article

Kurdish diaspora is the Kurdish populations found in regions outside their ancestral homeland Kurdistan.

Iran: The largest Kurdish enclave outside Kurdistan is the Kurdish region in north Khorasan, in north-eastern Iran. Over one million Kurds are living in this region. These Kurds are descendants of the exiled tribes during Safavid period and their ancestors were from westen Iran. Other scattered smaller communities are found in the Alburz mountain range in northern Iran, Guilan province in northern Iran and Sistan and Baluchistan province in southeastern Iran (and also neighbouring regions in Pakistan). (See *).A great number of Kurds live in Iranian cities like Tabriz and Tehran.

Turkey: There is a prominent Kurdish population in central Anatolia, concentrated to the west of Lake Tuz (Haymana, Cihanbeyli, Kulu, Yunak) and also scattered in districts like Alaca, Çiçekdağı, Yerköy, Emirdağ, Çankırı, Zile. Today, most Kurds in Turkey live in Turkish big cities such as Istanbul, Izmir, Mersin, and Adana.

Syria and Iraq: In addition to this fact that these two countries include parts of Kurdistan, there are significant Kurdish communities in metropolian areas of these countries in Aleppo, Damascus, Baghdad etc.

Transcaucasia: Kurds used to constitute the majority in former Kurdistan Autonomous Oblast prior to mass deportations in the period 1940 - 1944. Today, most of the Kurdish communities in Kazakhstan, Russia, and Kyrgyzstan are results of these deportations. The remaining Kurds in Azerbaijan who numbered about 150,000 became refugees following Nagorno-Karabakh war. (See Most Kurds who comprise a small portion (about 1.2 %) of total population arrived in Georgia at the time of the Ottoman Empire, having fled religious repression there. They now live mainly in Tbilisi or Rustavi. Kurds are mostly urbanized and socially integrated, but preserve their ethnic identity, language, and cultural traditions. Most of them are Yazidi [http://www.forcedmigration.org/guides/fmo001/fmo001-2.htm.

Arab World: Lebanon is home to a small (about % 1 of the population) but influential Kurdish community. There are two main groups; Kurmanji speakers who mostly have origins in Turkish Kurdistan and Mhallamis (also known as Mardinli or Mhalmoye) who speak a different dialect of Kurdish mixed with Arabic and Syriac, immigrants from Tur Abdin. * Both groups are Sunnis but there is also a little community of Alevi Kurds from Dersim. Kurds make up an important portion of expatriate population (about 230,000) in Kuwait. Most of them are originally Iraqi Kurds. There are also Kurdish communities in Jordan and Yemen. Balkans: A small Kurdish community is known to have existed in Dobruja since Ottoman times This community once spread into Russian territory as far as Ochakiv [http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cih/pdf/gradconf/robarts.doc. Today, they are usually regarded as a part of Muslim community in Romania.

Central Asia: There are scattered communities in Turkmenistan (about 40,000) and Afghanistan (about 200,000).

Western Europe: The Kurds also make up a section of the waves of Turkish and other Middle Eastern nationals who have and who are immigrating to Germany, France, and Britain.

Africa: There are Kurdish communities in Somalia and Eritrea preserving their language. The former Baath regime of Iraq often used to send Iraqi Kurds to Somalia as a form of exile. Although the number of Kurds in Somalia is relatively low, such a foreign presence is obvious in Somalia where few foreigners live. Since Somalis themselves share a common language and culture, it makes the Kurds stand out even more. Generally, these Kurds establish themselves in major cities, mainly Mogadishu, where they open up small kiosks and maintain a fairly low profile existence *.

History


There have been many famous Kurdish individuals among the Kurdish diaspora. Although according to Dehkhoda Dictionary, Ardashir I of Persia was son of a Kurdish mother from "Shabānkāreh" tribe in the Fars Province, other sources such as others such as Fars-nama(1107 CE) and Maslik al-absar of al-Umari and Sharafnama do not consider Shabankareh as Kurdish and make a distinction between the two. Kurds were also deported to Kerman and Baluchistan by the Sassanid Kings such as Khosrow I and Khosrow II. In 17th century, Safavid Kings deported thousands of Kurds to Khorasan, where they still can be found (see Iranian Kurdistan and History of the Kurds).

See also


External links


Kurdish diaspora | Kurds | Diasporas

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Kurdish diaspora".

Home Pageartsbusinesscomputersgameshealthhospitalshomekids & teensnewsphysiciansrecreationreferenceregionalscienceshoppingsocietysportsworld