Kurdên Kafkasyayê | |
---|---|
Total population | |
Unknown | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Russia and Kazakhstan | |
Languages | |
Kurdish (Kurmanji), Azeri, Armenian, Georgian, Russian and Kazakh | |
Religion | |
Sunni Islam, Shia Islam, Christianity and Yazidism. | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Kurds, Yazidis, and other Iranian peoples |
Caucasian Kurds are ethnic Kurds who come from or live in the region of the Caucasus. The first Kurdish presence in the Caucasus region can be traced back to the middle of the 10th Century. [1] Some groups of Caucasian Kurds were deported to Central Asia in 1937, 1938, and 1944 by the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin, with most of their descendants now residing in Kazakhstan. [2] The total number of Caucasian Kurds inside and outside the Caucasus region is unknown.
According to the latest Armenian Census, 32,742 Kurds live in Armenia as of 2022. [3] They mostly live in western Armenia (not to be confused with historical Western Armenia) and speak the Kurmanji dialect of Kurdish. The majority of the Kurdish Armenian population are Yazidis. [3]
According to the latest Georgian Census, 20,843 Kurds live in Georgia as of 2002. [4] They speak Kurmanji and mostly live in Tbilisi and Rustavi. [5]
In the Azerbaijan SSR, the administrative unit of Kurdistan Uezd had a population which was 74% Kurdish and 26% Azeri. [6]
In the entire Soviet Union in 1959, there were 26,000 Kurds in Armenia, 16,000 in Georgia and more than 14,000 in Central Asia. [7]
Country | Number | Year | Source |
---|---|---|---|
Armenia | 32,742 | 2022 | [3] |
Azerbaijan | 70,000 | 2011 | [8] |
Georgia | 20,843–60,000 | 2014 | [9] |
Kazakhstan | 49,355 | 2023 | [10] |
Russia | 50,701 | 2021 | [11] |
The latest Armenian census from 2022 [3] recorded 31,079 Yazidis and 1,663 non-Yazidi Kurds. In Armenia, Yazidis and Kurds are seen as two different ethnic groups.
In Georgia, Yazidis are seen as part of the Kurdish ethnicity by the Georgian government. The number of Yazidis in Georgia has steadily declined since 1989, from 30,000 in 1989, down to 18,000 by 2002, and then further down to 6,000 by 2015. [12]
The Shaddadids were the first Kurds who lived in the Caucasus, hailing from the Hadhabani Tribe, which itself occasionally had a presence in Dvin (medieaval Armenia) during the 10th century. [13] [14]
The first Kurdish presence in the Caucasus region (specifically the Transcaucasus) can be traced back to the mid-10th century when the Shaddadids established themselves at Dvin by its first emir Muhammad ibn Shaddad. The Shaddadids ruled between the Kura and Aras rivers until they fell in the end of the 12th century. During Shaddadid rule, they often engaged in war with the medieval Georgian Kingdom and occasionally with the Byzantine army. [1] [7]
According to Grigory Chursin, at the time of the Ottoman–Safavid War (1578–1590) a wave of Kurdish immigration in western parts of modern Azerbaijan may have taken place in 1589 when soldiers chose to stay in the conquered lands.
Kurdish tribes migrated to the Ararat Plain (modern day Armenia), in the 18th century. [15]
In 1728, Kurds and Shahsevans who were breeding cattle in the Mughan plain applied for Russian citizenship.
In the late 18th century, Kurds arrived in Tbilisi to get assistance from King Erekle II against the Ottomans.
When the Russian Empire and the Qajars signed the Treaty of Turkmenchay in 1828, Kurds were allowed to work in Georgia. [16]
During the early 19th century, the policy of the Russian Empire towards their own and the greater Kurdish population was to keep them neutral in the wars against Qajar Iran and the Ottoman Empire. [17] Around the same time, Kurds settled in Transcaucasia. In the late 19th and early 20th century, Yazidis who fled from the Ottoman Empire due to religious persecution settled in the Russian Transcaucasus. [18]
During the two Russo-Persian Wars between the Russian Empire and Qajar Iran (Persia), the Russian authorities let Kurds settle in Russia proper and then Russian ruled Armenia. Later during the Crimean War and the Russo-Turkish War, Kurds again moved to Russia and Armenia. [19]
A Kurdish representative was elected to the Armenian parliament of the First Republic of Armenia (1918–1920). [20]
After the dissolution of the First Republic of Armenia and the founding of the Socialist Soviet Republic of Armenia (later Armenian SSR), the soviet policy of Korenizatsiia was enforced, leading to the founding of radio, press and education in Kurdish (Kurmanji), alongside the creation of a Kurdish alphabet using the Armenian script in 1922 followed by a Latin version in 1927 and under Stalin in 1945 a Cyrillic one too. [21]
After the deportations of Caucasian Kurds began in 1937 Kurdish radio, the Riya Teze (newspaper) and other Kurdish institutions were closed. These radios were later revived in the 1950s. [22]
With the outbreak of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in 1988, many Kurds fled Armenia. [23] Around 18,000 Kurds left Armenia for Azerbaijan, a large community of Kurds from Armenia and neighboring countries has developed in Krasnodar. [24] Between 1992 and 1994 the Kurdish minority of the Lachin and Kelbajar districts of Azerbaijan was forced to flee due to the Armenian invasion during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War. [25]
In the independent Azerbaijan Democratic Republic, from 1918 to 1920, Kurds held offices in government, most notably Khosrov bey Sultanov and Nurmammad bey Shahsuvarov. [26]
In 1923, the Central Executive Committee of the Azerbaijan SSR created the administrative unit Kurdistan Uezd, 73% of its population was Kurdish and 26% was Azeri. [27] [6]
In 1937, the leader of the Soviet Union, Joseph Stalin, did not trust the Kurdish population and ordered their forced deportation to the Kazakh SSR, Uzbek SSR, and Kirghiz SSR. This group of Kurds came from Nakhchivan Autonomous SSR (part of the Azerbaijan SSR). Most of them died during the deportation. [28]
When in 1961 the First Iraqi–Kurdish War started, there were efforts by the Kurdish deportees of the 30s and 40s for the restoration of their rights, but these proved to be futile. [29]
In 1989, the Yekbûn was founded, which aimed to reestablish Kurdish autonomy in the Soviet Union. The Soviet government under Mikhail Gorbachev attempted to help the Kurds, but this failed because as the collapse of the Soviet Union occurred in 1991 and Turkish animosity to the plan. [30]
After the fall of the Soviet Union, the new republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan went to war in the First Nagorno-Karabakh War which led to the creation of the Kurdish Republic of Lachin in 1992. It was backed by Armenia, and when their support stopped due to political change, the republic was dissolved. [31] [32]
During World War II, one of the most renowned Soviet Kurds was the Yazidi named Samand Siabandov, who was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union during the war against Nazi Germany. He was born in 1909 in Kars oblast, which was in the Caucasus Viceroyalty and part of the Russian Empire.
In 1998, the leader of the PKK Abdullah Öcalan sought political asylum in Russia. In November 1998, the State Duma sent President Boris Yeltsin a recommendation to grant Öcalan political asylum in Russia, but to no avail. This was due to Russia and Turkey having developed a friendly economic and political relationship and Russia did not want to endanger this new friendship. [33]
The number of Kurds in Georgia fluctuated throughout the 20th century, between 1944 and 1948 under the Soviet Union parts of the kurdish population were deported to Central Asia. Between 1979 and 1989 the Kurdish population increased by 30%, but since independence in 1991 the number has steadily decreased. [12] [34] [35]
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (July 2024) |
The History of Kurds in the Caucasus goes back to the 10th century, specifically in 951 when the Shaddadid Dynasty was established at Dvin by Muhammad ibn Shaddad (Arabic: محمد بن شداد; Kurdish: محمد کوڕی شەداد). The Shaddadid Dynasty reached its greatest extent in 1030, during which it included territories from modern-day Armenia and Azerbaijan. In 1067 the Shaddadids became a vassal state of the Seljuk Empire after the death of Abu'l-Aswar. The Shaddadid State (of Dvin & Ganja) was fully annexed in 1075 by the Seljuk Sultan Alp Arslan and the dynasty survived in Ani through Manuchihr ibn Shavur. The Shaddadid Dynasty of Ani was independent for almost another 100 years until in 1161, when the Georgian King George III annexed all of Ani. The Shaddadids would rule over Ani again after a coalition of muslim states defeated Georgia in 1163, though they were a vassal of Azerbaijan. In 1174, Ani would again be occupied by Georgia and after switching sides between Georgia and the Shaddadids for another 4 times, the Shaddadid family lost all power over Ani in 1199. [36] [37] [38]
Kurdistan Uezd (also known as "Red Kurdistan") was a Soviet administrative unit which existed as an autonomous region inside the Azerbaijan SSR for 6 years. Its capital was Lachin and the region was majority Kurdish. In 1929, the Azerbaijani Congress of Soviets dissolved the autonomous region. [39] [2]
The administrative unit of Kurdistan Okrug only existed for around 2 months before being dissolved, which was due to it straining relations between the Soviet Union, Iran and Turkey. [2]
Kurdish Lachin (Officially: English: The Kurdish Republic of Lachin; Kurdish (Kurmanji): Komara kurdî ya Laçînê) was a unofficial Republic which existed for one year during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War, its Territory was the same as that of Kurdistan Uezd and the following Kurdistan Okrug. It was backed by Armenia, and when their support stopped due to political change in late 1992 the Republic was dissolved. [31] [32]
The First Deportation of Kurds from Caucasia occurred in 1937, then leader of the Soviet Union, Joseph Stalin did not trust the Kurdish population and ordered their forced Deportation to Kazakh SSR, Uzbek SSR and Kirghiz SSR. This group of Kurds from the first Deportation by Stalin came from Nakhchivan Autonomous SSR (Part of Azerbaijan SSR). Most of them died during the deportation. [28]
In 1938, Azeris, Persians, Kurds, and Assyrians were deported from the Azerbaijan SSR to the Kazakh SSR. [35]
Cleansing of Tbilisi, where Azeris and Kurds had been deported from Tbilisi to Southern Georgia SSR. [35]
In November 1944, multiple ethnicities from Southwestern Georgia SSR were deported to Central Asia, among them Caucasian Kurds. [35]
In August 1948, the last deportation of Caucasian Kurds was carried out. Kurds belonging to the force of Mustafa Barzani from the Azerbaijan SSR were deported for their affiliation with Barzani. [35]
The Kurdish population in Kazakhstan has descended from Caucasian Kurds from Azerbaijan and Georgia, who have been deported to Central Asia in 1937, 1938 and 1944 by Joseph Stalin. Some of those Kurds that were deported to Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan later migrated north to Kazakhstan due to the Osh Riots in 1990. [28]
The population of Kurds in Kazakhstan has steadily increased since 1970. [40] There wasn't any census for Kurds in Kazakhstan prior to 1970, but there was a 1959 census for all for Central Asia that counted 14,000 Kurds. [7]
Year | Number | Source |
---|---|---|
1970 | 12,313 | [40] |
1979 | 17,692 | |
1989 | 25,371 | |
1999 | 32,764 | |
2009 | 38,325 | |
2019 | 46,348 | |
2023 | 49,355 |
Most Kurds in Kazakhstan are Muslim, with them accounting for 98.3% of the Kurdish population, while Christian Kurds account for 0.52% of the Kurdish population. [10]
88.7% of Kurds in Kazakhstan speak the Kurmanji dialect of Kurdish as their mother tongue. Places in Kazakhstan in which Kurds are a substantial part of the population often teach Kurdish literature and the Kurdish Language in primary and secondary schools. Since 1990, there has also been a Kurdish newspaper in Kazakhstan named "Kurdistan". [41] [10]
Kurds or Kurdish people are an Iranic ethnic group native to the mountainous region of Kurdistan in West Asia, which spans southeastern Turkey, northwestern Iran, northern Iraq, and northern Syria. There are exclaves of Kurds in Central Anatolia, Khorasan, and the Caucasus, as well as significant Kurdish diaspora communities in the cities of western Turkey and Western Europe. The Kurdish population is estimated to be between 30 and 45 million.
The Kurds are an Iranian ethnic group in the Middle East. They have historically inhabited the mountainous areas to the south of Lake Van and Lake Urmia, a geographical area collectively referred to as Kurdistan. Most Kurds speak Northern Kurdish Kurmanji Kurdish (Kurmanji) and Central Kurdish (Sorani).
Iğdır Province is a province in eastern Turkey, located along the borders with Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Iran. Its adjacent provinces are Kars to the northwest and Ağrı to the west and south. Its area is 3,664 km2, and its population is 203,594 (2022). Its population was 168,634 in 2000 and 142,601 in 1990. The province is considered part of Turkish Kurdistan and has a Kurdish majority with a pretty close Azerbaijani minority.
Kurmanji, also termed Northern Kurdish, is the northernmost of the Kurdish languages, spoken predominantly in southeast Turkey, northwest and northeast Iran, northern Iraq, northern Syria and the Caucasus and Khorasan regions. It is the most widely spoken form of Kurdish.
The peoples of the Caucasus, or Caucasians, are a diverse group comprising more than 50 ethnic groups throughout the Caucasus.
Kurdish Christians refers to ethnic Kurds who follow Christianity. Some Kurds had historically followed Christianity and remained Christian when most Kurds were converted to Islam, however, the majority of modern Kurdish Christians are converts. Historically, Kurdish converts to Christianity came from diverse backgrounds, including Ancient Iranian religion, Zoroastrianism, Islam, and Yazidism. Evangelical churches have been established in recent times in Erbil, Selimani, and Duhok in Iraqi Kurdistan, and in Hassakeh, Qamishli, Kobani, Amouda, and Afrin in the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria.
Kurdistan Uezd, also known colloquially as Red Kurdistan, was a Soviet administrative unit within the Azerbaijan SSR that existed for six years from 1923 to 1929 and included the districts of Kalbajar, Lachin, Qubadli and part of Jabrayil. It was part of Azerbaijan SSR, with the administrative center being in Lachin. It was briefly succeeded by the Kurdistan Okrug from 30 May to 23 July 1930.
Yazidis in Armenia are Yazidis who live in Armenia, where they form the largest ethnic minority. Yazidis settled in the territory of modern-day Armenia mainly in the 19th and early 20th centuries, fleeing religious persecution by the Ottoman Empire. While Yazidis were counted as Kurds in censuses for much of the Soviet period, they are currently recognized as a separate ethnic group in Armenia. According to the 2022 census, around 31,079 Yazidis live in Armenia.
The population of Armenia includes various significant minority ethnic groups.
The Kurds in Armenia, also referred to as the Kurds of Rewan, form a major part of the historically significant Kurdish population in the post-Soviet space, and live mainly in the western parts of Armenia.
Sheylanli tribe is a Kurdish tribe who lived in the Sheylanli village, Lachin, until it was occupied by Armenian troops. Due to the war, the Sheylanlis fled to Aghjabadi Rayon, Azerbaijan. They speak the Kurmanji dialect of the Kurdish Language.
The Kurds in Azerbaijan form a part of the historically significant Kurdish population in the post-Soviet space. Kurds established a presence in the Caucasus with the establishment of the Kurdish Shaddadid dynasty in the 10th and 11th centuries. Some Kurdish tribes were recorded in Karabakh by the end of the sixteenth century. However, virtually the entire contemporary Kurdish population in the modern Azerbaijan descends from migrants from 19th-century Qajar Iran.
The Kurds in Georgia form a major part of the historically significant Kurdish population in the post-Soviet space, and are members of the eponymous ethnic group that are citizens of Georgia. In the 20th century, most Kurds fled religious persecution in the Ottoman Empire to the Russian Empire. The return of their Kurdish surnames needs effort according to a Kurdish activist in Georgia. The Kurds also have their own schools, school books and a printing press in Georgia. Illiteracy among them disappeared in the early 1900s. Kurds in Georgia are politically neutral; however, in 1999 they staged a huge demonstration in Tbilisi, demanding the release of the founder of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, Abdullah Öcalan. Kurds in Georgia today use Cyrillic script. Earlier, in the 1920s, they used the Latin script.
The Kurds in Kazakhstan form a part of the historically significant Kurdish population in the post-Soviet space, and encompass people born in or residing in Kazakhstan who are of Kurdish origin. According to the most recent Kazakh census in 2011, the Kurdish population is 38,325 or 0.2% of the population, but Vice President of the Kurdish Association of Kazakhstan, Malikshah Gasanov numbers the population up to 46,000, because many Kurds list themselves as Turks and Azeris. Other sources predict this number to be higher, counting up to 60,000 Kurds in Kazakhstan. During the Soviet era, most of the Kurdish population in the Kazakh SSR were deported there by Joseph Stalin from the Armenian, Azerbaijan and Georgian Soviet republics. Years later, Kurds immigrated to Kazakhstan from the neighbouring countries, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan.
Garnik Serobi Asatrian is an Iranian-born Armenian professor who studies and teaches Kurdish culture at Yerevan State University in Yerevan, Armenia.
Yekbûn is a Kurdish political organization established by Kurds in the Soviet Union that sought to make Kurdish culture autonomous and establish an autonomous Kurdistan there.
The Kurdish Republic of Lachin was a short-lived unrecognized state declared by Kurdish nationalists on the territory of the former Kurdistan Uezd in 1992, during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War, and dissolved in the same year.
Azerbaijan has had a deliberate policy of forced assimilation of ethnic minorities since Soviet times and up to the present. Non-Turkic peoples, such as Talyshis, Lezgins, Tats and others have been subjected to forced Azerbaijanization (Turkification).
The Kurds were deported from Azerbaijan SSR, Georgian SSR, and Armenian SSR by the Soviet secret police NKVD in 1937 and 1944 and sent to special settlements in Central Asia. During the July 1937 deportation, approximately 1,325 Kurds were deported. In March, 3,240 Kurds and Azerbaijanis were deported from Tbilisi. In November 1944 the Kurds of Georgian SSR were also sent to the "special colonies", including those in Siberia, and were resettled there, as part of the deportation of the Meskhetian Turks, when 8,694 Kurds were deported. Most adult males were deported separately from females and children with their fate unknown.
Wekîl Mistefayêv was a Kurdish political leader and activist known for his role in the Kurdish Republic of Lachin, an attempt to re-establish short-lived Red Kurdistan, a Soviet-administered Kurdish region dissolved in 1929.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link){{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)