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ANKARA: Explained: Kobane Or Ayn Al-Arab?

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  • ANKARA: Explained: Kobane Or Ayn Al-Arab?

    EXPLAINED: KOBANE OR AYN AL-ARAB?

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    Oct 28 2014

    ISTANBUL

    Kobane, a dusty town on Syria's border with Turkey, has been a
    battleground between the defending Syrian Kurdish forces and the
    besieging militants of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL)
    for weeks. As the fighting continues to rage, the etymology of the
    town's name is now also being contested.

    "I don't want to get involved in the debate about whether this town
    belongs to the Arabs or the Kurds. But as a matter of fact, as befits
    the name, it is called Ayn al-Arab ["Arab Spring" in Arabic]. This
    name was then turned into Kobane," Turkish President Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan told a group of journalists on his way back to Ankara from
    Estonia on Oct. 25.

    But where does "Kobane" come from?

    Nobody disputes that the town is a relatively new settlement. Before
    the 20th century, it was just a water meadow where even great
    commanders like Saladin used to feed the horses of his army. For a long
    time, it was referred to as Arab Punarı ("Arab Spring" in Turkish).

    Muhsin Kızılkaya, a writer of Kurdish origin, told private
    Turkish broadcaster CNN Turk on Oct. 13 that Kobane was not even a
    small village at the turn of the century. "The Germans set a small
    station there while building the Baghdad Railway. A new settlement
    was developed around the construction and locals called it Kobane,
    in reference to the German 'company' that built a road in the area,"
    he said.

    The rendering of "company" as "Kobane" seems logical at first glance,
    considering the fact that both Kurds and Arabs adapt many Western
    words by changing the letter "m" to "b."

    Historically, however, the "company theory" sounds weak, as Germans
    use the word "Gesellschaft" for business companies. "Kompanie,"
    on the other hand, refers to military units.

    Others have suggested that the middle part of the name Kobane
    could come from the German word "bahn" (road). In fact, Anatolische
    Eisenbahn, a German company, built the landmark Baghdad Railway,
    which some historians see as one of the causes of the First World War.

    After connecting Istanbul to Konya via Ankara in the 1890s, Anatolische
    Eisenbahn started to build the second phase of the railroad that would
    link Konya to Aleppo. "German engineers built a small station in the
    area. This was the first time that Arab Punarı was put on the map,
    in 1912," daily Milliyet columnist Aslı AydıntaÅ~_baÅ~_ wrote on
    Oct. 13.

    At the time, Arab Punarı was a remote railroad station with a few
    shacks around, while nearby Urfa was a sprawling multicultural city
    of Turks, Kurds, Arabs and Armenians. Suruc, a district of Urfa, was
    the closest settlement to Arab Punarı with a significant population,
    lying just across the railroad.

    "Actually, Arab Punarı first appeared on the stage of history during
    the Armenian massacres in 1915," AydıntaÅ~_baÅ~_ also added.

    Soon after Turkey entered the First World War as an ally of Germany,
    it decided for the mass deportation of Ottoman Armenians, who it
    accused of revolting and aiding the enemy on the eastern front, the
    Russians. Arab Punarı became one of the "transit centers" for the
    Ottoman Armenians deported from the Eastern Anatolian town of Sivas
    to the remote deserts of Syria.

    In his two-volume book, "The Armenian Genocide" French-Armenian
    historian Raymon Kevorkian writes that 120-170 people were dying due
    to illness each day in late 1915 at the Arab Punarı camp, where some
    15,000 Ottoman Armenians had been placed.

    Germany and the Ottoman Empire ultimately lost the war before a new
    border was drawn between Turkey and Syria based on the Sykes-Picot
    Agreement that Britain and France had secretly signed in 1916. The
    German-made railroad was determined as the mark for the border by
    the victors of the war. Hence, Suruc was left to Turkey while Arab
    Punarı was now on the Syrian side of the border.

    The new, independent Turkey has complained of armed groups crossing
    the border near Arab Punarı since the 1920s. After a Kurdish uprising
    was quelled by Ankara in 1925, several tribes crossed the border in
    the opposite direction, from Turkey to Syria, thus increasing the
    Kurdish population in Arab Punarı. The town became melting pot of
    Arabs, Kurds, Armenians and Turkmens, and many of its districts and
    surrounding villages still bear Turkish names.

    Right up to the independence of Syria, a French intelligence
    headquarters was maintained in Arab Punarı by the land's colonial
    authorities, according to AydıntaÅ~_baÅ~_. French agents were based
    there to control the porous border, upon Turkey's insistent requests
    to stop smugglers and armed groups.

    "When the modern state of Syria was founded, the regime renamed
    the town Ayn al-Arab, in line with its 'Arabization' policy,"
    AydıntaÅ~_baÅ~_ added. The demography of the area was slowly altered
    once again.

    Today, most Kurds refer to the town as Kobane, while Arabs prefer
    to stick to Ayn-al Arab. The Turkish authorities oscillate between
    both names, weary of the political war of words that goes hand in
    hand with the ongoing street battles in the town.

    Meanwhile, almost everyone has forgotten the true origins of the name
    referring to Arabs in Turkish, as well as the town's history, which
    is full of tragedies for many people, including Armenians and Kurds.

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/explained-kobane-or-ayn-al-arab.aspx?pageID=238&nID=73591&NewsCatID=359

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