Bibliothek Bibliothek
Suchen

Kurdipedia ist die grösste Quelle für Informationen


Suchoptionen





Erweiterte Suche      Tastatur


Suchen
Erweiterte Suche
Bibliothek
Kurdische Namen
Chronologie der Ereignisse
Quellen
Geschichte
Benutzer Sammlungen
Aktivitäten
Suche Hilfe?
Kurdipedische Publikationen
Video
Klassifikation
Zufälliger Artikel!
Registrierung der Artikel
Registrierung neuer artikel
Bild senden
Umfrage
Ihre Rückmeldung
Kontakt
Welche Informationen brauchen wir!
Standards
Nutzungsbedingungen
Artikel Qualität
Instrumente (Hilfsmittel)
Über
Kurdipedi Archivare
Artikel über uns!
Fügen Sie Kurdipedia auf Ihre Website hinzu
E-Mail hinzufügen / löschen
Besucherstatistiken
Artikel Statistik
Schriftarten-Wandler
Kalender-Konverter
Rechtschreibkontrolle
Sprachen und Dialekte der Seiten
Tastatur
Lebenslauf Nützliche Links
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Kekse
Sprachen
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Mein Konto
Anmelden
Mitgliedschaft!
Passwort vergessen!
Suchen Registrierung der Artikel Instrumente (Hilfsmittel) Sprachen Mein Konto
Erweiterte Suche
Bibliothek
Kurdische Namen
Chronologie der Ereignisse
Quellen
Geschichte
Benutzer Sammlungen
Aktivitäten
Suche Hilfe?
Kurdipedische Publikationen
Video
Klassifikation
Zufälliger Artikel!
Registrierung neuer artikel
Bild senden
Umfrage
Ihre Rückmeldung
Kontakt
Welche Informationen brauchen wir!
Standards
Nutzungsbedingungen
Artikel Qualität
Über
Kurdipedi Archivare
Artikel über uns!
Fügen Sie Kurdipedia auf Ihre Website hinzu
E-Mail hinzufügen / löschen
Besucherstatistiken
Artikel Statistik
Schriftarten-Wandler
Kalender-Konverter
Rechtschreibkontrolle
Sprachen und Dialekte der Seiten
Tastatur
Lebenslauf Nützliche Links
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Kekse
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Anmelden
Mitgliedschaft!
Passwort vergessen!
        
 kurdipedia.org 2008 - 2024
 Über
 Zufälliger Artikel!
 Nutzungsbedingungen
 Kurdipedi Archivare
 Ihre Rückmeldung
 Benutzer Sammlungen
 Chronologie der Ereignisse
 Aktivitäten - Kurdipedia
 Hilfe
Neue Artikel
Bibliothek
Reisebericht über Tur Abdin - Berg der Knechte Gottes
13-07-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Biografie
Hüseyin Aykol
11-07-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Biografie
Serdar Karakoç
11-07-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Wiener Jahrbuch für Kurdische Studien
10-07-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Muttersprachlicher Unterricht in kurdisch Entwicklung von Unterrichtsmaterialien
09-07-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
SOZIALE ÖKOLOGI
27-06-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Lehrbücher-Katalog Kurdische Lehrbücher für Kinder
25-06-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Kurdische Märchen Und Volkserzählungen
11-06-2024
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothek
Das Kadiamtsprotokollbuch von Mārdīn 247: Edition, Übersetzung und kritischer Kommenta
11-06-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
100 Jahre Türkei Die Republik zwischen Tradition und Erneuerung
11-06-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Statistik
Artikel  524,642
Bilder  106,213
PDF-Buch 19,762
verwandte Ordner 99,338
Video 1,439
Sprachen
کوردیی ناوەڕاست 
300,751

Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû 
88,734

هەورامی 
65,720

عربي 
28,794

کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو 
16,201

فارسی 
8,374

English 
7,162

Türkçe 
3,569

Deutsch 
1,456

Pусский 
1,123

Française 
321

Nederlands 
130

Zazakî 
84

Svenska 
56

Հայերեն 
44

Español 
39

Italiano 
39

لەکی 
37

Azərbaycanca 
20

日本人 
18

עברית 
14

Norsk 
14

Ελληνική 
13

中国的 
11

Bibliothek
Einbruch ins verschlossene ...
Biografie
Nadir Nadirov
Bibliothek
Christen und Jesiden im Ira...
Bibliothek
SOZIALE ÖKOLOGI
Biografie
Serdar Karakoç
Kurdiyada: How the Kurdish Days Reconnect the Kurdistani Jews with their Roots
Kurdipedia schreibt die Geschichte Kurdistans und der Kurden Tag für Tag neu.
Gruppe: Artikel | Artikel Sprache: English
Teilen Sie
Facebook0
Twitter0
Telegram0
LinkedIn0
WhatsApp0
Viber0
SMS0
Facebook Messenger0
E-Mail0
Copy Link0
Rangliste Artikel
Ausgezeichnet
Sehr gut
Durchschnitt
Nicht schlecht
Schlecht
Zu meinen Favoriten hinzufügen
Schreiben Sie Ihren Kommentar zu diesem Artikel!
Geschichte des Items
Metadata
RSS
Suche im Google nach Bildern im Zusammenhang mit dem gewählten Artikel!
Googeln Sie das ausgewählte Thema.
کوردیی ناوەڕاست0
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû0
عربي0
فارسی0
Türkçe0
עברית0
Deutsch0
Español0
Française0
Italiano0
Nederlands0
Svenska0
Ελληνική0
Azərbaycanca0
Fins0
Norsk0
Pусский0
Հայերեն0
中国的0
日本人0

Kurdiyada

Kurdiyada
On hired buses and private vehicles, hundreds of Jewish-Kurdish individuals and families with their children and friends from Jerusalem and its outskirts set out on their journey toward Eilat in the last week of March 2022. On our bus, Kurdish music was playing and Kurdish travellers wearing hats decorated with Kurdish flags and script began dancing. An announcement was issued that all the travellers on the buses were going to take a break in Lido. The joy and happiness of the Kurdish-Jewish travellers was noticeable. As soon as we arrived in Lido, the drum and shawm players kicked off and travellers started dancing. Hundreds of tourists joined in the dance performance. The Kurdish travellers turned the resort area into a street party for all, which lasted for an hour. During the journey, buses took more breaks and the Jewish- Kurdish travellers danced with a drum and shawm, attracting tourists to join them. Consequently, the four-hour route from Jerusalem to Eilat took seven hours.

Organised by the Kurdish community in cooperation with a Kurdish dancing band Gonenim Band of Jerusalem, Kurds gathered in Eilat to celebrate the days of the Kurds, called Kurdiyada, which take place every year in March, a few days after Jewish Purim and Kurdish Newroz. The days of the Kurds focus on Kurdish-Israeli symbols, Kurdish folk dances, songs, instruments, and food that evoke feelings of togetherness and connect people with each other and their roots, which trace back to their ancestors who lived in the Kurdistan regions of Iraq, Iran, Syria and Turkey for over 2000 years. Around 250 to 300 thousand Jewish Kurds live in Israel; they come from Kurdistan, which is divided between the above countries. Half of this population lives in Jerusalem and its outskirts.

Although the newer generation feel more Israelis, they also address their strong Kurdish roots. Ben, a young member of the organisational committee, pointed out that roots are very important in Jewish culture as people without roots are ‘without fruit’. However, people can bear fruit if they return to their roots. Kurdiyada is not only simply a holiday, but rather an intensive practice of revival of these Kurdish-Jewish roots, culture and values, as well as promotion of community cohesion and socialising which Kurdish-Jewish members experience dynamically on these two days. Moreover, Kurdiyada implies a combination of the celebrations of Purim and Newroz as festivals marking Jewish and Kurdish liberation from cruelty, which historically connect the fate of Kurdish and Jewish communities in the current Middle East. Thus, Kurdiyada is dominated by a range of cultural activities whose historical and political expression involves the hybridity and diversity of both Jewish and Kurdish societies
Jewish Kurds have simply inherited Kurdiyada (like Sehrane) from their ancestors, who imported this tradition from Kurdistan to Israel when the Jewish exile ended in the 1940s and 1950s with the establishment of Israel. However, it is hard to claim that the Jewish Kurds were in exile in Kurdistan. Rather, they made Kurdistan their homeland as they had already established emotional and social ties with the territories and people of Kurdistan. They engaged in common cultural and social practices with the Kurdish people. Like their non-Jewish fellow Kurds, who still travel to Ziyarets (a combination of ritual pilgrimages and festivals in sacred places, accompanied by traditional music, dancing and food), the Jewish Kurds in the Kurdistan region of Iraq and Syria organise annual trips to Ziyarets in certain places. For instance, the Jewish-Kurdish community in the Kurdistan region of Iraq travelled to the Tomb of Nahum in Alqosh and other sacred places while their fellow Jewish Kurds in Syria visited the Tomb of Yehudah Ben Betera on the border between Nusaybin in the Kurdish region of Turkey and Qamislo in the Kurdish region in Syria annually before immigrating to Israel. According to the narratives of my interviewees, their ancestors dressed in traditional Kurdish uniforms and travelled to these Ziyarets – sacred spaces – to celebrate these days together with music, dancing, and food. They met up, danced together, and cooked together and during these events young boys and girls would meet, often ending up in marriage.

The Jewish-Kurdish community in Israel continues this tradition from Kurdistan by annually meeting together for Kurdiyada either in Eilat or in Tiberias and celebrating these days with well-known local Kurdish singers, musicians, and dancers. Kurdiyada does not resemble a pilgrimage but has various aims including fostering community cohesion, reconnecting people with their ancestral roots, maintaining their ancestral traditions from Kurdistan, and celebrating Purim and Newroz, as well as being filled with happiness and wellbeing. The organisers of Kurdiyada indicated that their cultural activities and events aim to address the profound importance of the cohesion of the Kurdish Jewish community in Israel.

They implied that the community cohesion is the key for the promotion of good relationships between members of the community in question, a sense of belonging and shared identification based on the common ancestral roots of their ancestors from Kurdistan which define their existence as the Kurdish-Jewish community and present their culture and tradition within Israeli society. Another aspect of Kurdiyada is related to the way in which the Jewish-Kurdish community are involved in collective cultural activities as a form of expression to reconnect with their ancestral roots, which have a profound influence on the Jewish-Kurdish identity. Many young participants I talked with stated that they are Israeli but practice the Kurdish way of life and maintain Kurdish traditions as they feel a sense of responsibility towards their ancestors, while the elderly emphasised that they identify first as Kurdish then as Israeli. They referred to the hospitality, recognition, and culture that they enjoyed in Kurdistan, and want their children to stick to these values.

Therefore, the members of Kurdiyada committee organise these events by bringing together people from different social, generational and class-related backgrounds around cultural activities to maintain the bridge between their Jewish identity and Kurdish tradition. To put it differently, Kurdiyada is a platform created to mix up the older and younger generations through collective cultural activities such as performing Kurdish folk dances, singing Kurdish songs, and playing drum and shawm, through which they share joy and happiness and construct a sense of identification. In this way, these events help maintain the connection of different groups (but mainly the younger generation) within the Kurdish-Jewish community with Kurdish traditions and culture.
Finally, Kurdiyada takes place every year in the last week of March after the celebration of the Jewish holiday Purim and the Kurdish cultural and political festival of Newroz. Purim is a Jewish holiday that signifies the liberation of the Jewish community from devilish Haman, who aimed to eliminate the Jewish community during the first Persian Empire, as well as his defeat in 5th century BCE. The celebration of Purim occurs among the Jewish community in different ways, including dressing up in colourful costumes, and eating and drinking together to create community cohesion and union. Similarly, for the Kurds Newroz is not only a festival celebrating the start of spring or the New Year, but rather a festival of liberation from the cruel Assyrian King Zuhak (1000 A.D) who conquered Kurdish society and required the daily sacrifice of its members to relieve his pain, caused by serpents growing on his shoulders. To celebrate the defeat of Zuhak, or their liberation from evil, the Kurds celebrate Newroz in a similar way to the Jewish community. They dress up in traditional Kurdish costume, eat and drink together and light fires in the Kurdish mountains as a sign of the end of darkness and the start of light. Newroz requires the Kurds to build intra-community peace, unity, and togetherness. The meaning and timing of Purim and Newroz connect these ancient people (the Kurdish and Jewish communities) against cruelty and for liberation in Mesopotamia. Since Purim and Newroz convey identical meanings for both societies and occur in the same month, every year at the end of March the Jewish Kurds celebrate a combination of the two, Kurdiyada, which connects the Kurdish and Jewish histories, societies, cultures and desire to live together in peaceful co-existence.[1]
Dieser Artikel wurde in (English) Sprache geschrieben wurde, klicken Sie auf das Symbol , um die Artikel in der Originalsprache zu öffnen!
This item has been written in (English) language, click on icon to open the item in the original language!
Dieser Artikel wurde bereits 1,865 mal angesehen
HashTag
Quellen
[1] Website | کوردیی ناوەڕاست | blogs.timesofisrael.com
Verlinkte Artikel: 5
Gruppe: Artikel
Artikel Sprache: English
Publication date: 11-04-2022 (2 Jahr)
Dialekt: Englisch
Dokumenttyp: Ursprache
Inhaltskategorie: Geschichte
Technische Metadaten
Artikel Qualität: 93%
93%
Hinzugefügt von ( هەژار کامەلا ) am 30-04-2022
Dieser Artikel wurde überprüft und veröffentlicht von ( هاوڕێ باخەوان ) auf 30-04-2022
Dieser Artikel wurde kürzlich von ( هاوڕێ باخەوان ) am 30-04-2022 aktualisiert
URL
Dieser Artikel ist gemäss Kurdipedia noch nicht finalisiert
Dieser Artikel wurde bereits 1,865 mal angesehen
Verknüpfte Datei - Version
Typ Version Ersteller
Foto-Datei 1.0.173 KB 30-04-2022 هەژار کامەلاهـ.ک.
Kurdipedia ist die grösste Quelle für Informationen
Biografie
Serdar Karakoç
Bibliothek
Wiener Jahrbuch für Kurdische Studien
Biografie
Hüseyin Aykol
Biografie
Saya Ahmad
Bibliothek
Muttersprachlicher Unterricht in kurdisch Entwicklung von Unterrichtsmaterialien
Artikel
DIE LEBENSGESCHICHTE VON YILMAZ GÜNEY UND EIN ÜBERBLICK SEINER FILMKUNST
Artikel
Der Antrag auf das Verbot der prokurdischen HDP beim türkischen Verfassungsgericht
Artikel
Bozan: In Kurdistan herrscht Kolonialrecht
Bibliothek
Reisebericht über Tur Abdin - Berg der Knechte Gottes
Biografie
Halil Öztoprak (Xalil Alxas)
Biografie
Fevzi Özmen
Artikel
Entwicklung des muttersprachlichen Unterrichts Kurdisch in der Bundesrepublik
Biografie
Leyla Îmret
Biografie
Dilan Yeşilgöz
Bibliothek
Lehrbücher-Katalog Kurdische Lehrbücher für Kinder
Bibliothek
SOZIALE ÖKOLOGI
Biografie
Mely Kiyak
Biografie
Ismail Küpeli
Artikel
Der Völkermord von 1915: Anfang vom Ende des syrisch-aramäischen Christentums im Vorderen Orient
Biografie
Sebahat Tuncel

Actual
Bibliothek
Einbruch ins verschlossene Kurdistan
24-10-2011
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Einbruch ins verschlossene Kurdistan
Biografie
Nadir Nadirov
28-03-2022
هەژار کامەلا
Nadir Nadirov
Bibliothek
Christen und Jesiden im Irak : aktuelle Lage und Perspektiven
05-06-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Christen und Jesiden im Irak : aktuelle Lage und Perspektiven
Bibliothek
SOZIALE ÖKOLOGI
27-06-2024
هەژار کامەلا
SOZIALE ÖKOLOGI
Biografie
Serdar Karakoç
11-07-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Serdar Karakoç
Neue Artikel
Bibliothek
Reisebericht über Tur Abdin - Berg der Knechte Gottes
13-07-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Biografie
Hüseyin Aykol
11-07-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Biografie
Serdar Karakoç
11-07-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Wiener Jahrbuch für Kurdische Studien
10-07-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Muttersprachlicher Unterricht in kurdisch Entwicklung von Unterrichtsmaterialien
09-07-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
SOZIALE ÖKOLOGI
27-06-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Lehrbücher-Katalog Kurdische Lehrbücher für Kinder
25-06-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Kurdische Märchen Und Volkserzählungen
11-06-2024
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothek
Das Kadiamtsprotokollbuch von Mārdīn 247: Edition, Übersetzung und kritischer Kommenta
11-06-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
100 Jahre Türkei Die Republik zwischen Tradition und Erneuerung
11-06-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Statistik
Artikel  524,642
Bilder  106,213
PDF-Buch 19,762
verwandte Ordner 99,338
Video 1,439
Sprachen
کوردیی ناوەڕاست 
300,751

Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû 
88,734

هەورامی 
65,720

عربي 
28,794

کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو 
16,201

فارسی 
8,374

English 
7,162

Türkçe 
3,569

Deutsch 
1,456

Pусский 
1,123

Française 
321

Nederlands 
130

Zazakî 
84

Svenska 
56

Հայերեն 
44

Español 
39

Italiano 
39

لەکی 
37

Azərbaycanca 
20

日本人 
18

עברית 
14

Norsk 
14

Ελληνική 
13

中国的 
11

Kurdipedia ist die grösste Quelle für Informationen
Biografie
Serdar Karakoç
Bibliothek
Wiener Jahrbuch für Kurdische Studien
Biografie
Hüseyin Aykol
Biografie
Saya Ahmad
Bibliothek
Muttersprachlicher Unterricht in kurdisch Entwicklung von Unterrichtsmaterialien
Artikel
DIE LEBENSGESCHICHTE VON YILMAZ GÜNEY UND EIN ÜBERBLICK SEINER FILMKUNST
Artikel
Der Antrag auf das Verbot der prokurdischen HDP beim türkischen Verfassungsgericht
Artikel
Bozan: In Kurdistan herrscht Kolonialrecht
Bibliothek
Reisebericht über Tur Abdin - Berg der Knechte Gottes
Biografie
Halil Öztoprak (Xalil Alxas)
Biografie
Fevzi Özmen
Artikel
Entwicklung des muttersprachlichen Unterrichts Kurdisch in der Bundesrepublik
Biografie
Leyla Îmret
Biografie
Dilan Yeşilgöz
Bibliothek
Lehrbücher-Katalog Kurdische Lehrbücher für Kinder
Bibliothek
SOZIALE ÖKOLOGI
Biografie
Mely Kiyak
Biografie
Ismail Küpeli
Artikel
Der Völkermord von 1915: Anfang vom Ende des syrisch-aramäischen Christentums im Vorderen Orient
Biografie
Sebahat Tuncel
Ordner
Artikel - Inhaltskategorie - Dokumentarisch Artikel - Inhaltskategorie - Kurdenfrage Artikel - Inhaltskategorie - Militär Artikel - Inhaltskategorie - Politik Artikel - Inhaltskategorie - Terrorismus Artikel - Dialekt - Deutsch Artikel - Provinz - Frankreich Artikel - Provinz - Türkei Artikel - Provinz - West-Kurdistan Artikel - Art der Veröffentlichung - Born-digital

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2024) version: 15.67
| Kontakt | CSS3 | HTML5

| Generationszeit Seite: 0.313 Sekunde(n)!