationalism, that called for a unified Kurdish
state and fostering of Kurdish culture and language. Thus the
historian Sharaf al-Din Bitlisi wrote the first pan-Kurdish history
the Sharafnama in 1597, as Ahmad Khani composed the national epic of
Mem-o-Zin in 1695, which called for a Kurdish state to fend for its
people. Kurdish nationalism was born. For one last time a large
Kurdish kingdom-the Zand, was born in 1750. Like the medieval
Ayyubids, however, the Zands set up their capital and kingdom
outside Kurdistan, and pursued no policies aimed at unification of
the Kurdish nation. By 1867, the very last autonomous Kurdish
principalities were being systematically eradicated by the Ottoman
and Persian governments that ruled Kurdistan. They now ruled
directly, via governors, all Kurdish provinces. The situation
further deteriorated after the end of the WWI and dissolution of the
Ottoman Empire. The Treaty of Sevres (signed August 10, 1921)
anticipated an independent Kurdish state to cover large portions of
the former Ottoman Kurdistan. Unimpressed by the Kurds' many bloody
uprisings for independence, France and Britain divided up Ottoman
Kurdistan between Turkey, Syria and Iraq. The Treaty of Lausanne (signed
June 24, 1923) formalized this division. Kurds of Persia/Iran,
meanwhile, were kept where they were by Teheran. Drawing of
well-guarded state boundaries dividing Kurdistan has, since 1921,
afflicted Kurdish society with such a degree of fragmentation, that
its impact is tearing apart the Kurds' unity as a nation. The 1920s
saw the setting up of Kurdish Autonomous Province (the "Red
Kurdistan") in Soviet Azerbaijan. It was disbanded in 1929. In 1945,
Kurds set up a Kurdish republic at Mahabad in the Soviet, occupied
zone in Iran. It lasted one year, until it was reoccupied by the
Iranian army. Since 1970s, the Iraqi Kurds have enjoyed an official
autonomous status in a portion of that state's Kurdistan. By the end
of 1991, they had become all but independent from Iraq. By 1995,
however, the Kurdish government in Arbil was at the verge of
political suicide due to the outbreak of factional fighting between
various Kurdish warlords. Since 1987 the Kurds in Turkey by
themselves constituting a majority of all Kurds in Turkey have waged
a war of national liberation against Ankara's 70 years of heavy
handed suppression of any vestige of the Kurdish identity and its
rich and ancient culture. The massive uprising had by 1995 propelled
Turkey into a state of civil war. The burgeoning and youthful
Kurdish population in Turkey, is now demanding absolute equality
with the Turkish component in that state, and failing that, full
independence. In the Caucasus, the fledgling Armenian Republic, in
the course of 1992-94 wiped out the entire Kurdish community of the
former "Red Kurdistan." Having ethnically "cleansed" it, Armenia has
effectively annexed Red Kurdistan's territory that forms the land
bridge between the Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia
proper.
Geopolitics
Since the end of World War I, Kurdistan has been administered by
five sovereign states, with the largest portions of the land being
respectively in Turkey (43%) , Iran (31%), Iraq (18%), Syria (6%)
and the former Soviet Union (2%). The Iranian Kurds have lived under
that state's jurisdiction since 1514 and the Battle of Chaldiran.
The other three quarters of the Kurds lived in the Ottoman Empire
from that date until its break-up following WWI. The French Mandate
Syria received a piece, and the British incorporated central
Kurdistan or the Mosul Vilayet" and its oil fields at Kirkuk into
their recently created Mandate of Iraq. Northern and western
Kurdistan were to be given choice of independence by the Treaty of
Sevres(August 10, 1920) which dismantled the defunct Ottoman Empire,
but instead they were awarded to the newly established Republic of
Turkey under the term of the Treaty of Lausanne (June 24, 1923). The
Russian/Soviet Kurds had passed into their sphere in the course of
the 19th century when territories were ceded by Persia/Iran. The
Kurds remained the only ethnic group in the world with indigenous
representatives in three world geopolitical blocs: the Arab World
(in Iraq and Syria), NATO (in Turkey), the South Asian-Central Asian
bloc (in Iran and Turkmenistan), and until recently the Soviet bloc
(in the Caucasus, now Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia). As a matter
fact, until the end of the Cold War, Kurds along with the Germans
were the only people in the world with their home territories used
as a front line of fire by both NATO and the Warsaw Pact forces.
Society
The most important single features of Kurdistan society since the
end of medieval times has been its strong tribal organization, with
independence or autonomy being the political status of the land. The
society's process of developing the next stage of societal
convergence-and the creation of a political culture of interest in a
pan-Kurdish polity-was well under way in Kurdistan when it was
decisively aborted with the parcelling out of the country at the end
of the First World War. Tribal confederacies thus remain the highest
form of social organization, while the political process and the
elite remain to large degree tribal. Today, in the absence of a
national Kurdish state and government, tribes serve as the highest
native source of authority in which people place their allegiance
Population
Kurdish lands, rich in natural resources, have always sustained and
promoted a large population. While registering modest gains since
the late 19th century, but particularly in the first decade of the
20th, Kurds vlost demographic ground relative to neighboring ethnic
groups. This was due as much to their less developed economy and
health care system as it was to direct massacres, deportations,
famines, etc. The total number of Kurds actually decreased in this
period, while every other major ethnic group in the area boomed.
Since the middle of the 1960s this negative demographic trend has
reversed, and Kurds are steadily regaining the demographic position
of importance that they traditionally held, representing 15% of the
over-all population of the Middle East in Asia-a phenomenon common
since at least the 4th millennium BC. Today Kurds are the fourth
largest ethnic group in the Middle East, after the Arabs, Persians
and Turks. Their largest concentrations are now respectively in
Turkey (approx. 52% of all Kurds), Iran(25.5%), Iraq (16%), Syria
(5%) and the CIS (1.5%). Barring a catastrophe, Kurds will become
the third most populous ethnic group in the Middle East by the year
2000, displacing the Turks. Furthermore, if present demographic
trends hold, as they are likely to, in about fifty years Kurds will
also replace the Turks as the majority ethnic group in Turkey itself.
There is now one Kurdish city with a population of nearly a million
(Kirminshah) , two with over half a million (Diyarbekir, Kirkuk),
five between a quarter and half a million (Antep, Arbil, Hamadan,
Malatya, Sulaymania), and quarter of a million people (Adiyaman,
Dersim[Tunceli], Dohuk, Elazig[Kharput], Haymana, Khanaqin, Mardin
Qamishli, Qochan, Sanandaj, Shahabad, Siirt and Urfa).
Resource: Kurdish Studies, An
International Journal The Kurdish Library,