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Mustafa Barzani and the Kurdish Liberation Movement


Auteur :
Éditeur : Palgrave Macmillan Date & Lieu : , New York
Préface : Pages : 392
Traduction : ISBN : 0-312-29316-X
Langue : AnglaisFormat : 155x230 mm
Code FIKP : Liv. Ang. 1939Thème : Histoire

Présentation
Table des Matières Introduction Identité PDF
Mustafa Barzani and the Kurdish Liberation Movement

The First Barzan Uprising
(1931 — 1932)
Introduction to Part I


The idea of writing this book has arisen from my sense of the importance

of studying the history of the struggle of the Kurdish people and shedding light on the patriotic role of the Barzanis, who have taken part in formulating and forging numerous vicissitudes of this history.

Admittedly, I am neither a writer, nor a specialized researcher, nor a historian. I have fought hard to set aside my biases to command objectivity and fairness in meeting this challenging project, and to bring to readers and those interested in the Kurdish cause the fruits of this labor.

I must point out that despite a life full of heroism, sacrifice, and challenge devoted to the liberation and advancement of the Kurdish people, a life that reflects, in its transformations and demands, a significant share in the political history of the Kurdish people, the immortal Barzani never liked the idea of writing his memoirs and telling of the circumstances he faced in his life.

In this study, I wish to shed light on the first Barzan uprising in some detail, and to record information and facts I heard from participants in those events.

As the Kurdish struggle continued, detailed accounts of the first Barzan upris- ing remained unknown to many Kurds and to the outside world. Accounts of Iraqi officers who participated in military campaigns and accounts of British employ- ees in Iraq are not objective and fair. They were not, I must stress, written to be objective.

It is wrong to expect the British or officers trained by and serving under British commanders to impart the truth. They expressed official points of view, accord- ing to their own interests. Their accounts do not correspond to events on the ground or with the legitimacy of the national uprising.

From my position in the modern Kurdish national liberation movement, I find that it is imperative and a sacred duty to at least attempt to elucidate the vague or hidden aspects of this uprising and its role in paving the way for subsequent revolts and uprisings in Barzan.
 
No patriot, I believe, can effectively contribute to the struggle of his nation unless he mindfully studies its history. A nation's present is the rebirth of its past, and a nation's future is the progeny of its present.

Massoud Barzani
Kurdistan
January 1986


Table des Matières

Contents

Abbreviations / ix
General Introduction—Ahmed Ferhadi / 1

Part I. The First Barzan Uprising (1931-1932)
Introduction to Part I / 11
Chapter One / 13
Chapter Two / 17
Chapter Three / 21
Chapter Four / 27
Chapter Five / 35
Chapter Six / 39
Extrapolation 47

Part II. The Barzan Revolt (1943-1945)
Introduction to Part II / 49
Chapter Seven / 51
Chapter Eight / 55
Chapter Nine / 63
Chapter Ten / 67
Chapter Eleven / 73
Chapter Twelve / 79
Chapter Thirteen / 85
Chapter Fourteen / 93

Part III. The Barzan Revolt (1945-1958)
Introduction to Part III / 97
Chapter Fifteen /99
Chapter Sixteen / 103
Chapter Seventeen / 107
Chapter Eighteen / 109
Chapter Nineteen / 111
Chapter Twenty / 115
Chapter Twenty-One / 119
Chapter Twenty-Two / 121
Chapter Twenty-Three / 125
Chapter Twenty-Four / 127
Chapter Twenty-Five / 129
Chapter Twenty-Six / 135
Chapter Twenty-Seven / 139
Chapter Twenty-Eight / 141
Chapter Twenty-Nine / 143
Chapter Thirty / 145
Chapter Thirty-One / 147
Chapter Thirty-Two / 149

Part IV. The Kurds and the July 14, 1958 Revolution
Introduction to Part IV / 151
Chapter Thirty-Three / 157
Chapter Thirty-Four / 161
Chapter Thirty-Five / 165
Chapter Thirty-Six / 173
Chapter Thirty-Seven / 189
Chapter Thirty-Eight / 195
Chapter Thirty-Nine / 199
Chapter Forty / 201
Chapter Forty-One / 207
Chapter Forty-Two / 209
Chapter Forty-Three / 213
Chapter Forty-Four / 221
Chapter Forty-Five / 223
Chapter Forty-Six / 231
Documents / 233

Appendix 1—Players of Major Roles in the 1943-1945 Battles / 359
Appendix 2—List of Armed Men Who Accompanied
Barzani in the Historic March to the Soviet Union / 361

Notes / 375

Bibliography / 389


Abbreviations

CENTO Central Treaty Organization, which was known as the Baghdad Pact (member countries: Britain, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, and Turkey)
HP Hiwa [Hope] Party
ICP Iraqi Communist Party
IP Istiqlal [Independence] Party
IPC Iraqi Petroleum Company
KDP Kurdistan Democratic Party (founded on August 16, 1946)
KDPI Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (founded on August 16, 1945)
NDP National Democratic Party
NUF National Unity Front
PRM Popular Resistance Militia
PUK Patriotic Union of Kurdistan
RAF (British) Royal Air Force
RCC Revolutionary Command Council (of the Ba'thist government)
UAR United Arab Republic (comprising Egypt and Syria from 1958 to 1961
under President Nasser)
USSR Union of the Soviet Socialist Republic




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