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  • Misinformation From a Finnish Immigration Official

    Assyrian International News Agency
    Guest Editorial
    Misinformation From a Finnish Immigration Official
    Dr. Eden Naby
    Posted 01-28-2005, 13:01:32
    http://www.aina.org

    (AINA) -- A member of the Finnish Directorate of Immigration, Antero
    Leitzinger published an article called Kurds and the Kurdistans, which
    appeared on 1/23/05 at GlobalPolitician.com. The article appeared so
    outrageous to a Kurdish supporter that this person called it to the
    attention of Dr. Eden Naby, Academic Advisor to the Assyrian Academic
    Society. The article below is Dr. Naby's editorial for AINA
    critiquing the misinformation that the author has knowingly or
    unwittingly passed into the public domain about Assyrians (ed.).

    I am truly appalled at the shallowness of the analysis, lack of
    comparative data, and simple (mischievous?) twisting of facts in the
    article on Kurds and the Kurdistans, which appeared on 1/23/05 by
    Antero Leitzinger at GlobalPolitician.com. In the age of the Internet,
    thankfully, one cannot get away with such low quality work. Facts are
    easy to check, and propaganda cannot so easily pass for expert
    knowledge.

    Not only does this author persist on weighing "oranges" against
    "apples" and coming up with useless analogies (Scandinavians, divided
    into several countries, cannot be equated with Kurds, nor can Turks be
    equated with the distant Uighurs of Central Asia, whatever the
    language affinities may be), but he treats lightly areas of cultural
    history that are very complex

    But this is not his most egregious mistake. No, in his references to
    Assyrians your editors should not have let pass the absolute
    historical and linguistic misinformation being passed along by Kurdish
    extremists to unsuspecting western sources: Can Global Politician
    maintain its integrity if it presents such appallingly unbalanced
    material?

    Assyrians have never been "Kurds." Nor are Jews who lived in northern
    Iraq "Kurds." From reliable Israeli accounts, there are no more than
    100 Jews left in all of Iraq, and most of those are in Baghdad and
    Basra. The Jewish religious and cultural facilities in places like
    Mosul and especially the large village of Alqosh on the Nineveh Plain
    have been looked after by the local ChaldoAssyrians once the Jews
    finally got permission to flee to Israel after 1949. Assyrians and
    Jews in Iraq, because they shared religious status as dhimmis - barely
    tolerated non-Muslims - and a common Aramaic speaking heritage,
    maintained a close relationship. One of the earliest books published
    about Jews in Iraq is by an Assyrian (Ghanima, 1927).

    Whatever the new strategic relationship between Iraq's Kurds and the
    Israelis and Americans may be, let us not gloss over the fact that
    most Jews living in northern Iraq are today in Israel or somewhere out
    of Iraq. Just because they spoke Kurdish does not mean that they were
    Kurds. Many minorities speak multiple languages of necessity, even as
    a mother language, of necessity. Look at the Uzbek elites or the
    Kazakhs who still are more comfortable in Russian than in their own
    written languages. Imagine the situation in northern Iraq where Jews
    and Assyrians spoke modern forms of Aramaic but of necessity also
    communicated in Kurdish, Arabic and in some cases Turkish and
    Persian. That is the state of minorities. It is an injustice to parlay
    multilingualism into Kurdish ethnicity and deny the existence of
    special ethnic minorities who already suffer enough physically and
    culturally.

    In terms of religion therefore, Kurds do not include many religions.
    Absolutely not. They are Muslims of several stripes. Assyrians are
    Christians separated into several denominations. The language of
    Assyrian church liturgy is Syriac, and sometimes the modern Aramaic
    vernacular. If in some churches the knowledge of Aramaic has decreased
    due to its suppression in schools, and Arabic, Turkish and even
    Kurdish are adopted to carry on the Christian tradition, this does not
    make these people Kurds. Aramaic is the oldest continuously written
    and spoken language of the Middle East and second only to Chinese in
    the entire world. It is on the verge of joining the dead languages of
    the world like Latin precisely because of the kinds of persecution
    that Christians in parts of the Muslim world have experienced.

    In Iraq, northwest Iran and in eastern Turkey, the biggest direct
    physical pressure on the Assyrians came from the Kurds, historically
    and today. Antero Leitzinger should have reflected a bit more, and
    read a great deal more about the First World War in the Middle East
    before repeating Kurdish propaganda about who persecuted whom. Written
    records alone, of Kurdish attacks on Assyrian villages, go back to the
    mid-19th century. They culminated in World War I when Kurds
    persistently attacked Urmiyah at a time when the Iranian government
    was too weak (caught up in the Constitutional Revolution) to resist
    either the Tsarist or Ottoman armies. Kurds took advantage of this
    weakness to kill off Assyrians and Armenians in persistent pulses
    sweeping down from the Zagros foothills onto the plains of Urmiyah. In
    1914, just as the Ottomans joined the Central Powers, their Kurdish
    allies launched an attack on Margawar and Targawar, killing all who
    could not flee east to relative shelter. In 1915 when the Committee
    of Union and Progress (CUP) launched its jihad in earnest against the
    Armenians, Assyrians and Pontic Greeks, driving who they could not
    kill into the Syrian desert, due to the Kurdish Hamidiya paramilitary
    units, very few, less than 50,000 Assyrians managed to reach Urmiyah
    since the mountain passes were held by Kurds who had taken over
    Margawar and Targawar already. The events of WWI culminated in the
    assassination of the Kurdish Shakkak tribe's honored dinner guest, the
    Assyrian Patriarch, titled Mar Shim'un at that time, in 1918; about
    130 of Mar Shim'un's bodyguards were also murdered. Some allege the
    after dinner assassination took place because the Kurdish chieftain
    Isma'el Agha (Simku) coveted this Assyrian leader's ring. (Anzali,
    1999)

    Kurds have also coveted Assyrian and Armenian women, and being in a
    more religiously powerful position as Muslims, they have taken these
    women and girls as household servants or second wives with little that
    their Christian neighbors could do to prevent it, although trying to
    get the women back periodically occurred and as late as the 1960s got
    whole Christian villages destroyed (August Thiery, 2003). The
    offspring of such forced unions may be partly Assyrian, but ethnically
    and culturally they grew up Kurds. And Muslims. Forget racial purity
    in that part of the Middle East: what matters for identity is
    language, religion and heritage.

    Due to the polygamous marriages so popular among peasant and
    non-peasant Kurds, the rate of population increase among Kurds is one
    of the highest in the world although population figures are
    notoriously unreliable and we only have the sample Soviet censuses to
    provide some evidence. One recent New Yorker article (October 2004)
    noted that among the Kurds moving into Kirkuk was a man with two wives
    and 21 children! He was interviewed at random. The upshot of all this
    is that the villages in Iran identified as Assyrian in 1927 were
    reduced drastically in number by the time of the official Iranian
    census published in the early 1950s (Razmara). And take a guess as to
    who had replaced the Assyrian Christians in and around Urmiyah? Mainly
    Kurds, not Azaris. Maybe Antero Leitzinger should have read a little
    more about why the Mahabad Republic was located where it was in WWII,
    instead of simply wondering why it was not in "Kordestan."

    The same displacement process occurred in southeast Turkey, in
    northeast Syria and now with help from misinformation like that
    provided in Global Politician, on the Nineveh Plains in northern
    Iraq. These replacements are genuine Kurds, not of the variety your
    author is presenting as "Christian Kurds" and "Jewish Kurds."

    These ethnic and religious matters in the Middle East are not
    simple. To try to deal with them from a biased perspective, or to
    create untenable analogies, only leads to disastrously tragic policy
    decisions. Global political astuteness requires far greater diligence
    and care.

    Ethnic cleansing is no joking matter. Careless words can wipe out the
    Assyrians, one of the oldest surviving communities in the world. The
    culture of the Assyrians of the Middle East is precious in all the
    senses of that word: it is old, rich, increasingly fragile, and has
    made many contributions to world culture from medicine (Le Coz, 2004)
    to agriculture (Abdalla 1980s, 1990s articles) and all the fields of
    human knowledge between them. To relegate the Assyrians to a branch of
    Kurds, who, for whatever reason, have a low prestige culture and
    little written history, is a cultural crime. At the least your author
    and you [globalpolitician.com] need to make a retraction.


    --
    Dr. Eden Naby is a cultural historian on the modern Middle East with a
    concentration on the area from Iraq to Central Asia. She has published
    extensively on Assyrians, as well as the Afghans, Turkmens, Uighurs
    and Kurds. Dr. Nab y's book Afghanistan: Mullah, Marx And Mujahid
    (Westview Press, rpt. 2002), co-authored with the Prof. Ralph
    H. Magnus, is a seminal source on modern Afghanistan and particularly
    useful for its analysis of that country's ethnic and religious
    minorities. Her most recent writing about Assyrians is From Lingua
    Franca to Endangered Language: The Legal Aspects of the Preservation
    of Aramaic in Iraq, a paper in On The Margins Of Nations: Endangered
    Languages And Language Rights (Joan A. Argenter and R. McKenna Brown,
    ed., 2004).

    Views and opinions expressed in guest editorials do not necessarily
    reflect the views and opinions of AINA. Guest Editorial Policy

    Copyright (C) 2005, Assyrian International News Agency. All Rights
    Reserved.
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