The
Republic of Mahabad (
Kurdish:
Komarî Mehabad,
Persian: جمهوری مهاباد ), officially
Republic of Kurdistan, established in
Iranian Kurdistan, was a short-lived, Soviet backed
Kurdish state of the
20th century after the
Republic of Ararat in
Turkey. Its capital was the Kurdish city of
Mahabad in northwestern Iran. The republic's founding and demise was a part of the
Iran crisis, a conflict between
USA and
USSR, which was a precursor to the
Cold War .
Overview
The republic was led by President
Qazi Muhammad and the Minister of Defense,
Mustafa Barzani. The
Prime Minister was
Hadschi Baba Scheich. All these men were members of the then new
Kurdistan Democratic Party, which was founded in
1946, the same year Mahabad declared its independence. The Republic of Mahabad declared independence on
January 22,
1946, but was never recognized by the international community, and was defeated a year later by the army of the central government of
Iran once the occupying Soviets pulled out.
*. After the collapse of the republic in
1947, Qazi Muhammad was hanged in public in
Chuwarchira Square in the center of Mahabad.
Founding of the Republic
In September 1945, Qazi Muhammad and other Kurdish leaders visited Tabriez to see a Soviet Consul on the backing of a new republic, and were then redirected to Baku, Azerbaijan. There, they learned that the Azerbaijan Democrat Party was planning to take control of Iranian Azerbaijan, current day
East Azerbaijan, and his supporters should do the same in their region in West Azerbaijan (McDowall 240).
On December 10, 1945, Iranian forces lost control of the East Azerbaijan provence to the Azarbaijan Democrat Party. Qazi Muhammad decided to do the same, and on December 15, 1945, the Kurdish People's Government was founded in Mahabad (McDowall 241).
On January 22, 1946, Qazi Muhammad announced the formation of the Republic of Mahabad. (McDowall 241). Some of their aims mentioned in the manifesto are listed below (McDowall 241)-
- '' i. Autonomy for the Iranian Kurds within the Iranian state.
- '' ii. the use of Kurdish as the medium of education and administration.
- '' iii. the election of a provincial council for Kurdistan to supervise state and social matters.
- '' iv. all state officials to be of local origin.
- '' v. unity and fraternity with the Azerbaijani people.
- '' vi. the establishment of a single law for both peasants and notables.
End of the Republic
On
March 26,
1946, the Soviets promised to the Iranian government that they would pull out of northwestern Iran (McDowall 243). Shortly after in June, the Azarbaijan rebels who took control in East Azerbaijan handed control of the Azerbaijan provinces back to Iran. This move isolated the Republic of Mahabad, eventually leading to the destruction of the republic (McDowall 243).
By this point, Qazi Muhammed's support was dwindling, mainly from the Kurdish tribes who had supported him initially. Their crops and supplies were dwindling, and their way of life was becoming hard as a result of the isolation. The economic aid and military assistance from the Soviet Union was now gone, and the tribes saw no reason to support Qazi Muhammed. Many tribes began to leave, those who stayed began to resent the Barzanis, as they had to share their resources with them (McDowall 243). By December 5th, the war council told Qazi Muhammad that they would fight and resist the Iranian army if they tried to enter the region (McDowall 243).
On December 13, 1946, Iranian forces entered and recaptured Tabriz. On December 15, Iranian forces entered and secured Mahabad. Once there, they closed down the Kurdish printing press, banned the teaching of Kurdish, and burned any books that were written in Kurdish that they could find (McDowell 245).
Finally, on March 31, 1947, Qazi Muhammad was hanged in Mahabad (McDowall 246) on counts of treason.
Aftermath
Massoud Barzani, the current President of
Iraqi Kurdistan, was born in Mahabad when his father, the late General
Mustafa Barzani, was chief of the military of Mahabad declared in Iranian Kurdistan
After the republic was defeated, Barzani fled with 500 of his supporters to the Soviet Union, not returning until 1958 to Northern Iraq (Meiselas 182). In October of 1958, Mustafa Barzani returned into his homeland of Northern Iraq, beginning a series of struggles to fight for an independent Kurdish state under the KDP party, carrying the same flag that was used in Mahabad[http://www.kdp.pp.se/?do=mbarzani.
Reasons for failure
Archibald Roosevelt, son of the former U.S. President
Theodore Roosevelt, wrote in "The Kurdish Republic of Mahabad", that a main problem of the People's Republic of Mahabad was that the Kurds needed the assistance of the USSR; only with the Red Army did they have a chance. But this close relationship to
Stalin and the USSR caused most of the Western powers to side with Iran.
Qazi Muhammad, though not denying the fact that they were funded and supplied by the Soviets, denied that the
KDP was a communist party, stating this was a lie fabricated by the military authorities, and adding that his ideals were too different from the Soviets. (Meiselas 182).
Also, the republic was suffering from a number of internal issues. The townspeople and the tribes had a large divide between them, and their alliance for Mahabad was crumbling. As previously stated, the tribes and their leaders had only supported Qazi Muhammad for his economic and military aid from the Soviet Union. Once that was gone, many didn't see the purpose in staying with Qazi Muhammad. Other tribes resented the Barzanis, since they didn't like sharing their already dwindling resources with them. Some Kurds deserted Mahabad, including one of Mahabad's own marshalls, Amr Khan. Also, Mahabad was economically bankrupt, and it would have been nearly impossible for Mahabad to have been economically sound without harmony with Iran (McDowall 244-245).
References
- "The Republic of Kurdistan: Fifty Years Later," International Journal of Kurdish Studies, 11, no. 1 & 2, (1997).
- The Kurdish Republic of 1946, William Eagleton, Jr. (London: Oxford University Press, 1963)
- Moradi Golmorad: Ein Jahr autonome Regierung in Kurdistan, die Mahabad-Republik 1946 - 1947 in: Geschichte der kurdischen Aufstandsbewegungen von der arabisch-islamischen Invasion bis zur Mahabad-Republik, Bremen 1992, ISBN 3929089009
- M. Khoubrouy-Pak: Une république éphémère au Kurdistan, Paris u.a. 2002, ISBN 2747528030
- Archie Roosevelt, Jr., "The Kurdish Republic of Mahabad", Middle East Journal, no. 1 (July 1947), pp. 247-69.
- Kurdish Republic of Mahabad, Encyclopedia of the Orient. *
- The Kurds: People without a country, Encyclopedia Britannica *
- Meiselas, Susan Kurdistan In the Shadow of History, Random House, 1997. ISBN 0679423893
- McDowall, David A Modern History of the Kurds, I. B. Tauris, 1996 (Current revision at May 14, 2004). ISBN 1860641857
- Yassin, Burhaneddin A., Vision or Realty: The Kurds in the Policy of the Great Powers, 1941-1947, Lund University Press, Lund/Sweden, 1995. , ISBN 91-7966-315-X Lund University Press. ou ISBN 0-86238-389-7 Chartwell-Bratt Ltd.
See also
External links
Former countries in Asia | History of Iran | Kurdistan | Short-lived states | History of the Kurds
Republik Mahabad | جمهوری مهاباد | République de Mahabad | Komara Kurdistan a Mahabadê | Republiek Mahabad | Republic of Mahabad | Mahabadrepubliken