The Kurdish Digital Library (BNK)
Retour au resultats
Imprimer cette page

Kurdish Ethnonationalism


Editor : Lynne Rienner Publishers Date & Place : 1992, Boulder & London
Preface : Pages : 208
Traduction : ISBN : 1-55587-250-6
Language : EnglishFormat : 155x235 mm
FIKP's Code : Liv. Eng. Ent. Kur. N°2414Theme : Politics

Kurdish Ethnonationalism

Kurdish Ethnonationalism

Nader Entessar

Lynne Rienner Publishers


Kurdish nationalism has long been a source of instability, intercommunal conflict, and ethnic strife in the Middle East, and demands for Kurdish self- determination have grown increasingly frequent and loud. Nader Entessar explores the nature of Kurdish solidarity, the reasons for its political activation in recent years, and the policies that have been adopted in response to it.

After providing a historical context, Entessar analyzes the political, social, and legal dimensions of Kurdish integration into the mainstream of sociopolitical life in Iran, Iraq, and Turkey. How have these countries handled the phenomenon of Kurdish ethnonationalism? How has this phenomenon affected the nationstate system in the Middle East? Do state policies aimed at, variously, assimilation, pluralism, or segregation succeed in achieving multi-ethnic harmony? The impact of international events since the 1970s—e.g., the Iran-Iraq war—on the plight of the Kurds is also considered. In the final chapter of this balanced and well-grounded study, Entessar looks to the future of Kurdistan.



Nader Entessar is professor of political science and international relations, and chair of the Social Science Division at Spring Hill College.

 


Contents


1 Kurdish Ethnicity: Introduction And Overview / 1
State and Ethnicity
Kurdish Identity
Kurdish Language and Religion
Kurdish Socioeconomic Marginalization

2 The Kurds in Iran / 11
A Brief Historical Review
The Kurdish Republic of Mahabad
The Formation of the Komala
After Mahabad: Kurdish Nationalism and the Pahlavi Dictatorship
The Iranian Revolution, the Islamic Republic, and the Kurds
Intra-Factional Politics in Contemporary Iranian Kurdish Groups

3 The Kurdish Condition in Iraq / 49
The Kurds, the British, and the Iraqi Monarchy
Republican Iraq and the Kurds
The First Ba'thi Regime and the Kurds
The Non-Ba'thists and the Kurdish Dilemma: 1963-1968
The Second Ba’thi Regime and the Uprising in Kurdistan
The Kurdish Struggle After Mullah Mostafa Barzani

4 The “Mountain Turks”: The Kurds in Turkey / 81
Kurdish Uprisings in the Early Twentieth Century
The Growth of the Kurdish Movement and the Turkish Left
The Return to Civilian Rule: The Post-1983 Era
Human Rights Issues and the Kurdish Struggle in Turkey

5 International and Regional Context of Kurdish Nationalism / 113
Iran-Iraq Relations and Gulf Security
The Iran-Iraq War and the Kurds
The Invasion of Kuwait, the Gulf War, and the Kurdish Revolt

6 Whither Kurdistan? / 159
Kurdish Self-Determination and International Legal Principles
International Humanitarian Principles and the Kurds
Constitutional/Legal Techniques and Kurdish Integration

Notes / 171
Selected Bibliography / 193
Index / 202
About the Book and the Author / 208


PREFACE


The purpose of this book is to analyze the political and social dimensions of Kurdish integration into the mainstream of sociopolitical life in Iran, Iraq, and Turkey. The central thesis of the book is that ethnic conflict constitutes a major challenge to the contemporary nation-state system in the Middle East. In other words, the book challenges the long-held view that assimilation is an inevitable result of modernization and the emergence of the relatively strong and centralized nation-state system in the Middle East. Perhaps no single phenomenon illustrates this thesis more vividly than the historical Kurdish demands for self-determination.

In addition to Western literature, I have relied on Middle Eastern sources and publications of various Kurdish organizations, such as the Kurdish Democratic Party and Komala. Notwithstanding the importance of the Kurds for nation building and regime maintenance in Iran, Iraq, and Turkey, there are few comprehensive scholarly books on this subject. Many of the recent books on the Kurds are cither anecdotal or written to support the ideological position of a particular group or political movement. Of the few other books that have been written by scholars, most arc either out of date or have a narrower focus than this one. I hope that it will provide a balanced treatment of the Kurdish dilemma in the late twentieth century that will be useful to both scholars and informed readers.

In transliterating Arabic and Persian names and other words into English, I have relied on the most commonly used spellings. For simplicity, I have avoided using diacritical marks. Since modern Turkish, unlike Arabic and Persian, uses the Latin alphabet, I have tried to maintain the spellings of Turkish names as they are used in Turkish publications. For this reason, some names may be spelled differently in Turkish than they are spelled in Arabic or Persian.

A number of sources have aided in the research for this book. Spring Hill College awarded me several faculty research grants for data collection. The National Endowment for the Humanities provided me with two summer grants for college teachers to participate in seminars on ethnic minorities and cultural pluralism at Harvard University and the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
The staff of the interlibrary loan service at the Thomas Byme Memorial Library at Spring Hill College was especially helpful in obtaining various books and documents for me in a timely and efficient manner. Anonymous reviewers provided useful insight and critical comments on earlier drafts of this manuscript I also want to thank Martha Peacock for her cooperation and support of this project, and Gia Hamilton and Steve Amey for their astute editorial work. Last but not least, my wife, Marie, provided expert word-processing skills and help in revising the various drafts of this manuscript. I am indebted to all of them. Any errors of fact and interpretation are, of course, my sole responsibility.

Nader Entessar



1
Kurdish Ethnicity: Introduction and Overview

The end of the Cold War has augured a new vision of the global order and conflict management. In a controversial article, policy analyst Francis Fukuyama even suggests that with the apparent triumph of Western liberalism over Soviet communism, all underlying causes of conflict in the world have been eliminated.

What wc may be witnessing is not just the end of the Cold War or the passing of a particular period of history, but the end of history as such: that is, the end point of mankind’s ideological evolution and the universalization of Western liberal democracy as the final form of human government.1

Although Fukuyama in his neo-Hegelian theory acknowledges the importance of religious fundamentalism and ethnonationalism in global politics, he nevertheless asserts that Western liberalism will eventually prevail over possible challenges presented by these and similar phenomena.2

Though it is beyond the scope of this book to examine the validity of Fukuyama’s theory, one could reasonably assert that the phenomenon of ethnonationalism will continue to pose a major challenge to the nation-state system and will continue to be a serious source of conflict in multiethnic societies irrespective of the predicted triumph of Western liberalism on a global scale.
The revival of ethnonationalism in the Middle East, the former Soviet Union, Europe, and the Americas in the late twentieth century is a clear manifestation of the existence of sources of conflict that cannot be dealt with satisfactorily through the application of the macro theories of world order.

The rise of ethnic consciousness and the political demands of many minority or ethnic groups for self-determination has run against the perceived interests of the state as the dominant actor in global politics. As the history of Kurdish ethnonationalism clearly demonstrates, politicization of Kurdish ethnicity coincided with the formation of the modem nationstate system in the Middle East.3 In other words, competing claims of ethnic groups and the state have transformed ethnicity from a purely ...


Nader Entessar

Kurdish Ethnonationalism

Lynne Rienner Publishers

Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc.
Kurdish Ethnonationalism
Nader Entessar

Lynne Rienner Publishers
Boulder & London

Published in the United States of America in 1992 by
Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc.
1800 30th Street, Boulder, Colorado 80301

and in the United Kingdom by
Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc.
3 Henrietta Street, Covent Garden, London WC2E 8LU

© 1992 by Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Fublication Data
Entessar, Nader.
Kurdish ethnonationalism / by Nader Entessar
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
ISBN 1-55587-250-6
1. Kurds—Ethnic identity. 2. Kurds—Politics and government.
3. Middle East—Politics and government. I. Title.
DS59.K86E58    1992
950.049159—dc20 / 92-3655
CIP

British Cataloguing in Publication Data A
Cataloguing in Publication record for this book
is available from the British Library.

Printed and bound in the United States of America

The paper used in this publication meets the requirements
of the American National Standard for Permanence of
Paper for Printed Library Materials Z39.48-1984.

PDF
Downloading this document is not permitted.


Foundation-Kurdish Institute of Paris © 2024
LIBRARY
Practical Information
Legal Informations
PROJECT
History & notes
Partenaires
LIST
Themas
Authors
Editors
Languages
Journals