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Kurdish 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 pasturelands 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 latticework 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 colouring 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 Ironic blood and culture, particularly Median
and Alan, to form the basis physical typology and cultural identity.
Language
Kurds are speakers of Kurdish, a member of the northwestern subdivision of
the Ironic branch of the Indo-European family of languages, which is akin
to Persian, and by extension to other European languages. It is
fundamentally different from Semitic 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, about 3 million Kurds speak the Gurani dialect.
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, Vol. 5,
Numbers 1-2 Spring-Fall 1992.
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