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April 4, 2007
Thus Spoke the Zarathustrian Kurds
[Originally published in Turkish Daily News]
Mehdi Zana, the former mayor of Diyarbakır and a prominent figure among Turkey's Kurdish nationalists, has made the news twice in the past weeks with his claims on Kurdish history. First, he argued that Kurds simply had a brighter record before Islam. Second, as we read in the weekly news magazine Aksiyon, he claimed that the authentic religion of the Kurds is Zoroastrianism. They later converted to Islam, according to Zana, “due to the fear of the sword,” and “as a big mistake.”
By all that, Mr. Zana actually presents a pattern of thought that many modern nationalists have adhered to: the glorification and revival of the pre-Islamic or pre-Christian pagan religions. Since both of these Abrahamic faiths preach a brotherhood which transcends and even surpasses all tribal, ethnic and national identities, they are highly disturbing for the nationalist agendas. That's why the Nazis hated Christianity and tried to replace it with a neo-pagan faith in the German Reich and its messianic Fuehrer. Less radical nationalisms tried softer programs of de-Abrahamification. In its first two decades, Turkey lived through a similar experience with the official denigration of Islam as an “obstacle to progress,” and the invention of a mythical “glorious history” of pre-Islamic pagan Turks. The bizarre “Turkish Language Thesis,” which argued that the Turkish race simply created much of the human civilization during the Neolithic period, is a joke and perhaps and embarrassment for today, but it was the official truth in the 30's.
’The Seed of The Aryan Race’
Now it is the Kurd's turn, apparently. And it is not just Mehdi Zana who tries to glorify the pre-Islamic history of the Kurdish people. As I have examined in my book, “Rethinking the Kurdish Question,” (unfortunately, only available in Turkish for the moment) there is a rhetoric among Kurdish nationalist which one can justifiably call as “Kurdish History Thesis.”
Kurdist ideologues such as Cemşid Bender have long argued that Kurds are the founders of the Mesopotamian civilization and they were the ones who invented pottery, agriculture, and even mathematics. These are simply speculations, of course, because there is in fact no historical data to confirm or falsify them. What these writers do is simply to pin some important achivements in the history of the Middle East and then to invent links between them and “Kurdishness.” It is exactly the same “method” that Turkists used in the 30's to “discover” links between Central Asian Turks and Ancient Egyptians. (The Ancient Egyptians must have been of the Turkish stock; how else could they be so smart to build the pyramids?)
Another emphasis of the Kurdist ideologues is that they are of the Aryan race. This actually started in the heydays of the Nazi regime, when nationalist Kurdish intellectuals bought into the ideology of their German masters, including their hatred towards the Semitic peoples and cultures. Luckily for us, the plans for the Aryan domination of the world failed with the victory of the Allies against the Wehrmact in 1945. But the spirit lived among radical nationalists, which included some Kurds who were keen to potray their disputes with Muslim Turks and Muslim Arabs as the struggle of the modern Aryans against the narrow-minded Semites. No wonder Abdullah Öcalan, the leader of the terrorist PKK, once proudly declared, “Kurds are the seed of the Aryan race.”
History by invention
The effort by Kurdish nationalist such as Mehdi Zana to praise and revive Zoroastrianism (or, Zarathustrianism) is a part of thispolitical agenda. Whether this is a justified project or not is a matter of debate and the answer will change according to where you stand. I personally think that creating a separate Kurdish nation — which will, inevitably, demand its own nation-state — is a bad idea, both for the Kurds and their long-time neighbors. The process of creating such an entity will unavoidably raise the ethnic tension in the region and spark horrible ethnic cleansing operations. Just remember what happened during the Indo-Pakistani Partition or the destruction of Yugoslavia.
Moreover, how can one know that a Kurdish nation-state, even once established, will be good for the Kurds? (Believe me, having your own nation-state is not necessarily a blessing.) What really matters is whether you live in a political system which is run by democracy and which respects your rights and freedoms.And a hypothetical “Kurdistan” could well be far-off from those principles.
The second and more objective trouble with the project for Kurdish nationalism is that it deliberately distorts historical facts. Islamic period was not a “dark age” for Kurds. Quite the contrary, according to Kurdish historian Mehrdad Izady, “the golden age of Kurdish culture” was lived between the 10th and 12th centuries, which is long after Kurds' acceptance of Islam. Izady even defines the period as “the Kurdish centuries of Islam.”
The same is true also for Turks. Pre-Islamic Turkish history does not bear many signs of a rich civilization. All the great poets, writers, philosophers, scientists, or architects of Turkish history come from the Islamic period. (This was no suprise: The Islamic Middle East was the peak of civilization in the Middle Ages, and both Kurds and Turks benefited from that. And what allowed that golden age was the openness of the Muslim civilization towards other cultures; a wisdom some Muslims seem to have forgotten today.)
Denying and distorting these facts of the history of the Middle East will not help any of its peoples, including the Kurds. We need to discover, not invent, our history. We Turks lived through a bad experience in that regard. It would be only unwise for the Kurds to repeat the same mistake.
Posted by Mustafa Akyol at April 4, 2007 11:11 AM

Wow, nice article, very interesting. I've noticed the glorification of the paganist pasts of both Turks and Kurds, but never made the connection between that and nationalism. It totally makes sense though.
I'd love to buy your book if it ever becomes available in English.
Isallah, one day I'll be able to read it in Turkish,
Until either day comes, I enjoy your blog
Jake
Posted by: Jake Olson at April 4, 2007 1:56 PM
Another excellent article. I was unaware of this strain within Kurdish nationalism. This neo-pagan glorification is indeed dangerous--wherever it crops up.
Please keep us posted as to when your book is translated into English.
Posted by: John at April 4, 2007 8:32 PM
"Luckily for us, the plans for the Aryan domination of the world failed with the victory of the Allies against the Wehrmacht in 1945. But the spirit lived among radical nationalists, which included some Kurds who were keen to portray their disputes with Muslim Turks and Muslim Arabs as the struggle of the modern Aryans against the narrow-minded Semites."
I do agree.
With my thunderous applause...
Posted by: Kubilay Ant at April 5, 2007 7:55 AM
"Moreover, how can one know that a Kurdish nation-state, even once established, will be good for the Kurds? (Believe me, having your own nation-state is not necessarily a blessing.) What really matters is whether you live in a political system which is run by democracy and which respects your rights and freedoms.And a hypothetical “Kurdistan” could well be far-off from those principles."
What history has shown since the end of WWI and creation of nation states in the Middle East region and diving Kurdistan between these states, that Kurds had been and still victims of forced assimilation. The Kurds have rejected such efforts vehemently and numerous uprising are clear indication of that rejection. Yet the nation states in the name of what ever it finds it convenient carried out brutal suppression of Kurdish demands for cultural rights, for freedom of expression. Turkey is forefront of the brutal regimes that violently suppressed Kurdish uprisings. Kurds in Turkey were asked to deny their heritage in order to be first class citizen. I do not need to go on with the Arabaizarion of Kurdish land in Syria or Iraq. So Why Creation of nation state of Kurdistan is not better for the Kurds than what they have been enduring under the occupied authorities. I reject the hypocrisy and double standard when it comes to Kurdish rights for self determination by writers who cover the truth by pure fallacy.
Posted by: Pushdaree at April 7, 2007 3:56 PM
Mustafa Bey - contrary to what you claim, the Nazis did not hate Christianity, instead they glorified it. Adolf Hitler borrowed freely from Christian symbols and rites, as well as pagan ones, to construct his ideal Aryan utopia. Of course, he wanted the absolute subordination of the Church (both Catholic and Protestant), to which the latter did resist to some extent.
Nevertheless, Hitler was hugely popular among German Christians, and the Nazi party had a distinct religious appeal, as well as a purely nationalist and utopian one. Christians were especially enthusiastic about the anti-communist and anti-Semite stance of the party, and the party exploited this.
This poisonous mix of religion, nationalism and a utopic promise was in the essence of the Nazi propaganda.
(since a picture speaks a thousand words, I recommend you look at the photos in the following site: http://nobeliefs.com/nazis.htm - note: I do not endorse the general content of the website).
In relation to your general article, I would like to suggest you exercise more caution when seperating religion from nationalist (or race-based-utopian)ideologies. Often the dividing line is blurrier than you might like to think.
Posted by: Karabekir Akkoyunlu at May 18, 2007 1:38 AM
Turkish and Kurdish nationalism have a completely different origin. Turkish nationalism in 30s was a natural reaction to humiliation of Ottomans empire (after the Second World War) while Kurdish nationalism is a reaction to brutality of dominant forces who even deny existence of this nation. In such a difficult environment the only way Kurds can cope with oppression is to praise and glorify their culture and origin. As the origin of Turks has mixed with mystery and myth, Turkish nationalism can be a pathologic reaction to voidance of their history.
Posted by: Hamid at June 25, 2007 8:25 PM