Friday, September 12, 2014

Who are the Kurds

This is a good video to learn about the only SAFE Haven in Iraq,,

I got this directly from these people,,,


Published on May 3, 2012
who are the Kurds

There is a saying among the Kurds: "No friends but the mountains." For, indeed, the world has scarcely noticed when century after century, conqueror after conqueror has driven these once nomadic tribes deep within their beloved mountains to preserve their culture, their language and their lives.

Hidden in the shadows of history, resistance against repression became the Kurdish way of life, until atrocities inflicted by a dictator named Saddam Hussein sent shock waves throughout the world causing people of ever nation to ask, "Who are the Kurds?"

For many, awareness arrived on 'Bloody Friday' in March of nineteen eighty-eight when Saddam dropped poisonous gas on the Kurdish city of Halabja killing five thousand within minutes, followed by seven thousand more as the bombing continued for days.

Halabja was not Saddam's only chemical attack against Iraq's Kurds, it was simply the worst, captured in all its horrific detail, making it a symbol of the atrocities committed by Saddam Hussein.

INTERVIEW: RIZGAR HAMAWANDI
Saddam tried to wipe Kurdish people from the face of the earth. The people in Kurdistan are so happy because of the liberation and because now they can live in peace and free.

NARRATOR:
To trace the history of the Kurds, one must begin at the beginning -- for it was here, in the land some believe was once the Garden of Eden, that this resilient ancient people first left their mark upon the world.

Nourished by the headwaters of the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, archeologists believe it was within this Cradle of Civilization that Kurdish ancestors first pioneered agriculture, animal husbandry, weaving, metal work and the making of pottery.

NARRATOR:
For visitors, a trip through the land of the Kurds is a trip through Biblical history. The great prophets Nahum, Jonah, Habakkuk, and Daniel are all buried within the vast borders of what came to be known as Kurdistan.

The city of Amadiya still stands, marking the place many believe wise men known as magi began their journey to follow a great star that appeared in the sky.

As centuries passed, these tribes would fall to the forces of Alexander the Great at the Battle of Gaugamela...and later rise to their zenith as traders along the legendary Silk Road.

In time the Mongol hordes would make them prisoners...followed by the Ottomans who would make them princes.

But whether their occupiers were good or bad, killers or saints, the Kurds would learn to do what they must to survive.

At the end of World War I the Kurds were finally promised independence with the dismantling of the Ottoman Empire and the creation of new nation-states. Instead, with the stroke of a pen, Kurdistan was parceled out among Turkey, Syria, Iran and Iraq.

Today, the world's thirty million Kurds, equivalent to the population of Canada, make up the largest ethnic group in existence without a recognized state of their own.



No comments:

Post a Comment