Kurdish Heritage Reclaimed
After years of conflict, Turkey's tradition-rich Kurdish minority is experiencing a joyous cultural reawakening
- By Stephen Kinzer
- Photographs by Lynsey Addario
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 6)
During the civil war of the 1990s, the Turkish Army—determined to deny sanctuary to guerrillas in the countryside—forcibly evacuated more than 2,000 villages, pushing up to three million Kurds from their homes. Many landed in large towns and, having little experience with urban life, melted into a new impoverished underclass. “This culture has been damaged very seriously by forced migration,” says Zozan Ozgokce, a 33-year-old financial consultant. “[Before], we never had beggars or street children or drug users.” The strains on families are apparent. In 2004, Ozgokce co-founded the Van Women’s Association, which conducted a survey of 776 Kurdish women in Van—82 percent said they were victims of domestic abuse “often” or “very often.”
“Our society has been seriously injured, no doubt,” says Azize Leygara, 32, who runs Children Under the Same Roof, a nonprofit group that seeks to rescue Kurdish street kids in Diyarbakir, some 230 miles west of Van. “Our challenge is not to go back to life as it was. That’s gone, and it won’t be back. Our challenge now is to create a new social structure.”
The Umut Bookstore (the name means “hope”) in the dusty Turkish town of Semdinli is set amid jagged peaks 40 miles from the Iraqi border. The bookseller, Seferi Yilmaz, 47, became a local hero the hard way—by surviving a 2006 bomb attack on his store. Witnesses chased the assailant and surrounded the car in which his two collaborators were waiting. All three men turned out to be tied to the Turkish security forces; two were noncommissioned gendarmerie officers and the third was a former PKK guerrilla who had become a government informer. They were apparently trying to kill Yilmaz, who had served a prison term after being convicted of PKK membership in the 1980s. The incident set off waves of outrage among Kurds and provoked further demands for reform.
Inside the bookstore, Yilmaz showed me four glass cases holding artifacts from the attack, including bloodstained books and a teapot peppered with shrapnel holes. One man was killed in the bombing and eight others were injured.
“If you don’t accept the existence of a culture or an ethnicity, of course it cannot be permitted to have music or art or literature,” he said. “The Turks don’t recognize our identity, so they don’t recognize our culture. That’s why our culture is so politicized. Just to say that this culture exists is taken as a political act.”
Still, everyone I met—even the most outspoken Kurdish nationalists—told me they wanted their homeland to remain part of Turkey. Traveling across the country, it’s easy to understand why. Turkey is by most standards the most democratic Muslim country—a powerful, modern society with a vibrant economy and extensive ties to the international community. If the mainly Kurdish provinces of the southeast were to become independent, their state would be landlocked and weak in a highly volatile region—a tempting target for powers such as Iran, Iraq or Syria. “We don’t want an independence that would change borders,” says Gulcihan Simsek, mayor of a sprawling, impoverished borough of Van called Bostanici. “Absolute independence is not a requirement today. We want true regional autonomy, to make our own decisions and use our own natural resources, but always within the Turkish nation and under the Turkish flag.”
In Istanbul, I asked Turkish President Abdullah Gul why the Turkish state has been unable, over the course of its nearly 90-year history, to find peace with its Kurdish citizens, and what chance there is for it now.
“Some call it terror, some call it the southeast problem, some call it the Kurdish problem,” he responds. “The problem was this: the lack of democracy, the standard of democracy....When we upgrade that standard, all these problems will find solutions.” In practical terms, that means stronger legal protections for all citizens against discrimination, whether based on gender, religious belief or ethnicity.
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Related topics: World History Communities Rituals and Traditions Turkey
Additional Sources
Preventing Conflict Over Kurdistan by Henri Barkey, Brookings Institution Press, 2009









Comments (10)
first Kurds not minority in Turkey:about 30-35 million Kurds live in Turkey Republic (and population rises up more than others or turks)the biggest Kurdish city is istanbul about 6million Kurds lives and secon is Khorasan of iran 3or4 million Kurds lives there mostly Shii Kurds,in west Anatolia in izmir about 1,3million,in antalya 750.000,Mersin 1 million,Konya700.000.ankara 1milyon;and South east region about 9 milyon people is %85 is Kurds which is the higest increasing ,rising up population for Turkey,Eastern Anatolia %70 is Kurd with 10 milyon people.Also such as Kirsehir and Aksaray almost helf population is Kurds.Cia factbook is a big lie because they want to show kurds as minority,Kurds always were majority,since Hurrians and Hitites.Because now no contry for own by Kurds Persians and Truks steal all about Kurds.Kurdistan length from Sinop till Khurmuz Gulf.Azeri,Xiyiang(Sincan) people,Synctians are closer to the Kurds not turks,turks were gypsies of mid asia,Rojbash hevalno.
Posted by Slahaddin Elkurdi on September 26,2012 | 05:37 PM
All the usual silliness from the commentors. Nevertheless, a good article though I think most Kurds would never suggest Saladin did anything for them. And it's kind of odd that the church was ruined in the 'convulsions' that broke up the Ottoman state. I hear many synagogues were ruined in the convulsions of World War 2. In any case, things are indeed changing for the better here, despite all the silly 'There is no Kurdistan' comments...ugh.
Posted by Jeff Gibbs on January 6,2011 | 03:08 PM
! There arent any Kurdish guarilla. they were used as a pawn by the EU.
Posted by Kagan Keskin on January 1,2011 | 06:33 AM
There isn't a Kurdistan in or around Turkey but a province where Kurdish population is very intense.
The fact should be laid out properly in any source of media.
Posted by esin kara on August 23,2010 | 03:44 PM
Just a minor criticism, the article describes the PKK as 'guerillas'. In my mind an organisation that has indiscriminately killed some 40,000 people, since 1984, can only be described as terrorists. You fail to mention that the EU & UN also recognize the PKK as a terrorist organization. Very cute piece though, very fluffy.
Posted by Phoenix Macabi on June 15,2010 | 11:17 PM
What was the "Kurdish Problem" and how is Turkey trying to solve it?
Posted by Bhavya on June 9,2010 | 08:36 AM
I have worked as a Humanitarian Organization Director in Kurdistan of Turkey and Iraq now for 18 years and although I am currently on extended furlough your very nice article brought alive fond memories of life with the Kurds. Thank you for the sensitive and thoughtful words concerning their history and culture. I will make sure my friends hear about this article so they can enjoy it too.
Posted by Robert Anderson on May 30,2010 | 11:29 PM
It is good to see a sympathetic, broadly informative article about the much misunderstood Kurds (pronounced Koords) in this Magazine. A few corrections: the "ancestral homeland" extends far beyond SE-Anatolia in Turkey, it stretches over the Northern Zagros mountains and North-Eastern Mesopotamia to include parts of North-Western Iran and Northern Iraq. Kurdish is, after all, a West-Iranian language. While indeed large Kurdish groups were nomadic - migrating annually with their flocks of sheep and goats from winter-warm Upper Mesopotamia to their summer pastures in the Taurus mountains, the post-1923 borders between Iraq and Turkey have blocked these migrations. Most Kurdish groups that continue with their husbandry live winters in permanent villages and take their flocks to summer pastures nearby. Very few, small groups of nomads remain in the Iranian-Iraqi-Turkish border area. The Kurd as nomad is an anachronistic clichee.
And the "wedding party" is, indeed, the actual wedding, the religious ritual just confirms the wedding contract negotiated well in advance; civil formalities, if any, are a recent addition.
Stephen Kinzer deserves thanks for his observations from a corner of the world that is still difficult to enter, yet important to understand.
Posted by Dieter Christensen on May 25,2010 | 04:00 PM
"The route took me over rugged hills, along the rims of vertiginous gorges, and past the haunting ruins of a church, destroyed in the convulsions that accompanied the collapse of the Ottoman Empire in the early 20th century."
That church is at a place called Kochanes (aka Qodshanis, Qudshanis), until 1915 the "Rome" of the Church of the East (Old Church "Nestorians"), the home of its patriarchs, and still a focal point for those Assyrian tribes who once were just as powerful in Hakkari as were the Kurds. Mr. Kinzer and readers of his illuminating article would do well to study this aspect of Kurdistan's history as well. (See my "Fever & Thirst: An American Doctor Among the Tribes of Kurdistan, 1835-1844," Academy Chicago, 2005, among other works.) The Assyrian patriarch, once resident in Kochanes, now lives in Chicago.
Posted by Gordon Taylor on May 23,2010 | 12:46 AM
I like the part where the women said nobody went to see a dcotor and how they used herbs to cure. Americans think we have to see a doctor for the slightest discomfort and expect medicine to be prescribed every time. And it's bankrupted the USA to do something each and every human body does by itself, which is to heal itself.
Posted by Leo Fonoimoana on May 20,2010 | 01:21 AM