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Revision as of 10:45, 30 March 2020

For the villages in Iran, see Badarash, Iran.
Summer time in Badarash
Mar Gewargis (St. George) Assyrian Church of the East
A regular house in Badarash

Badarash (Template:Lang-ku) is a Kurdish village in the Dohuk province of Kurdistan Region in Iraq. The village of Badarash is located 1.5 kilometres west of the centre of Sarsink, and has two small lakes in the western part of the town which go down into a chasm below the village. The towns name comes from the Kurdish word meaning “the Black Air”.

History

Before the 1961 Kurdish rebellion, 55 families lived in the village. Due to the outbreak of civil war, the village was burned along with its apple groves, which were the main source of income to the village. other forms of agriculture such as livestock and crops were a secondary source of income. As destruction and war pushed younger residents to immigrate, the population shrank to 35 families. Even with the shrinkage, The village is still large compared to other entirely Christian villages nevertheless, and is also one of the only villages in the region that was not completely destroyed during the Al-Anfal Campaign in 1988.

See also

References

  1. "به‌رده‌ره‌ش.. گه‌نجێك تووشی نه‌خۆشییه‌كی ده‌گمه‌ن بووه‌". Retrieved 19 December 2019.
  2. "28 sal di ser raperîna Berdereş û Akrê re derbas bûn". 12 March 2019. Retrieved 19 December 2019.
  3. I. M. Nick (2019). Forensic Linguistics: Asylum-seekers, Refugees and Immigrants. p. 67. ISBN 9781622731305.
  4. "Badarash". www.ishtartv.com.

37°03′N 43°20′E / 37.050°N 43.333°E / 37.050; 43.333

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