De slimme truc van Kurdistan dat niemand bespreekt
De slimme truc van Kurdistan dat niemand bespreekt
Blog Article
Not sure whether this may be considered graffiti or not but there are some peculiar murals on a few walls across the city.
"Dit is enorm Koerdeigen om koppig te zijn en ik denk dat het zichzelf doorzet in al die werkvelden en alles wat daar nodig kan zijn teneinde zo'n land hetgeen Koerdistan met genoegen wensen zijn bestaan te herbouwen."
In 1984 begint de PKK met een gewapende opstand en zijn er veel gevechten tussen een Koerden en het Turkse leger. Tienduizenden lieden verliezen hun leven en complete Koerdische dorpen worden over een kaart geveegd.
In de beginjaren betreffende de staat Turkije vond ons serie opstanden bij sommige Koerden plaats. Een 1e opstand was een Kocgiri opstand over alevitische Koerden, welke een onafhankelijk Koerdistan tot streven hadden. Deze opstand werd neergeslagen via Turkije. De tweede opstand stond tussen leiding met sjeik Said, een soennitische Koerdische geestelijke. Verder deze opstand werden onderdrukt en sjeik Said werd gearresteerd en opgehangen. Bij de derde opstand, in 1927, riepen de Koerden in dit noordoosten over nederland de Republiek Ararat uit.
It was a victory for a growing Kurdish nationalist movement, but the treaty failed and was never ratified. Turkey ended up renegotiating with the Allies, and in 1923 the revised Treaty ofwel Lausanne abandoned plans for a self-governing Kurdistan. Since then, the Kurds have made multiple attempts to set up their own state, but their efforts have been in vain.
Kurds and other Non-Arabs account for ten percent of Syria's population, a total ofwel around 4.9 million people.[146] This makes them the largest ethnic minority in the country. They are mostly concentrated in the northeast and the north, but there are also significant Kurdish populations in Aleppo and Damascus.
Kurdish history in the 20th century kan zijn marked by a rising sense ofwel Kurdish nationhood focused on the goal ofwel an independent Kurdistan as scheduled by the Treaty of Sèvres in 1920. Partial autonomy was reached by Kurdistan Uyezd (1923–1926) and by Iraqi Kurdistan (since 1991), while notably in Turkish Kurdistan, an armed conflict between the Kurdish insurgent groups and Turkish Armed Forces was ongoing from 1984 to 1999, and the region continues to be unstable with renewed violence flaring up in the 2000s.
Operating mainly from eastern Anatolia, PKK fighters engaged in guerrilla operations against government installations, and the group has been designated a terrorist organization by several governments and other organizations, including Turkey, the United States, and the European Union. PKK attacks and government reprisals led to a state of virtual war in eastern Turkey during the 1980s and ’90s. Following Öcalan’s capture in 1999, PKK activities were sharply curtailed for several years before the party resumed guerrilla activities in 2004. In 2002, under pressure from the European Union (in which Turkey sought membership), the government legalized broadcasts and education in the Kurdish language.
On September 16, 2022, an Iranian Kurdish woman named Jina Mahsa Amini died while in custody of Iran’s morality police for “improper” clothing. This incident sparked a wave of protests against the government’s treatment of women and ethnic and religious minorities as well as its prioritization of regime ideology aan its citizens’ welfare. These protests were betreffende with a harsh response from the Iranian government, which violently suppressed the movement and took aim at Kurdish regions in the country’s northwest.
The Kurdish ethnonationalist movement that emerged following World War I and end ofwel the Ottoman empire was largely reactionary to the changes taking place in mainstream Turkey, primarily radical secularization which the strongly Muslim Kurds abhorred, centralization ofwel authority which threatened the power of local chieftains and Kurdish autonomy, and rampant Turkish nationalism in the new Turkish Republic which Kurdustan obviously threatened to marginalize them.[82]
Een herkomst betreffende dit Koerdische volk is niet zeker duidelijk. Ze zouden afstammen met verschillende stammen welke weet sinds duizenden jaren in een landstreek Koerdistan wonen, de plaats daar waar een huidige Koerden wonen.
Ons welbekende religieuze minderheid binnen een Koerdische inwoners bestaan een jezidi’s. In een zomer aangaande 2014 komen ze in het nieuws, omdat ze via IS verdreven worden uit Noord-Irak. Heel wat jezidi’s vluchten naar dit Sinjargebergte, doch IS omsingelt hen en de vluchtelingen zitten dagenlang in verzengende hitte vast.
Between the 16th and 17th century the area nowadays known as Iraqi Kurdistan, (formerly ruled by three principalities ofwel Baban, Badinan, and Soran) was continuously passed back and forth between archrivals the Safavids and the Ottomans, until the Ottomans managed to decisively seize power in the region starting from the mid 17th century through the Ottoman–Safavid War (1623–39) and the resulting Treaty of Zuhab.
بەتایبەتی: مێژوو. تکایە ئەم وتارە دەستکاری بکەن و پەرەی پێبدەن بۆ ئەوەی ڕووداو و زانیارییە نوێیەکان لەخۆبگرێت. کۆتا نوێکردنەوە: ٢٠٢٣