Ethnic group
Total population | |
---|---|
9–10 million | |
Languages | |
Kurdish, Gorani and Persian | |
Religion | |
Shia Islam (Twelver) Sunni Islam (Shafi'i) (Sufi order Qadiriyya also present) Yarsanism | |
Related ethnic groups | |
see Iranian peoples |
Kurds in Iran (Kurdish: کورد لە ئێران, romanized: Kurdên Îranê, Persian: کردها در ایران) constitute a large minority in the country with a population of around 9 and 10 million people.
Geography
Iranian Kurdistan or Eastern Kurdistan (Rojhilatê Kurdistanê), refers to the parts of western Iran inhabited by Kurds which borders Iraq and Turkey. It includes the Kurdistan province, Kermanshah province, West Azerbaijan province, Ilam province, and Lorestan province.
Shia Feyli Kurds inhabit Kermanshah province, except for those parts where people are Jaff, and Ilam province; as well as some parts of Kurdistan and Hamadan provinces. The Kurds of Khorasan, in the North Khorasan province of northeastern Iran, are Shi'ite Muslims. The Lak tribe populate parts of Ilam province and Lorestan province, while Chegini Kurds reside in central Lorestan.
Religion
Main article: Religion in KurdistanThe two major religions among Kurds in Iran are Islam and Yarsanism, while fewer Kurds adhere to Baháʼí Faith and Judaism. There is disagreement on which is the largest denomination among Kurds; experts such as Richard N. Frye and Martin van Bruinessen argue that Sunni Islam (the Shafi'i branch) is the majority religion, while researcher Anu Leinonen believes it is the Twelver branch of Shia Islam.
Pockets of Sunni Kurds belong to the Qadiriyya tariqa (around Marivan and Sanandaj). These orders have experienced repression from the state, including the destruction of their places of worship. Yarsanis are also targeted by the central government.
Political history
Emergence of Kurdish nationalism
While Ottoman Kurdistan has been identified as the source of Kurdish national inspiration, Iranian Kurdistan has been identified as the ideological cradle for the emergence of Kurdish nationalism.
In Iran, Kurdish intellectual writings and poetry from the 16th and 17th century indicate that the Kurdish population in the country was aware of the necessity of Kurdish unity and the need to form political and administrative entities for Kurds. However, these calls for Kurdish unity did not reach the broader Kurdish population until the 20th century when it awakened and diffused as a response to the implementation of nation-state policies (Persianization) by changing Iranian rulers. These policies not only alienated Kurds but also excluded them from equal access to citizenship. An example was the Constitutional Revolution of 1905–1911, which elevated Persian above Kurdish by asserting it as official language, language of administration and language of education.
Cross-border interaction (1918–1979)
Kurds have a strong cross-border ethnic linkage and few historical Kurdish rebellions were limited to the borders of a single country. For example, the rebellion of Sheikh Ubeydullah in Turkish Kurdistan around 1880 inspired Simko Shikak to rebel in 1918, while the various Barzani rebellions in Iraqi Kurdistan became a source of support for the Republic of Mahabad. Other examples of cross-border interaction include the subjugation of the Simko Shikak revolt forcing Simko to flee to Rawandiz in Iraqi Kurdistan – where he sought the support of Sheikh Mahmud Barzanji. Following the fall of the Republic of Mahabad in 1946, some of its leaders also fled to Iraqi Kurdistan where they were sheltered by the son of Sheikh Mahmud Barzanji. Mustafa Barzani had also supported the Republic of Mahabad by sending 2,100 soldiers which in turn also increased Kurdish self-confidence. Many teachers and military officers from Iraqi Kurdistan moreover crossed the border to support the republic.
In 1944, the Society for the Revival of the Kurds/Kurdistan (JK) considered the first Kurdish nationalist movement met with a Turkish Kurdish delegation and an Iraqi Kurdish delegation at the border area near Mount Dalanpar where they signed the Pact of Three Borders which demonstrated the existence of a strong Kurdish sense of cross-border solidarity and sentiment.
Cross-border interaction became difficult to sustain in the 1950s due to repression from SAVAK on the Iranian side. However, Kurds were able to reinforce the cross-border political activity, when the First Iraqi–Kurdish War commenced in 1961, as the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (KDPI) gave financial support and loyalty to their counterpart in Iraq, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), while KDPI themselves accessed spatial resources. Relations between KDP and KDPI would later deteriorate greatly as KDP became a close ally of SAVAK against Iraq. CIA documents from 1963 show that the KDP rebuffed support from KDPI due to the desire to maintain close relations with Iran.
In the 1970s, KDPI with Komalah and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) fought around Piranshahr, Sardasht, Baneh in the northern parts of Iranian Kurdistan against Iranian forces who received support from KDP.
Cross-border interaction after 1979
After the Iranian revolution in 1979, political infighting among Kurds increased and KDPI and Komala fought over political and spatial influence in Iranian Kurdistan as they were fighting Iran together. In the 1980s, the two political and military groups had become powerful and cross-border interaction was therefore less important.
Separatism
Main articles: Kurdish separatism in Iran, Republic of Mahabad, and Western Iran clashes (2016–present)Kurdish separatism in Iran or the Kurdish–Iranian conflict is an ongoing, long running, separatist dispute between the Kurdish opposition in Western Iran and the governments of Iran, lasting since the emergence of Reza Shah Pahlavi in 1918.
During the Iranian revolution, Kurdish nationalist political parties were unsuccessful in attracting support, who at that time had no interest in autonomy. However, since the 1990s, Kurdish nationalism in the region has grown, partly due to outrage at the government's violent suppression of Kurdish activism.
Tribes
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to itadding to it or making an edit request. (April 2020) |
Tribe | Kurdish and Persian names |
Geography | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Ali Sherwan | Kurdish: عهلی شیروان Persian: ئایل علیشروان |
Ilam province | Southern Kurdish–speaking |
Amar | Kurdish: عمار Persian: عمارلو |
Gilan province, Greater Khorasan and Qazvin province | Kurmanji–speaking |
Arkawâzi | Kurdish: ئهرکهوازی Persian: ارکوازی |
Ilam province | Southern Kurdish–speaking |
Badreh | Kurdish: بەدرە Persian: بدرهای |
Ilam province | |
Balavand | Persian: بالاوند | Ilam province | |
Beiranvand | Kurdish: Bîranwend ,بیرانوەند Persian: بیرانوند |
Between Aleshtar and Khorramabad; Bayranshahr. | Laki–speaking. |
Chahardoli | Persian: چاردولی | Hamadan province and West Azerbaijan province | Laki–speaking |
Chalabianlu | Persian: چلبیانلو | East Azerbaijan province | |
Chegini | Kurdish: Çengînî ,چەگینی Persian: چگنی |
Between Khorramabad and the Kashgan river. | Chegini dialect (Mixture of Laki and Luri) |
Dehbalai | Persian: بالایی | Ilam province | |
Delikan | Persian: دلیکانلو | Ardabil province | Turkophone |
Dilfan | Kurdish: Dilfan ,دیلفان Persian: دلفان |
Around Delfan County. Present in Ilam and Mazandaran provinces as well. | Laki–speaking |
Donboli | Kurdish: Dimilî ,دونبەلی Persian: دنبلی |
Khoy and Salmas area. | Turkophone |
Falak al-Din | Persian: فلک ئالدین | Hamadan province | Laki–speaking |
Eyvan | Kurdish: ئهیوان Persian: ايوان |
Ilam province | |
Feyli | Kurdish: Feylî ,فهیلی Persian: فیلی |
Ilam province (Ilam, Chardoval, Mehran, Malekshahi, Abdanan, Dehloran). | Southern Kurdish–speaking. |
Ghiasvand | Persian: قیاسوند | Hamadan province | Laki–speaking |
Guran | Kurdish: Goran ,گۆران Persian: گوران |
Hawraman region | Gorani–speaking. |
Hasanvand | Kurdish: حەسەنوەند Persian: حسنوند |
Around Aligudarz, Khorramabad and Borujerd. | Laki–speaking. |
Herki | Kurdish: Herkî ,ھەرکی Persian: هرکی |
Western countryside of Urmia in the Targavar and Margavar valleys. | Kurmanji–speaking. |
Jaff | Kurdish: Caf ,جاف Persian: جاف |
From Sanandaj to Kermanshah with Javanrud as area of origin. | Sorani–speaking. |
Jalali | Kurdish: Celalî ,جەلالیان Persian: جلالی |
Around Maku. | Kurmanji–speaking. |
Jalilavand | Kurdish: Celalwend ,جەلیلوەند Persian: جلیلوند |
Around Dinavar and in Lorestan province. | Laki–speaking. |
Kakavand | Kurdish: Kakewend ,کاکەوەن Persian: کاکاوند |
Kermanshah, Harsin area, and Kakavand District, Delfan. | Laki–speaking. |
Kalhori | Kurdish: Kelhûr ,کەڵھوڕ Persian: کلهر |
Around Eslamabad-e Gharb, Qasr-e Shirin and Gilan-e Gharb. Ilam province (Chardoval and Eyvan) |
Southern Kurdish–speaking. |
Khezel | Kurdish: خهزهل Persian: خزل |
Ilam province | Southern Kurdish–speaking |
Kolivand | Persian: كليوند | Ilam province | |
Kordshuli | Kurdish: Kurdşûlî Persian: کردشولی |
Fars province | Laki–speaking |
Kuruni | Kurdish: Kûranî Persian: کورونی |
Fars province | |
Malekshahi | Kurdish: Melekşahî Persian: ملکشاهی |
Ilam province | Southern Kurdish–speaking |
Mamash | Kurdish: Mamaş ,مامش Persian: مامش |
Southern parts of West Azerbaijan. | Sorani–speaking. |
Mangur | Kurdish: Mangûr ,مەنگوڕ Persian: منگور |
Around Piranshahr, Mahabad, Sardasht and Bukan in West Azerbaijan. | Sorani–speaking. |
Milan | Kurdish: Mîlan ,میلان Persian: میلان |
North of Zurabad in northern West Azerbaijan | Kurmanji–speaking. |
Mukri | Kurdish: Mukrî ,موکری Persian: مکری |
Around Baneh, Mahabad, Piranshahr and Saqqez. | Sorani–speaking. |
Musavand | Persian: موسی وند | Hamadan province | Laki–speaking |
Qolugjan | Ardabil province | ||
Reşwan | Kurdish: Reşwan ,ڕەشوان Persian: رشوند |
Gilan province, Greater Khorasan and Qazvin province | Kurmanji–speaking |
Rizehvand | Persian: ریزه وند | Ilam province | |
Sanjâbi | Kurdish: Sencabî ,سنجاوی Persian: سنجابی |
Western parts of Kermanshah province. | Southern Kurdish-speaking. |
Shaqaqi | Kurdish: Şeqaqî ,شەقاقی Persian: شقاقی |
East Azerbaijan province | |
Shatran | Persian: شاترانلو | Ardabil province | |
Shekak | Kurdish: Şikak ,شکاک Persian: شکاک |
Western countryside of Urmia. | Kurmanji–speaking. |
Shuhan | Persian: شوهان | Ilam province | Southern Kurdish–speaking |
Torkashvand | Persian: ترکاشوند | Hamadan province | Laki–speaking |
Uriad | Persian: اوریاد | Fars province | |
Zangana | Kurdish: Zengine ,زەنگەنە Persian: زنگنه |
South of Kermanshah. | Southern Kurdish–speaking. |
Zola | Kurdish: زۆلا Persian: زوله |
Hamadan province | Laki–speaking |
See also
- Ardalan
- Mokryan
- List of Iranian Kurds
- A Modern History of the Kurds by David McDowall
References
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Bibliography
- Hassaniyan, Allan (2021), Kurdish Politics in Iran, Cambridge University Press, doi:10.1017/9781009029971, ISBN 9781009029971, S2CID 241171409
Further reading
- Bayani, Farhad; Serajzadeh, Seyed Hossein (2021). "Islamic Fundamentalism as a lifestyle? a Sociological Study of Islamic Fundamentalism among Sunni Kurds of Iran". British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. 50: 123–141. doi:10.1080/13530194.2021.1937517. S2CID 236293538.
- Cabi, Marouf (2021). The Formation of Modern Kurdish Society in Iran: Modernity, Modernization and Social Change 1921-1979. I.B. Tauris. pp. 1–232. ISBN 978-0755642243.
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