Kurdish immigration into Syria

Last updated

Kurdish immigration into Syria has occurred since ancient times. Today Kurds form about 10% of Syria's population, numbering around 2 million. [1] The majority of Kurds in Syria immigrated from Turkey to the French Mandate the 20th century to escape persecution. [2] Most of these Kurds live in northeast Syria, with smaller communities scattered in various places across the country.

Contents

Pre-modern Kurdish presence in Syria

Kurds have been known to live in Syria for centuries. Since the 7th century, Kurds were often influential in the area of religion. [3] They were also known as warriors, and the Zengid dynasty had a strong contingent of Kurds in their military. [3] The Mirdasid prince of Aleppo stationed Kurds in the fortress of castle Krak de Chevalier to protect the trade routes between Homs and Hama from 1029 to 1038. [3] In Arabic, the castle was known as Ḥoṣn al-Akrād (حصن الأكراد) meaning "fort of the Kurds." [4]

Saladin, the Kurdish founder of the Ayyubid dynasty, established himself in Damascus, where he had lived during his youth. His brother Turan-Shah governed Syria. [5]

20th century

French mandate era (1920–1946)

During the interwar period, the Turkish campaign to assimilate its Kurdish population was at its peak. This caused large groups of Kurds to leave Turkey. [2] These first waves of Kurds arrived with the laying of the Aleppo-Baghdad section of the Berlin-Baghdad railway. According to Kurdish studies expert Jordi Tejel, Kurdish political parties at the time were not interested in challenging Syrian borders and preferred to focus on their region of origin in Turkish Kurdistan. [6]

Maurice Abadie, a French general and overseer of the French occupation of Syria, noticed that Kurds were beginning to migrate west of the Euphrates, particularly to northern Syria. The Kurds who settled there lived alongside Turks, Turkmen, Christians and Arabs, and adopted several customs from their new neighbours. [7]

In the 1920s, the military situation in southeastern Turkey deteriorated. [7] Between February and March 1925, the Kurdish cleric Sheikh Said led a rebellion in the northern parts of Diyarbakır Province and conquered large swaths of southeastern Turkey, besieging the city of Diyarbakır. The rebellion forced tens of thousands of Kurds to flee their homes in the mountains of Turkey and cross into Syria. [8] This rebellion was one of the first in a long series of rebellions and conflicts between the Kurdish population and Kemalist authorities. [9]

The French Mandate authorities encouraged this Kurdish immigration [10] and granted them considerable rights, including Syrian citizenship, in its bigger minority autonomy campaign as part of a divide and rule strategy. This favorable policy towards Kurdish immigration into Syria was part of the a plan executed by French officer Pierre Terrier (and became known as the Terrier Plan) aiming at creating majority/minority rifts in Syria. The Terrier Plan shaped what is known as the Kurdish policy by mandatory authorities. This plan also used the new immigrants in its "sedentarization" (or pacification) project aiming at reclaiming large swathes of land to make the mandate financially more profitable for the French.

In his zeal to increase the population of the area, Terrier has even sometimes contradicted the directives of the French High Commissariat in Beirut. [11] Some of the new arrivals worked with the French against the local population. A prime example is the Kurdish tribal chief Hadjo Agha of the influential Havergan tribe who immigrated from Turkey together with more than 600 families, including arms and sheep, and settled in al-Qahtaniyah. [8] In different parts of Syria, the French recruited heavily from the Kurds and other minority groups such as Alawite and Druze, for its local armed forces. [12]

The French authorities themselves generally organized the settlement of the refugees. One of the most important of these plans was carried out in Upper Jazira in northeastern Syria where the French built new towns and villages such as Qamishli (in 1926) and al-Malikiyah (then called Dijlah or Tigre in French) with the intention of housing the Turkish and Iraqi refugees considered to be "friendly" (i.e. Christians and Kurds). This has further encouraged the non-Turkish minorities that were under Turkish pressure to leave their ancestral homes and property, they could find refuge and rebuild their lives in relative safety in neighboring Syria. [13] Consequently, the border areas in al-Hasakah Governorate between Qamishli and al-Malikiyah started to have a Kurdish majority, while Arabs remained the majority in river plains and elsewhere.

The French geographer Robert Montagne summarized the situation in 1932 as follows: [14]

We are seeing an increase in village establishment that are either constructed by the Kurds descending from the Anatolian mountains (north of the border) to cultivate or as a sign of increasing settlement of Arab groups with the help of their Armenian and Yezidi farmers.

After World War II

Illegal immigration along the border from Ras al-Ayn to al-Malikiyya continued after WWII. Another major wave of illegal Kurdish immigrants settled down in the region along the border in major population centers such as Al-Darbasiyah, Amuda and al-Malikiyya. Many of these Kurds were able to register themselves illegally in the Syrian civil registers. They were also able to obtain Syrian identity cards through a variety of means, with the help of their relatives and members of their tribes. It is thought that the land reform encouraged their immigration in an effort to benefit from socialist-style land redistribution. Official figures available in 1961 showed that in a mere seven-year period, between 1954 and 1961, the population of al-Hasakah governorate had increased from 240,000 to 305,000, an increase of 27% which could not possibly be explained merely by natural increase. The government was sufficiently worried by the apparent influx that it carried out a sample census in June 1962 which indicated the real population was probably closer to 340,000. The huge unemployment due to mechanization, harsh working conditions and political instability in Turkey are all factors that have further encouraged immigration out of Turkey. [15]

Kurdish towns and villages in Syria

The French official reports show the existence of at most 45 Kurdish villages in Jazira prior to 1927. A new wave of refugees arrived in 1929. [16] The mandatory authorities continued to encourage Kurdish immigration into Syria, and by 1939, the villages numbered between 700 and 800. [16] These continuous waves swelled the number of Kurds in the area, and French geographers Fevret and Gibert [8] estimated that in 1953 out of the total 146,000 inhabitants of Jazira, agriculturalist Kurds made up 60,000 (41%), semi-sedentary and nomad Arabs 50,000 (34%), and a quarter of the population were Christians. [8]

An account of the number of settlements for the new immigrants and their locations in Syrian Jazira is given by the French geographer Etienne de Vaumas. These settlements were created to help the newcomers work in mechanized agricultural projects. As of 1932, in the Kamishliye (Qamishli) region, one town, 28 villages, 48 hamlets and 29 isolated farms for future villages were established. To the north of Ain Diwar (in al-Malikiyah district, almost 90 villages were erected. The number of villages was estimated by the French intelligence officer in Hasakah (regional capital) at 250 in 1929. This number jumped to 336 in 1935. [14]

A group of Kurdish Alevis who fled the persecution of the Turkish army during the Dersim massacre, settled in Mabeta in the 1930s. [17]

Kurdish tribes immigrating to Syria

French geographer Pierre Rondot provides a detailed account of the settlement areas for the native and incoming tribes of Jazira, extending his focus to the Taurus Mountains in Turkey. In the Syrian Jazira region he mentions the following Kurdish tribes in the Qamishli area and comments on their origins in Turkey and current establishment locations: [18]

Rondot reports that the establishment of all of these tribes is recent but events have evolved rapidly with the development of agricultural projects in the area.In the Derik-Ain Diwar area, Rondot mentions the Hesenan, Harunan and Alikan tribes, all of which had descended from the mountains to the north three or four generations ago.

Political influence of Turkish Kurds in Syria and Turkey

The Kurdish immigration from Turkey has provided most of the Kurdish leaders in Syria, notably the Badr Khan (also spelled Bedirxan) family (known for being the emirs of Botan), and Hassan Hajo Agha. [19]

Soon after their arrival, many Turkish Kurds in Syria established Xoybûn conference in Beirut in 1927, with its objectives to formulate a national language to help fight against the Kemalists, to organize themselves against the Turks, and to liberate Kurdistan from the Turkish yoke. [20]

Demographics

Syrian census of 1939

In 1939, French mandate authorities reported the following population numbers for the different ethnic and religious groups in al-Hasakah city centre: [21]

Syrian census of 1939
DistrictArabKurdChristianArmenianYezidiAssyrian
Hasakah city centre7,1333605,700500
Tell Tamer 8,767
Ras al-Ayn 2,2831,0252,263
Shaddadi 2,6106
Tell Brak 4,509905200
Qamishli city centre7,9905,89214,1403,500720
Amuda 11,2601,500720
Al-Darbasiyah 3,0117,8992,382425
Chagar Bazar 3803,8103
Ain Diwar3,608900
Derik (later renamed Al-Malikiyah)441,6851,204
Mustafiyya34495950
Derouna Agha5705,09727
Tel Koger (later renamed Al-Yaarubiyah)165

Jazira population between 1929 and 1954

The number of Kurds settled in the Jazira province during the 1920s was estimated at 20,000 [22] to 25,000 people. [23] These numbers marked a huge demographic shift in Jazira's population that was estimated at 40,000 in 1929. [14]

Due to successive waves of Kurdish immigration from Turkey, the population of Jazira province grew significantly. The largest jumps were in 1932 and 1935 when the population increased by 42.7% and 45.8%, respectively.

Historical population increases in Jazira are depicted in the table below: [14]

Population from 1929-1954
YearPopulation% change
192940,000-
193144,153+10.4%
193263,000+42.7%
193364,886+3.0%
193594,596+45.8%
193798,144-
1938103,514+5.5%
1939106,052+2.5%
1940126,508+19.3%
1941128,145+2.1%
1942136,107-
1943146,001+7.3%
1946151,137+3.5%
1950159,300+5.4%
1951162,145+1.8%
1952177,388+9.4%
1953232,104+30.8%
1954233,998+0.8%

Related Research Articles

Qamishli is a city in northeastern Syria on the Syria–Turkey border, adjoining the city of Nusaybin in Turkey. The Jaghjagh River flows through the city. With a 2004 census population of 184,231, it is the ninth most-populous city in Syria and the second-largest in Al-Hasakah Governorate after Al-Hasakah. Qamishli has traditionally been a Christian Assyrian majority city, but is now predominantly populated by Kurds with large numbers of Arabs and Assyrians and a smaller number of Armenians. It is 680 kilometres (420 mi) northeast of Damascus.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Al-Hasakah Governorate</span> Governorate in Syria

Al-Hasakah Governorate is one of the fourteen governorates (provinces) of Syria. It is located in the far north-east corner of Syria and distinguished by its fertile lands, plentiful water, natural environment, and more than one hundred archaeological sites. It was formerly known as Al-Jazira Province. Prior to the Syrian Civil War nearly half of Syria's oil was extracted from the region. It is the lower part of Upper Mesopotamia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Upper Mesopotamia</span> Northern part of the region between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers

Upper Mesopotamia constitutes the uplands and great outwash plain of northwestern Iraq, northeastern Syria and southeastern Turkey, in the northern Middle East. Since the early Muslim conquests of the mid-7th century, the region has been known by the traditional Arabic name of al-Jazira and the Syriac variant Gāzartā or Gozarto (ܓܙܪܬܐ). The Euphrates and Tigris rivers transform Mesopotamia into almost an island, as they are joined together at the Shatt al-Arab in the Basra Governorate of Iraq, and their sources in eastern Turkey are in close proximity.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kurds in Syria</span> Ethnic group

The Kurdish population of Syria is the country's largest ethnic minority, usually estimated at around 10% of the Syrian population and 5% of the Kurdish population.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Assyrians in Syria</span> Ethnic group

Assyrians in Syria also known as Syriacs are an ethnic and linguistic minority that are indigenous to Upper Mesopotamia, the north-eastern half of Syria. Syrian-Assyrians are people of Assyrian descent living in Syria, and those in the Assyrian diaspora who are of Syrian-Assyrian heritage.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Al-Hasakah</span> City in al-Hasakah, Syria

Al-Hasakah is the capital city of the Al-Hasakah Governorate, in the northeastern corner of Syria. With a 2023 estimated population of 422,445 Al-Hasakah is predominantly populated by Arabs with large numbers of Kurds, Assyrians and a smaller number of Armenians and Chechens. Al-Hasakah is 80 kilometres south of the city of Qamishli. The Khabur River, a tributary of the Euphrates River, flows west–east through the city. The Jaghjagh River flows into the Khabur from the north at Al-Hasakah. A portion of the city is a Syrian government-controlled enclave, comprising the city center and various government buildings, with the rest of the city controlled by the AANES.

Amuda is a town in Al Hasakah Governorate in northeastern Syria close to the Syria–Turkey border. As a result of the ongoing civil war, Amuda is currently under the civil control of the AANES and military control of the SDF and Syrian Army.

Al-Malikiyah also known as Derik, is a small Syrian city and the center of an administrative district belonging to Al-Hasakah Governorate. The district constitutes the northeastern corner of the country, and is where the Syrian Democratic Council convenes. The town is about 20 km (12 mi) west of the Tigris river which defines the triple border between Syria, Turkey and Iraq. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Al-Malikiyah had a population about 26,311 residents in the 2004 census. It is the administrative center of a nahiyah ("subdistrict") consisting of 108 localities with a combined population of 125,000. The population enjoys demographic and ethnic diversity that is characteristic of most of Al-Hasakah Governorate. The town is inhabited by Kurds, Assyrians, Arabs and Armenians.

The 2004 Qamishli riots were an uprising by Syrian Kurds in the northeastern city of Qamishli in March 2004, which culminated in a massacre by the Syrian Arab Armed Forces.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kurdistan Democratic Party of Syria</span> Political party in Syria

The Kurdistan Democratic Party of Syria, commonly known as KDPS or PDK-S, is a Kurdish Syrian political party founded in 1957 by Kurdish nationalists in northern Syria. The party is based in Hamburg, Germany and has various branches in France, United Kingdom, Sweden and the United States of America.

Al-Jazira Province was an administrative division in the State of Aleppo (1920–25), the State of Syria (1925–1930) and the first decades of the Mandatory Syrian Republic, during the French Mandate of Syria and the Lebanon. It encompassed more or less the present-day Al-Hasakah Governorate and part of the former Ottoman Zor Sanjak, created in 1857.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria</span> De facto autonomous region in Syria

The Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES), also known as Rojava, is a de facto autonomous region in northeastern Syria. It consists of self-governing sub-regions in the areas of Afrin, Jazira, Euphrates, Raqqa, Tabqa, Manbij, and Deir Ez-Zor. The region gained its de facto autonomy in 2012 in the context of the ongoing Rojava conflict and the wider Syrian civil war, in which its official military force, the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), has taken part.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jazira Region</span> One of seven de facto regions of the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria in Al Hasakah

The Jazira Region, formerly Jazira Canton,, is the largest of the three original regions of the de facto Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES). As part of the ongoing Rojava conflict, its democratic autonomy was officially declared on 21 January 2014. The region is in the Al-Hasakah Governorate of Syria.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Syrian Kurdistan</span> Kurdish inhabited area of Syria

Syrian Kurdistan is a region in northern Syria where Kurds form the majority. It is surrounding three noncontiguous enclaves along the Turkish and Iraqi borders: Afrin in the northwest, Kobani in the north, and Jazira in the northeast. Syrian Kurdistan is often called Western Kurdistan or Rojava, one of the four "Lesser Kurdistans" that comprise "Greater Kurdistan", alongside Iranian Kurdistan, Turkish Kurdistan, and Iraqi Kurdistan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eastern al-Hasakah offensive</span> Military operation

The Eastern al-Hasakah offensive was launched in the Al-Hasakah Governorate during the Syrian Civil War, by the Kurdish-majority People's Protection Units, Assyrian Christian militias, and allied Arab forces against the jihadist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, with the intent of retaking the areas of the Jazira Canton that had been captured by ISIL. Subsequently, the Syrian Armed Forces also launched an assault against the jihadists, without coordinating with the YPG.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rojava conflict</span> Military and political conflict in northern Syria

The Rojava conflict, also known as the Rojava Revolution, is a political upheaval and military conflict taking place in northern Syria, known among Kurds as Western Kurdistan or Rojava.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Human rights in the AANES</span>

The Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria is a de facto autonomous region of Syria that emerged from 2012 onwards during the Syrian civil war and in particular the Rojava conflict. The current administration emphasises gender equality and pluralistic tolerance for religious and cultural diversity.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Al-Hasakah Governorate campaign (2012–2014)</span> Syrian military campaign

The al-Hasakah Governorate campaign was a multi-sided military conflict between Syrian government forces, Kurdish forces, armed Syrian opposition groups, and Salafist jihadist forces, including al-Qaeda's Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant and the al-Nusra Front in the al-Hasakah Governorate as part of the Syrian Civil War. The clashes began with the People's Protection Units (YPG)'s entrance into the civil war in July 2012 and spread across the governorate.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arab Belt project</span>

The Arab Belt was the Syrian Ba'athist government's project of Arabization of the north of the Al-Hasakah Governorate to change its ethnic composition of the population in favor of Arabs to the detriment of other ethnic groups, particularly Kurds.

Roger Lescot (1914–1975) was a French orientalist and diplomat known for his research of the Kurdish language.

References

  1. "Who are Syria's minority groups?". SBS News. Retrieved 2024-03-28.
  2. 1 2 Storm, Lise (2005). "Ethnonational Minorities in the Middle East Berbers, Kurds, and Palestinians". A Companion to the History of the Middle East. Utrecht: Wiley-Blackwell. p. 475. ISBN   1-4051-0681-6.
  3. 1 2 3 Eddé, Anne-Marie (1997-01-01). Kurdes et Turcs dans l'armée ayyoubide de Syrie du Nord. Brill. p. 226. ISBN   978-90-04-47447-5.
  4. Ring, Trudy; Watson, Noelle; Schellinger, Paul (2014-03-05). Middle East and Africa: International Dictionary of Historic Places. Routledge. ISBN   978-1-134-25986-1.
  5. "Sultan Saladin Ayubi – ein Kurde, der Geschichte machte | NAVEND – Zentrum für Kurdische Studien e.V." www.navend.de. Retrieved 2022-10-15.
  6. Tejel, Jordi (2020). "Borders, Boundaries, and the State. Mobility & Politics". The Complex and Dynamic Relationship of Syria's Kurds with Syrian Borders: Continuities and Changes. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 243–267. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-44877-6_11. ISBN   978-3-030-44876-9. S2CID   226595950.
  7. 1 2 Dawn Chatty (2010). Displacement and Dispossession in the Modern Middle East. Cambridge University Press. pp. 230–232. ISBN   978-1-139-48693-4.
  8. 1 2 3 4 Fevret, Maurice; Gibert, André (1953). "La Djezireh syrienne et son réveil économique". Revue de géographie de Lyon (in French). 28 (28): 1–15. doi:10.3406/geoca.1953.1294 . Retrieved 2012-03-29.
  9. Arshak Safrastian, Kurds and Kurdistan, (London: Harvill Press, 1948), p. 169.
  10. Kreyenbroek, Philip G.; Sperl, Stefan (1992). The Kurds: A Contemporary Overview . London: Routledge. pp.  147. ISBN   0-415-07265-4.
  11. Tejel Gorgas, Jordi (2007). "The Terrier Plan and the emergence of a Kurdish policy under the French Mandate in Syria, 1926–1936". The International Journal of Kurdish Studies. 21 (1 & 2): 93–108. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
  12. Yildiz, Kerim (2005). The Kurds in Syria : the forgotten people (1. publ. ed.). London [etc.]: Pluto Press, in association with Kurdish Human Rights Project. p.  25. ISBN   0745324991.
  13. Tachjian Vahé, The expulsion of non-Turkish ethnic and religious groups from Turkey to Syria during the 1920s and early 1930s, Online Encyclopedia of Mass Violence, [online], published on: 5 March 2009, accessed 09/12/2019, ISSN 1961-9898
  14. 1 2 3 4 De Vaumas Étienne. Population actuelle de la Djézireh. In: Annales de Géographie, t. 65, n°347, 1956. pp. 72–74; doi : https://doi.org/10.3406/geo.1956.14375.
  15. McDowall, David. Modern History of the Kurds, I. B. Tauris & Company, Limited, 2004. pp. 473–474.
  16. 1 2 Tejel, Jordi (2009). Syria's Kurds: History, Politics and Society. London: Routledge. p. 144. ISBN   978-0-203-89211-4.
  17. "derStandard.at". DER STANDARD. Archived from the original on 2022-07-06. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  18. Rondot, Pierre (1936). "Les Tribus Montagnardes de l'Asie Anterieure. Quelues Aspects Sociaux Des Populations Kurdes et Assyriennes". Bulletin d'études orientales (in French). 6 (28): 1–50. doi:10.3406/geoca.1953.1294. JSTOR   41585290 . Retrieved 2022-08-19.
  19. Anonymous, 1948. Report on the Kurdish minority problem 1948 Archived 2017-01-23 at the Wayback Machine . Central Intelligence Agency, Langley, VA.
  20. Gorgas, Jordi Tejel (2007). Le mouvement kurde de Turquie en exil: continuités et discontinuités du nationalisme kurde sous le mandat français en Syrie et au Liban (1925–1946) (in French). Peter Lang. p. 148. ISBN   978-3-03911-209-8.
  21. Algun, S., 2011. Sectarianism in the Syrian Jazira: Community, land and violence in the memories of World War I and the French mandate (1915– 1939). PhD Dissertation. Universiteit Utrecht, the Netherlands. Pages 11–12. Accessed on 8 December 2019.
  22. Simpson, John Hope (1939). The Refugee Problem: Report of a Survey (First ed.). London: Oxford University Press. p. 458. ASIN   B0006AOLOA.
  23. McDowall, David (2005). A Modern History of the Kurds (3. revised and upd. ed., repr. ed.). London [u.a.]: Tauris. p. 469. ISBN   1-85043-416-6.