Tur Abdin is a hilly region of south east Turkey incorporating the eastern half of Mardin Province, and Sirnak Province west of the Tigris, on the border with Syria. The name 'Tur Abdin' is from the Syriac (ܛܘܪ ܥܒܕܝܢ), meaning 'mountain of the servants (of God)'. Tur Abdin is of great importance to Syriac Orthodox Christians, for whom the region used to be a monastic and cultural heartland. The people of Tur Abdin call themselves Suryoye, 'Syrians' or 'Syriacs', or Turoye, 'mountain-folk', and traditionally speak the Aramaic dialect which is sometimed called Turoyo. There are also Assyrians in the region who belong to the Assyrian Church of the East.
Today, the population of Tur Abdin is mostly Muslim and divided between Kurmanji-speaking Kurds and Arabic-speaking Mhalmoye. This latter group represents Syriac Orthodox Christians who converted to Islam centuries ago, but still retain some Syriac Christian customs.
In the centre of Tur Abdin, halfway between Midyat and Cizre, is Dayro d-Mor Gabriel. Built in AD 397, Mor Gabriel monastery, is the oldest functioning Syriac Orthodox monastery. It is the residence of the Metropolitan Bishop of Tur Abdin, seven nuns, four monks and a host of guests, assistants and students. The monastery is charged with keeping the flame of Syriac Orthodox faith alive in Tur Abdin, for which it is as much a fortress as a church.
The town of Midyat and the villages of Hah, Bequsyone, Dayro da-Slibo, Salah (with the old monastery of Mor Yaqub), `Aynwardo (Ayinvert), Anhel, Kafro, Arkah (Harabale, with Dayro Mor Malke), Beth Sbirino, Middo (Miden) and Azagh were all important Syriac Orthodox places. Hah has the ancient `Idto d'Yoldath-Aloho, the Church of the Mother of God.
During the First World War, many Syriac Christians, some 500,000 (according to Syriac Orthodox records, ca. 90.000 of their community were included), were killed in the Armenian and Syriac Genocide (called in Syriac Sayfo, simply 'the sword') and died alongside their coreligionists. In the last few decades, caught between Kurds and Turks, many Syriac Christians have fled the region or been killed. Today there are only 2,500, a quarter of the Christian population thirty years ago. Most have fled to Syria, Europe (particularly Sweden, Germany and ), Australia and the USA. However, in the past few years, a few families have begun to return to Tur Abdin.
Tur Abdin | Tour Abdin | Tur Abdin | Turabdîn | Tur Abdin
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