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Astarjian: Our Friends, Our Foes: The Kurds

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  • Astarjian: Our Friends, Our Foes: The Kurds

    Astarjian: Our Friends, Our Foes: The Kurds
    By Henry Astarjian
    January 7, 2010

    The Armenian Weekly
    January 2010 Magazine

    The inheritance of my generation of Armenians is the legacy of our
    parents and grandparents who survived the genocide, especially the
    atrocities committed by the Kurds. Even after almost a century,
    talking to the post-genocide Armenians about the Kurds generates
    anger, hatred, belittlement, and at best indifference. However,
    today's realities mandate a cool, close look at these people who share
    land with us in southeastern Turkey, which we call Western Armenia and
    they call Northern Kurdistan. So are they our friends or foes, or
    both?


    Kurdish women demonstrating (photo by Mujgan Arpat)
    The stories passed on to us speak of the criminal, at least hostile,
    acts perpetrated against Armenians throughout the centuries,
    especially in the late 19th century by Kurdish tribes leading to the
    Great Genocide of 1915.

    Who are these people who have historically influenced our way of life,
    threatened our existence, and continue to shape our future?

    Ethnic jokes and anecdotes portray the Kurd as an ignorant group of
    nomads, who are Muslims (just barely so, according to the Turks, who
    consider the Kurds Muslim only when compared to the giavour (the
    infidel): Giavoura bakarak Kurd Musluman).

    Historic accounts document their profile as tribes who, for the last
    five centuries, have survived in Anatolia through extortion, robbery,
    individual killings, mass killings, rape, kidnapping, and in general,
    by collaborating with the Ottoman authorities to oppress the Armenian
    nation and the other Christian minorities.

    So, who are the Kurds? What is their genealogical origin? Where did
    they come from?

    All that really matters not! What matters is that they have lived with
    us for 4,000 years and have sometimes been our friends, often our
    foes, not to say enemies. Our histories have intermingled; we have
    allied ourselves with the Ottomans against them, they have done the
    same against us, and at times we have joined forces with them against
    the Ottoman government. An example: the 1845 armed uprising of Prince
    Badrkhan, in a coalition with the Armenians, against the Sultan.
    Prince Badrkhan believed that `The Armenians and the Kurds are Arians,
    belonging to the same race. One tribe accepted Islam and the other
    remained Christian.' He even allowed intermarriage, though it is
    doubtful that any Armenian man married a Kurdish girl.

    I met his great grandson Saif Badrkhan, who lives in California. He's
    a highly educated decent human being who even gave a brief speech in
    one of the April 24 gatherings in LA condemning the genocide. He
    arranged for me to deliver speeches in Kurdish American conferences in
    California and Maryland. I did! The meetings were crowded by people,
    whose appearance and existence alone changed my view of the Kurds.
    Perhaps it is not an exaggeration to say that whomever I met had a
    Ph.D. or master's degree in some scientific or business field. Polite
    mannerisms reflected civility during the official speeches, and during
    dinners and social hours. Ladies, graceful in their charm and
    traditional Kurdish gowns, mingled with men and danced shoulder to
    shoulder.

    I was given a seat in the front row. There was an empty chair to my
    left; I thought it might have been planted there deliberately, because
    Kurds, all from Turkey, came to shake my hand, and sit on that chair
    to share thoughts and `secrets' with the `representative of the
    Armenian people,' which I was not, nor claimed to be. A few of them
    posed a rhetorical question: `Why are the Kurds Muslims? What have we
    gained by being Muslims?' At least a dozen or so told me - on the
    promise of anonymity - that their grandmother is Armenian. I was not
    shocked. A few years later I heard the Kurdish explanation of
    kidnapping our girls, which I will discuss later.

    The theme of these meetings was inarguably political and inarguably
    nationalistic and designed to advance the cause of a `United, Free
    Kurdistan.' It was an eye opener! For, the issue was not limited to
    Iraqi Kurdistan, the liberation of the Kurds from the atrocities of
    Saddam Hussein, but to Pan Kurdism and the establishment of a united,
    free, and sovereign Kurdistan expanding from the Araratian planes in
    present-day Turkey to Kirkuk and Mandali, deep into Iraq. Needless to
    say, it includes the six Armenian vilayets, the jewel of which was
    Van.

    I said my word, loud and clear, from the podium, the gist of which
    was: Yes, we have the same cause. Yes, we have a common enemy. Yes,
    there should be an alliance between us. But each group has its own
    interests and rights, for which they must struggle. There should be no
    dispute between our two nations. We are partners in destiny. Our
    rights were spelled out, in detail, in the provisions of the Sevres
    Treaty, which was then refined and mapped by U.S. President Woodrow
    Wilson. It is to our advantage, and to the detriment of Turkey, to
    stick to this map and the provisions in the Sevres Treaty.

    I got standing ovations all three times, but not necessarily as an
    endorsement of my expressed ideas. They were, I believe, happy for my
    having exposed Turkey for what it is: an occupier, an oppressor of
    other nations, and a violator of human rights.

    In one of the meetings, I met Nijyar H. Shemdin (Agha) the son of
    Hajji Shemdin Agha of Zakho, Iraq. My uncle, Dr. Krikor Astarjian, was
    one of Shemdin Agha's close friends and his family's physician.
    Through the Agha, and other Aghas whom he canvassed, he was
    instrumental in tipping the League of Nation's plebiscite held in the
    early 1920's in favor of Iraq. In this plebiscite, the Kurds of Mosul
    voted not to join Kemal Ataturk's Turkey, thus joining the newly
    formed Kingdom of Iraq. We both were happy to find each other and
    recall the memories of yesteryear.

    Events guided me to participate in the festivities of the first
    anniversary of the incorporation of the Kurdish Parliament in Exile,
    which was incorporated in the Hague, and which established itself
    physically in Brussels. Ten European countries had recognized it
    and/or lent their support to this democratic institution. The
    parliament was established by Turkey's Kurdish exiled
    parliamentarians. They had fled Turkey when other Turkish `deputan'
    were stripped of their parliamentary immunity and arrested - like Leyla
    Zana - for supporting the `Kurdish Cause.'

    The organizers had elected Yasar (Yashar) Kaya as president of the
    parliament. I had met him in one of the Kurdish meetings in
    California, where he also had delivered a speech calling for Kurdish
    unity. He, together with Zubeyir Aydar, the chair of the Executive
    Committee (originally representing Siirt in the Turkish Parliament)
    came to welcome the representative of the Tashnag Party (which I was
    not). They took me to dinner in an Italian restaurant. I let them
    initiate the conversation. They apologized for Kurdish tribes'
    criminal acts against the Armenians. They said, `These killers were of
    certain tribes who are doing to us what they did to you: They are
    killing us, raping our women in front of assembled villagers, they are
    burning our villages and hamlets, and they are deporting the civilians
    into internal exile. The difference is that they did not send them to
    Der Zor. You had the Hamidiya Alaylari, and we have these criminals,
    the Korujus. They are on Turkish government's payroll.'

    They further developed the conversation to talk about Kurdish
    kidnapping of our children. They said, `We don't dispute that, but
    look at it from our view: We knew that those kids would face a certain
    death in the desert of Der Zor, so we saved their lives. And we always
    told them they are Armenians.' They did not say that they converted
    them to Islam.

    They went into the litany of the genocide, expressing profound
    sympathy to the survivors and their offspring. I listened and listened
    to this sincere mea culpa, until it became repetitious, at which time
    I told them what I told the parliament in a televised speech the
    following day. The gist of my speech was simple: I am not here to
    demand sympathy or demand apology from the Kurds. I am here to affirm
    the Armenian nation's right to some of the land you are living on, and
    to our adherence to the provisions of the Sevres Treaty. Our
    relationship with the Kurdish nation is not based on ideology, but on
    land rights and demands in Western Armenia. Both the Kurdish and
    Belgian televisions televised the proceedings.

    Our relationship with the Kurds is a complex one: (1) We are allies by
    necessity: The enemy of my enemy is my friend. (2) They look up to us,
    yet we look down upon them. And we are wrong. The Kurds have advanced
    in every imaginable field beyond anyone's imagination, certainly
    beyond mine. (3) Whether we like it or not, they are our neighbors. We
    better understand them. (4) Other than Western Armenia, there is, for
    them, the issue of `Red Kurdistan,' that is, Lachin, Kelbajar, and
    Fizuli. For us, the case is closed.

    So, are the Kurds our friends or foe? Probably both. A smart approach
    to this seemingly impossible situation will make them, in my opinion,
    our friends much more than our foes.

    (One caveat: Though I kept our leadership fully informed, I had no
    endorsement nor any kind of support from them. In this endeavor, I was
    not representing anyone but myself. Others may have had a different
    impression.)
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