Kurdish people

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Kurds (Kurdish: کورد) or Kurdish people are an Indo-European and Iranian[1][2][3] ethnic group indigenous to the mountainous region of Kurdistan in Western Asia, which spans today's southeastern Turkey, northwestern Iran, northern Iraq and northeastern Syria.[4][5]

There are exclaves of Kurds in Central Anatolia, Khorasan, and the Caucasus, as well as significant Kurdish diaspora communities in the cities of western Turkey, particularly Istanbul, and Western Europe, primarily in Germany. In 2017, the Kurdish population was estimated to be between 36.5–45 million.[6]

Kurds
Kurd کورد
Total population
36.5–45 million[7]
(Kurdish Institute of Paris, 2017 estimate.)
Flag of Turkey.svg Turkeyest. 15-20 million[7]
Flag of Iran.svg Iranest. 12 - 12 million[7]
Flag of Iraq.svg Iraqest. 8–8.5 million[7]
Flag of the Syrian revolution.svg Syria3–3.6[8][9]
Flag of Germany.svg Germany1.5–2.5 million[10][11]
Flag of Turkmenistan.svg Turkmenistan50,000[12]
Flag of Azerbaijan.svg Azerbaijan180,000 - 4 million (inc. Ancestral)[12]
Flag of France.svg France150,000 - 300,000[13]
File:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands100,000 - 210,000[14]
Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden83,600 - 115,600[15]
Flag of Russia.svg Russia63,818 - 130,000[16]
Flag of Belgium.svg Belgium50,000[17]
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom49,841 - 186,000[18][19][20]
Flag of Kazakhstan.svg Kazakhstan46,348[21]
Flag of Switzerland.svg Switzerland51,000[22]
Flag of Denmark.svg Denmark30,000[23]
Flag of Jordan.svg Jordan30,000[24]
Flag of Austria.svg Austria110,000[25]
Flag of Greece.svg Greece61,000[26]
Flag of the United States (Pantone).svg United States20,591[27]
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Canada16,315[28]
Flag of Finland.svg Finland15,368[29]
Flag of Georgia.svg Georgia13,861[30]
Flag of Kyrgyzstan.svg Kyrgyzstan13,200[31]
Flag of Australia.svg Australia10,551[32]
Flag of Armenia.svg Armenia37,470 - 900,000 (inc. Ancestral)[33]
Languages
Kurdish
In their different varieties: Sorani, Kurmanji, Pehlewani, Laki[34]
Zaza, Gorani[35]
Religion
Predominantly Islam (Largely Sunni majority with a small Shia minority)
with minorities of Yazidism and Alevism
Related ethnic groups
Other Iranian people

Kurds are one of the largest and most important ethnic groups in the Middle East.

Most of the Kurdish population lives in Kurdistan. Kurdistan is the area where Kurds live. Today, it is a border country with lands in the east and southeast of Turkey, in the north-west of Iran, in the north of Iraq and in the north-east of Syria.[36]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  (Lands in Armenia and Azerbaijan also have small Kurdish populations.)[4][36]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist. 

Languages

Many Kurds speak the Kurdish language. The two largest Kurdish dialects are Kurmanji Kurdish and Sorani Kurdish. The Kurds of Turkish Kurdistan (Bakur) and of Syrian Kurdistan(Rojava)speak Kurmanji. About half of Kurds in Iranian Kurdistan (Rojhelat) and Iraqi Kurdistan (Bashur) speak Kurmanji, while other Kurds there speak Sorani. Some Kurds in Iranian Kurdistan (Rojhelat) speak the Gorani Kurdish dialect, while others in Turkish Kurdistan (Bakur) speak Zazaki Kurdish.[4][36]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist. 

Lifestyles

Until the 20th century, most Kurds were nomadic people.[36]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  The Kurds' economy had a close connection with pastoralism and animal husbandry.[36]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist. 

In the 21st century, nomadism is not common among Kurds.[36]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  Most Kurds now live in cities.[36]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  In the 21st century, farming is the most important work in Kurdistan. Industrialization means that fewer Kurds work as farmers, and this has caused urbanization of the Kurdish population. In the past, Kurds were part of the Silk Road economic system. Trade routes form connections between different countries through Kurdistan.[4][36]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist. 

Some scholars make an argument that the meaning of the name was not an ethnonym at the time, because many different groups of nomads and pastoralists had the name "Kurds" during the Middle Ages. However, other scholars make the argument that the name was not the name of lifestyle or economic system, such as nomadism or pastoralism, but the name of a population. This population shared a common character in linguistics, shared an area to live in, and shared a mythology.[37]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  Whether the people and groups who had the name "Kurds" thought that they were a common community before the 12th century is unknown.[37]

History

Middle Ages

In the 7th century, Kurds had many different religious beliefs.[37]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist. [38]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  There were Christians and Zoroastrians.[37]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  There were also Kurdish Jews.[38]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  Some sects among the Kurdish Christians and Jews had religious beliefs from Zoroastrianism and Mithraism in their religion.[38]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  There may have been Kurds among the Companions of the Prophet.[38]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist. 

Islamic conquests in the 7th century meant that most Kurds became Muslim in the 7th and 8th centuries.[37]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  Most Kurds converted to Islam between the 7th and 9th centuries CE. Kurds who were not Muslim had to pay the jizya, a tax.[37]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  Most of these were part of the Shafi'ite system of Islamic jurisprudence.[37]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist. 

While most Kurds are Sunni Muslims, there are also Kurds of many other religions and sects.[38]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  There are Kurdish Jews in Iraqi Kurdistan and in Israel as well.[36]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist. 

20th century

After modern international borders came into existence after World War I, many Kurds went out of Kurdistan. They migrated to the large cities in the Middle East and to Western Europe.[36]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  Since the Middle Ages, there have also been Kurdish communities in Cairo, Beirut, Damascus, and Aleppo.[36]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist. [39]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  Since the Early Modern Period, there have also been Kurdish communities in Khorasan, a region covering modern north-eastern Iran and Afghanistan.[4][36]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist. 

Persecution in the Soviet Union

The Soviet Union also committed ethnic cleansing against Kurds by forcing them to migrate from the Caucasus to Central Asia. When the Soviet Union ended, the First Nagorno-Karabakh War between Armenia and Azerbaijan harmed most Kurds in the Caucasus.[4][40]

Religions

The Kurds are a mostly Muslim people associated with Sunni Islam. Most Kurds are part of the Shafi'i school of jurisprudence, but some Kurds are part of the Hanafi school. Sufism is also common among Kurds. There are also Kurds who are part of Shia Islam and Kurds who are part of Alevism. There are also Kurdish Jews and Yazidi people.[4][36]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist. 

Classical antiquity

In Classical antiquity, the most important deities of the Kurds' lands were Ahura Mazda and Mithra.[38]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist.  The most common religion was Zoroastrianism. Zoroastrianism was probably the state religion of the Achaemenid Empire. There are connections between the writings of Zoroastrianism and the Vedas, the Hindu writings of ancient India.[38]: Script error: The function "hyphen2dash" does not exist. 

Kurdish People Media

References

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  2. E. J. van Donzel (1994). Islamic desk reference. BRILL. p. 222, "(...) the Kurds are an Iranian people who live mainly at the junction of more or less laicised Turkey, Shi'i Iran, Arab Sunni Iraq and North Syria and the former Soviet Transcaucasia."
  3. Biggs, Robert D. (1983). Discoveries from Kurdish Looms. Mary and Leigh Block Gallery. Northwestern University. ISBN 978-0-941680-02-8. p. 9, "Ethnically the Kurds are an Iranian people (...)"
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 * Kreyenbroek, Philip G.. The Kurds: A Contemporary Overview (1992)Routledge. ISBN 9781138869745. Retrieved December 9, 2024.
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  7. "Syria - Kurds". World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples. "There are around two-and-a-half million Kurds in Syria. They speak Kurdish (the Kirimanji dialect), but most speak Arabic, too, and many Kurds have at least partially assimilated into Arab society. Most are Sunni Muslims."
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