Turkey 1899 According to the official data of the
1935 census, the number of people whose mother tongue was
Kurdish was 1,480,246 people, or 9.16%, and according to the official data of the
1965 census, it was 2,219,502, or 6.9%. The difference between the 1965 and 1935 censuses was that in the 1935 census,
Zazaki was considered a sub-branch of Kurdish, while in the 1965 census it was considered a separate language and was counted separately. According to the
CIA World Factbook, Kurds formed approximately 18% of the population in Turkey (approximately 14 million) in 2008. One Western source estimates that up to 25% of the Turkish population is Kurdish (approximately 18–19 million people). In 1980,
Ethnologue estimated the number of
Kurdish-speakers in Turkey at around five million, when the country's population stood at 44 million.
Rudaw, in its report prepared based on Türkiye's census data in February 2024, stated that the total population of Kurdish-majority regions in Türkiye is around 17 million. Kurds form the largest minority group in Turkey, and they have posed the most serious and persistent challenge to the official image of a homogeneous society. To
deny the existence of Kurds, the Turkish Government used several terms. "Mountain Turks" was a term was initially used by . In 1961, in a foreword to the book
Doğu İlleri ve Varto Tarihi of
Mehmet Şerif Fırat, the Turkish president
Cemal Gürsel declared it of utmost importance to prove the Turkishness of the Kurds. Eastern Turk was another
euphemism for Kurds from 1980 onwards. Nowadays the Kurds, in Turkey, are still known under the name
Easterner (Doğulu). Several large-scale Kurdish revolts in 1925, 1930 and 1938 were suppressed by the Turkish government and more than one million Kurds were forcibly relocated between 1925 and 1938. The use of Kurdish language, dress,
folklore, and names were banned and the Kurdish-inhabited areas remained under
martial law until 1946. The
Ararat revolt, which reached its apex in 1930, was only suppressed after a massive military campaign including destruction of many villages and their populations. By the 1970s, Kurdish leftist organizations such as the Kurdistan Socialist Party-Turkey (KSP-T) emerged in Turkey which were against violence and supported civil activities and participation in elections. In 1977, Mehdi Zana a supporter of KSP-T won the mayoralty of
Diyarbakir in the local elections. At about the same time, generational fissures gave birth to two new organizations: the National Liberation of Kurdistan and the
Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). --> The words "Kurds", "
Kurdistan", or "Kurdish" were officially banned by the Turkish government. Following the
military coup of 1980, the Kurdish language was officially prohibited in public and private life. Many people who spoke, published, or sang in Kurdish were arrested and imprisoned. The Kurds are still not allowed to get a primary education in their mother tongue and they do not have a right to self-determination, even though Turkey has signed the
ICCPR. There is ongoing discrimination against and "otherization" of Kurds in society. The Kurdistan Workers' Party or PKK (Kurdish:
Partiya Karkerên Kurdistanê) is Kurdish militant organization which has waged an armed struggle against the Turkish state for cultural and political rights and self-determination for the Kurds.
Turkey's military allies the US, the EU, and
NATO label the PKK as a terrorist organization while the
UN,
Switzerland, and
Russia have refused to add the PKK to their terrorist list. Some of them have even supported the PKK. Between 1984 and 1999, the PKK and the Turkish military engaged in open war, and much of the countryside in the southeast was depopulated, as Kurdish civilians moved from villages to bigger cities such as
Diyarbakır,
Van, and
Şırnak, as well as to the cities of western Turkey and even to western Europe. The causes of the depopulation included mainly the Turkish state's military operations, state's political actions, Turkish
deep state actions, the poverty of the southeast and PKK atrocities against Kurdish clans which were against them. Turkish state actions have included torture, rape, forced inscription, forced evacuation, destruction of villages, illegal arrests and executions of Kurdish civilians. Since the 1970s, the
European Court of Human Rights has condemned Turkey for the thousands of human rights abuses. The judgments are related to executions of Kurdish civilians, torturing, forced displacements systematic destruction of villages, arbitrary arrests murdered and disappeared Kurdish journalists.
Leyla Zana, the first Kurdish female MP from Diyarbakir, caused an uproar in
Turkish Parliament after adding the following sentence in
Kurdish to her parliamentary oath during the swearing-in ceremony in 1994: "I take this oath for the brotherhood of the Turkish and Kurdish peoples." In March 1994, the
Turkish Parliament voted to lift the immunity of Zana and five other Kurdish
DEP members: Hatip Dicle, Ahmet Turk, Sirri Sakik, Orhan Dogan and Selim Sadak. Zana, Dicle, Sadak and Dogan were sentenced to 15 years in jail by the Supreme Court in October 1995. Zana was awarded the
Sakharov Prize for human rights by the
European Parliament in 1995. She was released in 2004 amid warnings from European institutions that the continued imprisonment of the four Kurdish MPs would affect Turkey's bid to join the
EU. The 2009 local elections resulted in 5.7% for Kurdish political party
DTP. Officially protected death squads are accused of the disappearance of 3,200 Kurds and Assyrians in 1993 and 1994 in the so-called "mystery killings". Kurdish politicians, human-rights activists, journalists, teachers and other members of intelligentsia were among the victims. Virtually none of the perpetrators were investigated nor punished. Turkish government also encouraged Islamic extremist group
Kurdish Hezbollah to assassinate suspected PKK members and often ordinary Kurds. Azimet Köylüoğlu, the state minister of human rights, revealed the extent of security forces' excesses in the autumn of 1994: "While acts of terrorism in other regions are done by the PKK; in Tunceli it is
state terrorism. In Tunceli, it is the state that is evacuating and burning villages. In the southeast there are two million people left homeless."
Iran The
Kurdish region of
Iran has been a part of the country since ancient times. Nearly all
Kurdistan was part of
Safavid Iran until its Western part was lost during
wars against the
Ottoman Empire. Following the
dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, at the
Paris Peace Conference of 1919 Tehran had demanded all lost territories including
Turkish Kurdistan,
Mosul, and even
Diyarbakır, but demands were quickly rejected by Western powers. This area has been divided by modern
Turkey,
Syria and
Iraq. Today, the Kurds inhabit mostly northwestern territories known as
Iranian Kurdistan but also the northeastern region of
Khorasan, and constitute approximately 7–10% of Iran's overall population (6.5–7.9 million), compared to 10.6% (2 million) in 1956 and 8% (800,000) in 1850. Unlike in other Kurdish-populated countries, there are strong ethnolinguistic and cultural ties between Kurds,
Persians and others as
Iranian peoples. At the same time waves of
nationalism from the disintegrating Ottoman Empire partly influenced some Kurdish chiefs in border regions to pose as Kurdish nationalist leaders. In 19th-century
Iran,
Shia–Sunni animosity and the describing of
Sunni Kurds as an Ottoman
fifth column was quite frequent. During the late 1910s and early 1920s,
tribal revolt led by Kurdish chieftain
Simko Shikak struck northwestern Iran. Although elements of
Kurdish nationalism were present in this movement, historians agree these were hardly articulate enough to justify a claim that recognition of Kurdish identity was a major issue in Simko's movement, and he had to rely heavily on conventional tribal motives. Rebels do not appear to have felt any sense of unity or solidarity with fellow Kurds. while Iran did the same during
Ararat rebellion against Turkey in 1930.
Reza Shah's military victory over Kurdish and
Turkic tribal leaders initiated a repressive era toward non-
Iranian minorities. In the particular case of the Kurds, these repressive policies partly contributed to the development of
nationalism among some tribes. The secular
Pahlavi dynasty endorsed Iranian ethnic
nationalism to establish the
Soviet puppet government called
Republic of Mahabad. It arose along with
Azerbaijan People's Government, another Soviet puppet state. The state itself encompassed a very small territory, including
Mahabad and the adjacent cities, unable to incorporate the southern Iranian Kurdistan which fell inside the Anglo-American zone, and unable to attract the tribes outside Mahabad itself to the nationalist cause. Still, many of dissident leaders, among others
Qazi Muhammad and
Abdul Rahman Ghassemlou, were executed or assassinated. and designated as
terrorist by Iran, Turkey and the United States. Cease-fire has been established in September 2011 following the Iranian offensive on PJAK bases, but several clashes between PJAK and IRGC took place after it. Since the
Iranian Revolution of 1979, accusations of "discrimination" by Western organizations and of "foreign involvement" by Iranian side have become very frequent. Some of the more influential Kurdish politicians during recent years include former
first vice president Mohammad Reza Rahimi and
Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf,
Mayor of Tehran and second-placed
presidential candidate in 2013. The
Kurdish language is today used more than at any other time since the
Revolution, including in several newspapers and among schoolchildren. The issue of Kurdish nationalism and Iranian national identity is generally only questioned in the peripheral Kurdish dominated regions where the
Sunni faith is prevalent.
Iraq , meeting with U.S. officials in
Baghdad, Iraq, on 26 April 2006 Kurds constitute approximately 17% of Iraq's population. They are the majority in at least three provinces in northern Iraq. Kurds also have a presence in
Kirkuk,
Mosul,
Khanaqin, and
Baghdad. Around 300,000 Kurds live in the Iraqi capital
Baghdad, 50,000 in the city of
Mosul and around 100,000 elsewhere in southern Iraq. Kurds led by
Mustafa Barzani were engaged in heavy fighting against successive Iraqi regimes from 1960 to 1975. In March 1970, Iraq announced a peace plan providing for Kurdish autonomy. The plan was to be implemented in four years. However, at the same time, the Iraqi regime started an Arabization program in the oil-rich regions of
Kirkuk and
Khanaqin. The peace agreement did not last long, and in 1974, the Iraqi government began a new offensive against the Kurds. Moreover, in March 1975, Iraq and Iran signed the
Algiers Accord, according to which Iran cut supplies to Iraqi Kurds. Iraq started another wave of Arabization by moving Arabs to the oil fields in Kurdistan, particularly those around Kirkuk. Between 1975 and 1978, 200,000 Kurds were deported to other parts of Iraq. picnic in
Kirkuk During the
Iran–Iraq War in the 1980s, the regime implemented anti-Kurdish policies and a
de facto civil war broke out. Iraq was widely condemned by the international community, but was never seriously punished for oppressive measures such as the mass murder of hundreds of thousands of civilians, the wholesale destruction of thousands of villages and the deportation of thousands of Kurds to southern and central Iraq. The genocidal campaign, conducted between 1986 and 1989 and culminating in 1988, carried out by the Iraqi government against the Kurdish population was called
Anfal ("Spoils of War"). The Anfal campaign led to destruction of over two thousand villages and killing of 182,000 Kurdish civilians. The campaign included the use of ground offensives, aerial bombing, systematic destruction of settlements, mass deportation, firing squads, and chemical attacks, including the most infamous attack on the Kurdish town of
Halabja in 1988 that killed 5000 civilians instantly. in September 2017 After the collapse of the Kurdish uprising in March 1991, Iraqi troops recaptured most of the Kurdish areas and 1.5 million Kurds abandoned their homes and fled to the Turkish and Iranian borders. It is estimated that close to 20,000 Kurds succumbed to death due to exhaustion, lack of food, exposure to cold and disease. On 5 April 1991,
UN Security Council passed resolution
688 which condemned the repression of Iraqi Kurdish civilians and demanded that Iraq end its repressive measures and allow immediate access to international humanitarian organizations. This was the first international document (since the
League of Nations arbitration of Mosul in 1926) to mention Kurds by name. In mid-April, the Coalition established "safe havens" inside Iraqi borders and prohibited Iraqi planes from flying north of 36th parallel. The Kurdish population welcomed the American troops in 2003 by holding celebrations and dancing in the streets. The authority of the
KRG and legality of its laws and regulations were recognized in the articles 113 and 137 of the new
Iraqi Constitution ratified in 2005. By the beginning of 2006, the two Kurdish administrations of Erbil and Sulaimaniya were unified. On 14 August 2007, Yazidis were targeted in a
series of bombings that became the deadliest suicide attack since the
Iraq War began, killing 796 civilians, wounding 1,562.
Syria and
YPJ fighters in Syria Kurds account for 9% of
Syria's population, a total of around 1.6 million people. This makes them the largest ethnic minority in the country. They are mostly concentrated in the northeast and the north, but there are also significant Kurdish populations in Aleppo and Damascus. Kurds often speak Kurdish in public, unless all those present do not. According to
Amnesty International, Kurdish human rights activists are mistreated and persecuted. No political parties are allowed for any group, Kurdish or otherwise. Techniques used to suppress the ethnic identity of Kurds in
Syria include various bans on the use of the
Kurdish language, refusal to register children with Kurdish names, the replacement of Kurdish place names with new names in
Arabic, the prohibition of businesses that do not have Arabic names, the prohibition of Kurdish private schools, and the prohibition of books and other materials written in Kurdish. Having been denied the right to Syrian nationality, around 300,000 Kurds have been deprived of any social rights, in violation of international law. As a consequence, these Kurds are in effect trapped within Syria. In March 2011, in part to avoid further demonstrations and unrest from spreading across Syria, the Syrian government promised to tackle the issue and grant Syrian citizenship to approximately 300,000 Kurds who had been previously denied the right. On 12 March 2004, beginning at a stadium in
Qamishli (a largely Kurdish city in northeastern Syria), clashes between Kurds and Syrians broke out and continued over a number of days. At least thirty people were killed and more than 160 injured. The unrest spread to other Kurdish towns along the northern border with Turkey, and then to
Damascus and
Aleppo. As a result of
Syrian civil war, since July 2012, Kurds were able to take control of large parts of Syrian Kurdistan from Andiwar in extreme northeast to Jindires in extreme northwest Syria. The Syrian Kurds started the
Rojava Revolution in 2013. Kurdish-inhabited
Afrin Canton has been
occupied by Turkish Armed Forces and
Turkish-backed Free Syrian Army since the
Turkish military operation in Afrin in early 2018. Between 150,000 and 200,000 people were displaced due to the Turkish intervention. In October 2019, Turkey and the
Syrian Interim Government began an offensive into Kurdish-populated areas in Syria, prompting about 100,000 civilians to flee from the area fearing that Turkey would commit an
ethnic cleansing.
Transcaucasus Between the 1930s and 1980s,
Armenia was a part of the
Soviet Union, within which Kurds, like other ethnic groups, had the status of a protected minority. Armenian Kurds were permitted their own state-sponsored newspaper, radio broadcasts and cultural events. During the conflict in
Nagorno-Karabakh, many non-Yazidi Kurds were forced to leave their homes since both the Azeri and non-Yazidi Kurds were Muslim. In 1920, two Kurdish-inhabited areas of Jewanshir (capital
Kalbajar) and eastern Zangazur (capital
Lachin) were combined to form the
Kurdistan Okrug (or "Red Kurdistan"). The period of existence of the Kurdish administrative unit was brief and did not last beyond 1929. Kurds subsequently faced many repressive measures, including deportations, imposed by the
Soviet government. As a result of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, many Kurdish areas have been destroyed and more than 150,000 Kurds have been deported since 1988 by separatist
Armenian forces.
Diaspora on 10 October 2019 , Kurdish-American billionaire, founder and CEO of
Chobani According to a report by the
Council of Europe, approximately 1.3 million Kurds live in
Western Europe. The earliest immigrants were Kurds from Turkey, who settled in
Germany,
Austria, the
Benelux countries, the United Kingdom,
Switzerland and
France during the 1960s. Successive periods of political and social turmoil in the region during the 1980s and 1990s brought new waves of Kurdish refugees, mostly from Iran and Iraq under Saddam Hussein, came to Europe. There have been tensions between Kurds and the established Muslim community in Dewsbury, which is home to very traditional mosques such as the
Markazi. Since the beginning of the turmoil in Syria many of the
refugees of the Syrian Civil War are
Syrian Kurds and as a result many of the current Syrian asylum seekers in Germany are of Kurdish descent. There was substantial immigration of ethnic Kurds in Canada and the United States, who are mainly political refugees and immigrants seeking economic opportunity. According to a
2011 Statistics Canada household survey, there were 11,685 people of Kurdish ethnic background living in Canada, and according to the 2011 Census, 10,325 Canadians spoke Kurdish languages. In the United States, Kurdish immigrants started to settle in large numbers in
Nashville in 1976, which is now home to the largest Kurdish community in the United States and is nicknamed
Little Kurdistan. Kurdish population in Nashville is estimated to be around 11,000. The total number of ethnic Kurds residing in the United States is estimated by the
US Census Bureau to be 20,591. ==Culture==