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Federal Region Kurdistan

Gebirgsland zwischen Armenien und dem Euphrat;

Heimat der Kurden; In vier Teile zerstückelt auf Turkei, Iran, Irak und Syrien.

40 Millionen Kurden ohne eigene Staat

Die Kurden sind neben den Arabern, Persern Armenien eines der Aeltesten Voelker der Region. Das von ihnen besiedelte Land wird Kurdistan genannt.

Die Kurden haben ihre eigene Sprache, die zu der indio-europaeischen Sprachfamilie gehoert. Mit dem Arabischen und dem Turkischen ist Kurdisch nicht verwand. 90 Prozent der Kurden sind Moslems der verschiedenste Glaubensrichtungen. Im syrischen Teil Kurdistans leben wenige kurdische Christen. In abgelegenen Gebieten hat sich das Yezidentum erhalten, eine Glaubensrichtung die ihre Wurzeln im Zarathustra-Glauben hat.

Etwa ab dem11. Jahrhundert, nach Gruendung des osmanischen Reichs, wird Kurdistan zum Schauplatz kriegerischer Auseinandersetzungen zwischen den Osmanen und den Persern. Im Jahr 1638 wurde Kurdistan offiziell zwischen beiden Reichen aufgeteilt. Damit erhielt der Kampf der Kurden einen nationalen Charakter. Kurdische Fuersten, aber auch religöse Fuehrer haben seitdem fuer die Einheit und Unabhaengigkeit Kurdistans gekaepft. Erst nach dem 1. Weltkrieg, sollte ein kurdischer Staat entstehen duerfen. Doch mit der Entstehung Syriens und dem Irak wurde das kurdische Siedlungsgebiet im wesentlichen in vier Teile zerstueckelt.
Das Gebiet des heutigen Kurdistan befindet sich zu einem Grossteil im südostlichen Teil der Türkei sowie im Norden von Syrien, Irak und Iran.
Am anfang wurden die Kurden als Nation akzeptiert. Jedoch dies aenderte sich bald. Die Worte ,,Kurdisch,, und ,,Kurdistan,, wurden ebenso verboten wie die Ausubung kurdischer Kultur, die kurdische Sprache usw. Die Kurden wehrten sich, es kam zu verschiedenen Aufstaenden. Die Turkei regiert seit 1979 die kurdischen Gebiete mit Kriegsrecht und Ausnahmezustand.
35 Millionen Kurden leben in einem Gebiet, welches etwa so gross wie Frankreich ist. Innerhalb der Turkei leben etwa 18- 20 Millionen, im Iran 6- 10 Millionen, im Irak 5 Millionen und in Syrien 1,5 Millionen Kurden. Im Ausland, besonders in den europaeischen Laender, leben etwa eine Millionen Kurden. Kurdistan ist ein von der Landwirtschaft gepraegtes Land.
Jedoch in bezug auf Bodenschaetze ist dieses Land eines der reichsten der Erde. Allein die Erdoelfelder im Irak, Iran und Syrien, befinden zu einem Grossteil auf kurdischem Gebiet.

Photo kurdistan

Federal Region Kurdistan

Kurdistan is a geographical area divided between the nation states of Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria. It is inhabited mainly by Kurds, and historical evidence show they have been living in the area some thousand years before Christ. The Kurds are, together with Arabs, Persians and Armenians, one of the most ancient peoples of the Near East.

kurdistan_map.jpg

The exact number of Kurds in the world is not known to this date, but approximately, there are about 35 to 40 million people. Although being one of the largest ethnic groups in the world, the Kurds do not have a state of their own. The division of the Kurdish area is a result of numerous wars between neighbouring states, international interests, and broken treaties. The borders that divide Kurdistan are neither natural, economic, nor cultural borders.

Iraqi Kurdistan is a region about 83,000 square kilometres. That is roughly the same size as Jordan or Austria. There are about five million Kurds living in this area. The region is divided in four main provinces – Hawler (also called Erbil), Sulaimaniya, Duhok and Kirkuk – with the regional parliament for Iraqi Kurdistan situated in Hawler.

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The language in Kurdistan is Kurdish, with two major dialects being Kurmanj and Sorany. The great majority of Kurds are Sunni Muslims. Although there are also other religions represented within Kurdistan, amongst them branches of the traditional religion of Zoroastrianism, which is one of the oldest religions in the world.

A brief history

About a thousand years ago, Kurdistan was the theatre of military clashes between the Greek, Roman and Ottoman empires, and the Persian empire. Following World War I, and the break-up of the Ottoman Empire, the Kurds were offered their own state, but the establishment of Kurdistan did not occur. Treaties were broken twice, both in 1920 and later in 1923, because of disagreements within the international community. Kurdistan has stayed divided until this day, and since World War II, the history of Iraqi Kurdistan has been one of displacement, disappearance, destruction, and disrupted lives.

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The internal fighting and disagreements in Iraqi Kurdistan has a long history. The two major parties, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), who controlled the region, were unable to cooperate and civil war broke out. In the war between Iraq and Iran in 1980, the Kurds supported the Iranian forces and as the Iran-Iraq war drew to a closing, Iraqi forces launched the "Anfal Campaign" against the Kurds.

Next, the Iraqi regime moved on to its invasion of Kuwait. Saddam Hussein suffered a massive defeat in his war against the allies, and with the end of the war, the UN created a security zone for the Iraqi Kurds in the north.

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The Kurdish community now got the opportunity to build a more stable society without the interference of the Iraqi government, but the difficulties were many. The Kurdish region was for example disconnected from the national electricity network, food rations were cut off, and pensions and governmental salaries were withdrawn. The UN “Oil-for-Food” program began to function in 1997 and provided the region with food rations from Iraq's public oil wealth. Iraqi Kurdistan has been isolated from the rest of the world since 1991, and only a couple of years after the millennium the region obtained access to the Internet.

With the allied invasion of Baghdad in March 20, 2003, the real freedom for Iraqi Kurds begins. Kurds were supporting the invasion all along, and with the capture of their former dictator in December 13, 2003, they finally dared to believe freedom had come. After years of internal fighting and disagreements, the two Kurdish parties have finally settled with a joint parliament, situated in the city of Hawler. Massoud Barzani is the president of Iraqi Kurdistan, since the PUK-leader, Jalal Talabani, was sworn in as the president of the liberated Iraq April 7, 2005.




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