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  • Discussion On The Formation Of Kurdish Nationalism

    DISCUSSION ON THE FORMATION OF KURDISH NATIONALISM
    By Azad Aslan

    Kurdish Globe
    http://www.kurdishglobe.net/displayArticle.j sp?id=6409F3AA7C2AD51378AA2A7882B099E6
    April 16 2008
    Iraq

    The concepts of nation and nationalism are approached in two main
    categories

    In the following commentary, Globe writer Azad Aslan succeeds in his
    attempts to "ignite theoretical discussion within Kurdish political
    discourse."

    With the exception of some scholarly studies on the origin of Kurdish
    nationalism by Abbas Vali, Hamid Bozarslan, Amir Hasanpour, and Martin
    van Bruinessen, there is lack of a serious and informed discussion
    within the Kurdish historiography on the formation and development of
    Kurdish nationalism. The lack of theoretical discourse on nation and
    nationalism both within Kurdish intelligentsia and political movement
    points out a chronicle theoretical infirmity of the Kurdish national
    movement. This frailty is more apparent presently than ever before as
    the Kurdish national question has acquired an international character,
    particularly since the first Gulf War in 1991 and flourishing
    Kurdish national awareness throughout Kurdistan has fast become a
    phenomenon. Processes of formation of Kurdish national identity in
    southern Kurdistan are not elaborated with a theoretical insight
    toward the concepts of nation and nationalism. The whole purpose of
    this article is to ignite such theoretical discussion within Kurdish
    political discourse.

    Primordialism and modernism

    There is not a single comprehensive definition on the concepts
    of nation and nationalism. However, for the sake of simplicity,
    the myriad conflicting approaches to these concepts can broadly be
    divided into two main categories: primordialism and modernism. For
    the priomordialist, nation is a historical entity that has existed
    since time immemorial. Nation, thus, is not a product of modernity,
    but a historic entity that has developed over the centuries and has
    its origin in the mists of time. Thus, nationalism is its vehicle
    for the realization of its historical rights to a national state. The
    modernist, on the other hand, holds that nation and nationalism are
    intrinsic to the nature of the modern world and to the revolution of
    modernity. In the modernist paradigm, nation is a constructed identity
    invented and imagined by nationalism.

    This article defines nation as a combination of objective
    and subjective conditions, with more emphasis on the latter. By
    objective conditions it means a community that shares common cultural
    characteristics such as a commonly used language, identification with
    a particular territory, shared history and myths. In other words, it
    sees the existence of a cultural community with a territory assumed
    as their natural possession. By subjective conditions it refers to
    the political activities of conscious human agency with a purpose
    to transform such a cultural community into a political community
    that is based on shared rights and duties. Nation is a politicized
    community, and hence nationalism is the sum of political activities
    oriented toward the state.

    It is this aspect of nation and nationalism that lacks a clear
    political discussion amongst the Kurdish intelligentsia and Kurdish
    political movement. Kurdish political actors today pay insignificant
    attention to the undeniable relations between nation and the state.

    Agency vs. determinism

    Subjective and objective conditions mentioned above mainly refer to
    internal factors. There are also external factors that are crucial
    in the formation and development of nationalist movements. External
    factors include two decisive aspects: world-wide, social-economic
    transformation, and the global and regional political crisis.

    Economic development and social transformation that have occurred
    all over the world in the last two centuries or longer in relation
    or in response to European capitalism have taken different forms and
    consequences under different structural and conjunctural conditions.

    The breakdown or transformation of primary communities, urbanization,
    individualization of labor, intensification of the social division
    of labor, the emergence of new forms of government and institutions,
    widening of education and literacy, technologies and networks of
    communications and transport, were some of the common features of
    global social and economic transformation. Such economic development,
    and particularly the advent of capitalism, gradually but greatly
    changed the world's social and political landscape. Thus, nationalism
    as modern phenomenon became a worldwide political movement, albeit
    in different forms and colors. However, treating the development
    of nationalism as sole consequences of such social and economic
    transformation, dominant political beliefs among the Kurdish
    intelligentsia, would run the risk of lapsing into historical
    determinism. The social and political crises have had a great affect
    on the formation and development of nationalism throughout the world.

    The impact of World War I on world politics, and particularly on the
    development and the surge of nationalist movements throughout the
    world, was unprecedented.

    It is imperative to add the subject of structure/agency to discussion
    of nation and nationalism. Nation, as a constructed political
    entity, and nationalism, as a political movement oriented toward
    such construction, are attributed to the role of agency. The role
    of agency is limited within the primordialist perception of nation
    as it conceives nation as a natural entity that exists since time
    immemorial. In that sense, there is no need for conscious human
    activities to create such an entity. I suggest that construction of
    nation and formation and evolution of nationalism are primarily the
    outcome of agency. There is, therefore, an undeniable bond between
    modernist theory of nationalism and the role of agency in making
    history. This, however, should not be understood to contend that there
    is no place for structure in the construction and formation of nation
    and nationalism. Social formations (e.g., tribalism), cultural features
    (customs, traditions, language), and existing political arrangements
    of a community that shares common territory are necessary backgrounds
    upon which the nationalists, as agents, transform such a community
    into the politicized entity that is a nation. The bulk of Kurdish
    historiography approached the concept of nation and nationalism
    within the paradigm of primordialism combined with an evolutionary
    and determinist historical understanding. This explains the reason
    behind the lack of well-established discussion within the Kurdish
    historiography and politics about the role of agency in history.

    Antiquity and Kurdish historiography

    The early Kurdish nationalists were anxious to prove the historical
    antiquity of the Kurds and their heroic past. The majority of studies
    and works on the Kurds and Kurdistan, particularly since the 1970s
    amongst the Kurdish intelligentsia, academics, and historians,
    underline the continuity of the primordialist nature of Kurdish
    historiography. Emphasizing the early emergence and existence of a/the
    Kurdish nation was/is one of the main themes in the re-emergence of
    Kurdish national movements, particularly for those in Turkey. Since
    the late 1980s, a number of studies carried out by Kurdish writers
    have emphasized the ancient history, culture, and roots of a Kurdish
    nation going back to 3000 B.C. Dr. Cemsid Bender, who passed away
    recently, stated that the Kurds were the oldest people of Anatolia,
    adding that their age is so old that it cannot be known. The writer
    further goes on to assert that it was the Kurds who, as the oldest
    people of the Mesopotamia along with the Sumerians, contributed most
    to world civilization in its infancy.

    However, the development of Kurdish historical writings since 1970s
    in Turkey is both a reaction to and imitation of 20th-century Turkish
    historiography. Following the establishment of the Turkish Republic,
    Turkish historical writings began to engage two mainstream ideas.

    First, they tried to establish the superiority of the Turkish
    nation over all other nations and ethnic groups and the great
    Turkish contribution to world civilization. They claimed that global
    civilization began with the Turkish race and that the Turkish language
    is the oldest and most profound language in the world.

    Second, Turkish historiography attempted to disprove the existence
    of the Kurdish ethnicity and language by claiming that the Kurds
    were in fact a part of the great Turkish race. Such extreme writings
    were not mere scholastic exercises in Turkish historiography, but,
    as strategic discourses, they legitimized Turkish state policy with
    regards to the Kurds. Thus, it is not surprising to note that the
    Kurdish historiography is a direct response to the Turkish history
    writings and to a great extent an imitation of it.

    Though most Kurdish nationalists and historians share the primordial
    paradigm of nationalism, there are growing numbers of scholars and
    historians of Kurdish history who analyze Kurdish nationalism within
    the perimeters of the modernist theory of nationalism.

    Formation of early Kurdish nationalism

    Some scholars and historians of Kurdish history have labeled the
    pre-war period as the emergence of Kurdish nationalism. Some others go
    even further by assuming the 19th-century uprisings in Kurdistan to be
    the beginning of Kurdish nationalism. A. Hasanpour, for example, refers
    to the literary works of Ahmed-e Khani as the manifestation of "feudal"
    Kurdish nationalism. This article, however, suggests that formation
    of early Kurdish nationalism began with the establishment of Kurdistan
    Teali Jamiyeti soon after the end of World War I. It suggests that the
    classification of political, cultural, and organizational activities
    of the Kurdish intelligentsia of the pre-war period, especially
    from the time of publication of first Kurdish newspaper, Kurdistan,
    in 1898 in Cairo, as nationalism would be inappropriate. This period
    should rather be termed as the Kurdish "enlightenment." Indeed, as
    an analysis of the primary Kurdish sources of the time indicates, the
    Kurdish intelligentsia's prime concern during the pre-war period was
    to enlighten, inform, and educate the Kurdish masses who, as Kurdish
    intelligentsia believed, had been deliberately neglected by the Ottoman
    state. The intelligentsia were aware that there was a Kurdish question,
    but this question was understood as an internal part of the Ottoman
    whole and its solution was sought within the political boundaries
    of Ottomanism. The question had not yet been perceived as having
    a political character. The Kurdish intelligentsia were in search
    of a means of accommodating their ethnicity and identity within
    the Ottoman social and political structure. As indicated earlier,
    nationalism is primarily a political movement that seeks to obtain
    a nation state or self-determination. A close examination of the
    associations and publications of the Kurdish intelligentsia does not
    reveal any such objective. They were mainly interested and involved
    in the cultural aspects of the Kurdish people, particularly in the
    area of education and literature. Their thoughts were far away from
    mobilizing the Kurdish masses in pursuit of a nation-state of their
    own. They mainly identified themselves with Ottomanism. One must
    note though, as Hutchinson would argue, that the demarcation between
    a cultural movement and a nationalist movement is not clear cut and
    it only needs political crisis and external factors, such as war or
    disruption of social and political life, for a cultural movement to
    transform itself into a political nationalist movement. It is also
    imperative to differentiate between the cultural activities and
    intentions of the Kurdish intelligentsia predominantly in Istanbul
    and the engagement of local notables, in effect tribal leaders,
    influential families, and religious leaders in Kurdistan. The former
    were trying to accommodate the cultural distinctiveness of Kurdish
    people within the Ottoman polity by advocating both reformation and
    modernization of the Ottoman state structure, as well as improving the
    social conditions of Kurdistan mainly through education and structural
    reforms. The latter, however, were concerned with the advancement
    of their regional influence and local interests, in effect tribal,
    inter-tribal, as well as tribe-state issues in their environment.

    For the first time in Kurdish modern political history a Kurdish
    political organization, Kurdistan Teali Jemiyeti (KTJ, est. in 1918)),
    demanded a Kurdish nation-state. The main political objective of the
    KTJ was to secure general rights for the Kurdish people. An important
    article published by Jin (published by KTJ in 1918-19) provides more
    information with regard to KTJ's aims and activities.

    Narrating the events of a conference held by the KTJ in Istanbul
    in 1918, the writer quotes from the conference: "The Association is
    intended to protect the general and national interests of the Kurds.

    In order to guarantee the national rights provided by the Wilson
    Principles, naturally the association put the Wilson Principles
    into its program. The Wilson Principles, which were approved by the
    whole world and recognized by the Ottoman government, provide for and
    secure national rights. For, if national rights [of the Kurds] were
    not secured, the Kurds would remain oppressed and without rights, and
    perhaps for centuries to come the Kurds would remain imprisoned." The
    same writer asserted: "So, as the Kurdish people has preserved its
    existence up to this century, and in this century, before our eyes,
    and clearly with its language, characteristic features, traditions,
    needs and environments distinct from others, thus it is imperative
    to admit 'there is a Kurdish nation,' then it is their [the Kurds]
    right to obtain the same [national] rights as the neighboring and
    other communities of the same level." These rights, for the writer,
    include: "They [the Kurds] too want to be listened to by those who
    speak the same language, to be healed by those who understand them,
    to be ruled by a law of its own, to be able to create their own
    conditions that make them happy and to live in their own country as
    they like." Here there is certainly a strong nationalist argument:
    to live on their own land with their own people and by their own rule.

    The head of the Kurdish delegation at the Paris Peace Conference,
    Gen. Sherif Pasha, who was a member of KTJ, presented a memorandum to
    the Conference in which he stated that the Kurds constitute a nation
    therefore right to self-determination of the Kurdish nation must be
    recognized by Great Powers.

    Continuity and change

    Here it is imperative to comment on continuity and change in history
    with respect to the sharp transformation of the Kurdish "enlightenment"
    (1898-1914) to the formation of Kurdish nationalism (1918- ). The
    political actors that played a significant role during the pre-war and
    post-war Kurdish activities more or less constituted the same group of
    people. An explanation is required to answer the sudden transformation
    of the Kurdish intelligentsia's political thought from Ottomanism
    to Kurdish nationalism in a period of four years. Remaining strictly
    within the framework of modernist paradigm of nationalism examination
    of the available Kurdish primary sources presents a convincing argument
    with regard to the classification of the Kurdish elite's Ottomanism and
    its evolution into nationalism in a very short period of time. However,
    this sudden alteration in the political thought of the Kurdish elite
    poses a problem in the discipline of history.

    The outbreak of World War I, the evident collapse of the Ottoman
    Empire, the rise of ethnonationalism amongst the various subjects
    of the Empire, including the Turks, Arabs, and Armenia, and the
    nationalistic discourse of the Allied Powers, such as the Wilson
    Principles and the Anglo-French declaration, were the main factors
    behind the radical shift in Kurdish political thought.

    The rise of Armenian nationalism and the growing Great Power and
    Russian interests in Armenia from the late 19th century always caused
    great anxiety amongst the Kurds. Armenian-Kurdish relations in the
    immediate post-war era deteriorated further as both groups contested
    for the same territory. This contention was an important factor
    in contributing to the rise of Kurdish nationalism. The Kurds felt
    strongly that it was either "them" or "us." What differentiated the
    immediate post-war conflict from that of the pre-war period was that
    the Kurds realized the inability of the Ottoman central government
    to deal with the issue and the growing physical presence of the new
    actors in the arena, that of Britain and France. This was compounded
    by the explicit support of the U.S. toward the Armenians. The Kurds
    had seen the Caliphate as the supreme protector of Muslim citizens
    against the infidel and spiritually identified themselves with it.

    They no longer had the hope, in the post-war period, of expecting
    the Ottomans to solve the issue on behalf of and according to the
    interests of the Muslim Kurds.

    If the formation of early Kurdish nationalism had taken shape partly
    as a reaction against Armenian nationalism, the effect of the Great
    Powers' discourse on self-determination of the oppressed people
    was another factor that contributed to the development of Kurdish
    nationalism. Indeed the rhetoric of the Great Powers was promising.

    On November 1918, a British-French joint declaration on Middle Eastern
    policy stated its aim to be "the complete and final liberation of
    the peoples who have for so long been oppressed by the Turks, and
    the setting up of national governments and administrations that shall
    derive their authority from the free exercise of the initiative and
    choice of the indigenous populations." However, it was the Wilson
    Principles that caused the greatest hope amongst the Kurdish elite
    because of its explicit advocacy of the right of self-determination
    for the non-Turkish subjects of the Ottoman Empire. The 12th
    point of the principles states: "The Turkish part of the present
    Ottoman Empire should be assured a secure sovereignty, but other
    nationalities that are now under Turkish rule should be assured an
    undoubted security of life and absolutely unmolested opportunity of
    autonomous development." It was because of the hope and excitement
    that had arisen from the principles that the first Kurdish national
    organization had the Wilson Principles in its program. They demanded
    the application of the Wilson Principles to the Kurds due to the
    fact that, as they argued, the Kurds constituted a distinct nation,
    and thus had rights to their own self-determination. An article in Jin
    indicates the complex relationships between the Wilson Principles and
    the Armenian issue: "Yes, up to the present time, we Kurds did not feel
    like separating from the Turkish government or the Ottoman community
    (Menzuma-i Osmaniyan). Whereas now, we see that Wilson says "we will
    not give non-Turks to the Ottomans." So this is the case: our land is
    called Kurdistan and there are, apart from two to three civil servants,
    no Turks. If there are no Turks, what about Armenians or others? The
    Armenians only constitute 5% and the others not more than 2%.

    Therefore, in Kurdistan there is no other nation than the Kurds
    and thus, Kurdistan is the right of the Kurds not others. Wilson's
    Principles provide us with the right to have Kurdistan." (Jin, issue
    no. 6, 25 December 1919, pp.5-14)

    Reading Jin reveals that Wilson represented, for the Kurdish
    nationalists, the voice of a new age in which justice, reason,
    and the laws of science were to dominate international relations:
    'The old ideologies, the erstwhile political and social ideologies
    are collapsing," asserted a writer. "Other principles, other leaders
    are appearing; reason dominates hatred, darkness is being imprisoned
    by enlightenment." (Jin, issue no. 1, 7 November 1918, p.5)

    It is noteworthy to remember that World War I itself was an
    unprecedented event in world history. As Roshwald acutely observed:
    "The war created unusual opportunities and tremendous pressure that
    served to catapult the idea of national self-determination toward
    sudden realization across a wide range of societies. To be sure, the
    cultural, economic, and political conditions in these various lands
    were extremely divisive; what these cases all have in common is that
    their transition to political systems based on the idea of national
    self-determination was very sudden rather than the result of a steady,
    evenly paced process, and that it took place within the framework of
    a common, external contingency-a war that transformed the shape of
    global politics." Dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire after World War
    I played a significant role in transformation of the Kurdish elite's
    political thought on the question of nationality and identity.

    There had not been any radical social and economic changes in Kurdistan
    from the pre-war to the post-war period apart from the devastating
    impact of the war on its economy. In that sense, explaining the
    formation and development of nationalist ideas in Kurdistan from a
    strict modernist perspective that nationalism developed as a result
    of industrialization and of the impact on state and society of that
    process would be futile. The critical and turbulent period of World War
    I, on the other hand, presents an explanation for the equally critical
    transformation of Kurdish political thought. As Halliday argued:
    "The modernist claim need not rest on a narrow, industrial-society
    model. Rather, starting from the rise of modern industrial society in
    Europe and the U.S., it seeks to show how the impact of this society
    was felt throughout the world, in economic change and industrialization
    certainly, but also in the political, social, and ideological changes
    that accompanied the subjugation to this model of the world, in the two
    centuries 1800-2000 that are also the lifespan of modern nationalism."
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