An Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga fighter monitors his surrounding from the top of Mount Zardak, about 25km east of Mosul{Ever-Kind} |
Decades after warrior-king Sheikh Mahmud's overthrow, Kurds keep on fighting for a homeland.
Sulaimania, Iraq - By the time Sheikh Mahmud
Barzinji declared himself king of Kurdistan in 1922, over an area that
included the city of Sulaimania and its environs, he had already fought
dozens of battles; some alongside the British against the Ottomans,
others against the British alongside the Arabs, and then several more
against the Arabs.
From March 1923 to mid-1924, the British
retaliated against Sheikh Mahmud's perceived insolence with aerial
bombardment, and thus ended the Kurds' first attempt at full-fledged
sovereignty.
In 1923, the Treaty of Lausanne had dealt a definitive blow to
Kurdish aspirations for self-determination in the aftermath of the
Ottoman Empire's disintegration. Three years earlier, the Treaty of
Sevres stipulated that the oil-rich Mosul Vilayet be given to the Kurds.
But at Lausanne, the British and the French changed their minds and
drew up a very different map, which gave rise to the modern state of
Iraq.
Sheik Mahmud Barzinji, with Ahmed Uthman in 1927, Erbil, Iraq[Ever-Kind] |
The man who would be king of Kurdistan lived the rest of his years in
relative obscurity, in a village near the city of Sulaimania, and died
in 1956. Despite the errors committed by the valiant warrior - by most
accounts, he was not a shrewd politician - Sheikh Mahmud remains an
idolised figure and a source of inspiration for Kurdish leaders. An
enormous mural-portrait of him lies at the entrance of the Sulaimania
bazaar.
"They say Sheikh Mahmud didn't like the British, but that is
not true. They promised him a state, but then they changed their minds
and gave the Mosul Vilayet to the Arabs," says Sheikh Salar al-Hafeed, a
lawyer and relative of Sheikh Mahmud.
Today, as the Kurds of Iraq, Syria and Turkey play a critical
role in the war against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL)
as the only fighting force on the ground, Middle East watchers talk of a
new Sykes-Picot in the making.
Some 150,000 Kurdish Peshmerga are on active dutyacross
northern Iraq today. They are an integral part of the US-led coalition
against ISIL, just as their forefathers were supportive of British
forces at the end of World War I, spurred on by disingenuous promises of
an independent Kurdish state carved out of an ailing Ottoman Empire.
No official source will confirm whether or not Iraqi Kurdish
leaders have been promised an independent state in the event of ISIL's
defeat - rumours of an independence deal actually gained momentum around
the time of the Arab Spring, some say to appease the Kurdish public - but parallels abound with the conditions on the ground at the turn of the last century.
The line between insurgent and freedom fighter has always been
blurry. Revered today as a Kurdish nationalist hero, Sheikh Mahmud was
seen as an "insurgent" by the British authorities back in the day.
In 1919, after he was wounded in combat against British
imperial forces on the road between Sulaimania and Kirkuk, he was
captured and taken to Baghdad to stand trial in a military court.
"During the trial, [the British] refused to acknowledge his
status as a Kurdish leader, as a sheikh. They told him, 'You are an
obstacle.' They called him the leader of a terrorist group," says
Hafeed. "Sheikh Mahmud replied: 'You promised us a Kurdistan.'"
The Kurdish leader was sentenced to death for insurrection, but
this was later reduced to imprisonment in a British fort in India for
two years.
On his return to Sulaimania in October 1922, Sheikh Mahmud initially
had cordial relations with the British, promising to help them clear the
Turks out of Kurdish areas. But scarcely a month had passed before
promises on both sides were broken and Sheikh Mahmud declared himself
king of Kurdistan. An audacious act that did not go down so well with
the British Mandate of Iraq.
While the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has repeatedly
expressed gratitude for the US-led coalition's air support for Kurdish
ground forces, there are some who fear that Kurdish interests may be
betrayed once again by Western powers. Recently, for instance, Peshmerga
commanders have magnified their calls for more updated and sophisticated weapons and artillery,
saying their arsenal pales in comparison to those in ISIL's possession.
With over 2,000 Peshmerga already killed and many others injured -
according to official figures - they argue that the war cannot be won if
the asymmetry in capability persists.
Sheikh Salar al-Hafeed, a lawyer and relative of Sheikh Mahmud, points to a portrait of Kurdish elders circa 1920s{Ever-Kind} |
Have today's Kurdish leaders derived any lessons from Sheikh Mahmud's ill-fated experience? Hafeed is sceptical.
"No, they never learn anything from him," he says, shaking his
head. "Sheikh Mahmud established his kingdom despite British opposition,
as he was being bombed from the air by the British. Today's regional
government was established under a no-fly zone set up by the British and
others."
Prodded further on why Sheikh Mahmud's family has stayed out of
politics, he says: "We know what it is to be a Kurd. We don't need to
be a member of a party to be Kurdish."
The jibe is aimed at the two main political parties - the
Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan
(PUK) - that have largely dominated the political landscape since the
1950s, having led the armed resistance against the British Mandate and
later, the Baathist regime.
Regardless of who's in charge in Erbil, and the ongoing
political rivalry between the two parties, Hafeed dogmatically believes
the time has come for an independent Kurdistan.
"Our area is rich in natural resources and we have a strategic
importance, because of our borders with Iran, Turkey and Syria. They
want us to be something now," he says.
Hafeed - who has penned a book entitled "Kurdistan as and
within the international plan beginning from south" (2012) - says
Sykes-Picot lasted 100 years and now it's time for change.
"Next year, on May 16, they will want to change the map," he
prophesies. "Western powers want to change the map again, put another
treaty in place, at another Congress of Peace, and they'll redraw the
map."
There are others who share Hafeed's conviction about the
redrawing of the borders, if not his optimism for an independent
Kurdistan.
"The Western powers have already decided how all this is going
to end. The borders of the new map have already been drawn up," says
Dana Qadir, a businessman based in Sulaimania.
"This is about carving out a state for the Sunnis, and the
Kurdish Peshmerga are spilling their blood for it. The poorest of our
people are fighting someone else's war again..."
Novelist Rauf Behgard compares the prevailing mood in the Iraqi
Kurdish region to that of Austria-Hungary in the early 1900s as per the
writings of Franz Kafka. Behgard, who also serves as head of the Sardam
Publishing House, says this is a time of crisis for both the Kurdish
identity and politics. His soon to be released anthology of short
stories, entitled "Slaw Kafka" (Dear Kafka), is meant to show how
Kafkaesque themes now pervade all aspects of Kurdish life - whether
feelings of alienation from society, or labyrinths of bureaucracy.
"People in Kurdistan are afraid now, just as people in
Austria-Hungary were then, when Kafka was writing," he says. "That's why
I decided to allude to Kafka when writing my short stories set in
Kurdistan. The parallels are many."
He adds: "Compare the mood now, with the mood 10 years ago. You must understand that after the 1991 [Kurdish] uprising,
when the Peshmerga came down from the mountains, they were received as
angels from the sky who had come to liberate Kurdistan from the Baathist
regime. We were euphoric and appreciative. But we slowly discovered
that they would not be the solution to our problems. We gave them a
chance, for years, until 2003, because we had come to believe that it
was Saddam Hussein who was the greatest obstacle to our collective
aspirations. But that period of hope quickly dissipated."
Rauf Behgard, Iraqi Kurdish novelist and head of | Sardam Publishing House in Sulaimania [Ever-Kind] |
Life under the KRG has brought stability, and some improvements to
the infrastructure. But daily hardships persist, such as a chronic lack
of electricity and recent budget problems repeatedly leaving civil
servants unpaid for months. Erbil's squabbling with Baghdad over oil
revenues, internal disputes among the Kurdish parties and now the war
against ISIL have all contributed to the stagnating economy.
As a result, Behgard says many Kurds today find themselves
questioning everything they once believed in and thousands are trying to
leave the region for Europe or the United States.
"There is a sense of disillusionment," he says.
Under these circumstances, few in the know believe that an independent Kurdistan is in the cards any time soon.
One politician and member of the Goran (Change) Party, an
offshoot of the PUK, dismissed any notion of independence for the time
being.
"Let's get our house in order first," he said. "We have a
presidential crisis to solve, major economic problems and a war going
on. This is not the time to discuss independence."
Until then, the Kurds continue to look back on the kingdom that once was, and take pride in having tried.
They say Sheikh Mahmud didn't like the British, but that is not true. They promised him a state, but then they changed their minds and gave the Mosul Vilayet to the Arabs.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Reaply