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
Ökologie: Aufstand der Natur
26-05-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Durch Armenien. Eine Wanderung und der Zug Xenophons bis zum Schwarzen Meere. Eine militär-geographische Studie
18-05-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Der Kurdische Fürst Mîr Muhammad-î Rawandizî
27-04-2024
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothek
Themen Aus Der Kurdischen Wortbildung
06-04-2024
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothek
FREIHEIT FÜR DIE KURDISCHEN POLITISCHEN GEFANGENEN IN DEUTSCHLAND
03-04-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Der Iran in der internationalen Politik 1939-1948
03-04-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Die neue Kurdenfrage: Irakisch-Kurdistan und seine Nachbarn
03-04-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Tausend Tränen, tausend Hoffnungen
03-04-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Revolution in Rojava
28-03-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Die türkische Filmindustrie
26-03-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Statistik
Artikel  519,053
Bilder  106,477
PDF-Buch 19,320
verwandte Ordner 97,306
Video 1,396
Bibliothek
Einbruch ins verschlossene ...
Bibliothek
Konflikte mit der kurdische...
Artikel
Als die Guerilla die Mensch...
Bibliothek
Themen Aus Der Kurdischen W...
Bibliothek
Der Kurdische Fürst Mîr Muh...
The Kurdish Roots of a Global Slogan
Historische Fotos sind unser nationales Eigentum! Bitte entwerten Sie sie nicht mit Ihren Logos, Texten und Farben!
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

Women protest outside the Iranian embassy in Mexico City

Women protest outside the Iranian embassy in Mexico City
#Shukriya Bradost#
Shukriya Bradost is an international security and foreign policy analyst

How a women’s movement launched in Iranian Kurdistan in 2003 anticipated today's protests — and forced this author into exile

If I had been killed, would I have had the same impact on the Iranian people as what we have witnessed since the killing in September of the 22-year-old Kurdish woman Jina-Mahsa Amini? Definitely not. The use of heavy military weaponry to crack down on protests in Kurdish cities in Iran, which has shocked the world and led to mass killings and arrests of Kurds during the current uprising, is nothing new for Kurds. What is new is that what began as Kurdish protests then spread across the country, and later the world, chanting the slogan “Jin, Jiyan, Azadi” (“Woman, Life, Liberty”).

Kurdish resistance to the Islamic Republic began on the first day of the regime’s establishment. On 31-03-1979, Iran held a nationwide referendum to vote yes or no to the Islamic Republic, with no other option. The Iranian people had never heard of the Islamic Republic, and the authorities had provided no explanation for the system. Although the number of people who voted yes in that referendum is debatable, Kurdish cities boycotted it altogether. That was the start of Kurdish suffering under the new Iranian regime.

When my friends and I began our struggle against the autocratic regime, we were in the same age range as many of the protesters in Iran today. We were high school students when we first protested against the cruelty of the Islamic Republic. In 2003, we established the Woman and Life (Jin, Jiyan) Committee in the northwestern city of Urmia to fight for our Kurdish and women’s rights. I was forced into exile from my homeland one year later due to my vocal activism for that cause. Shortly thereafter, our publication Khaton (“Woman”) was banned. In many ways, then, the very essence of today’s “Woman, Life, Liberty” slogan was the reason I was expelled from the land of my forefathers in 2004. Since then, I have been far from home – now living in the United States – and have been harassed by the regime, which seeks to silence me with relentless smear campaigns and attempts at online intimidation.

It is bittersweet to retrace the origins of how young Iranian Kurdish women weaved the core of this slogan, under what were then very different and difficult circumstances. One young Iranian Kurdish political prisoner, Shirin Alam Holi, had even carved the slogan on the wall of her prison cell before her heartbreaking execution in 2010. But to be clear: We, the Kurdish women of Iran, have not been fighting just for women’s rights; our struggle has always been for basic human rights. Iranian Kurds, much like other fellow Iranians of other ethnicities, have paid a huge price for our ethnic and religious differences with the ruling Islamist regime.

In high school, I remember sometimes wishing I wasn’t Kurdish so I could have a life like the rest of my classmates, who were not Kurds. Even at that young age, I knew and felt that discrimination against my identity. The regime’s education system deemed my Sunni identity to be that of an infidel, while, as Kurds, we were called savages. I was humiliated many times in school for being a Kurd. On the territory where my great-grandfathers founded the first Kurdish authority (the Dimdim authority in Urmia) in the 17th century, I and other Kurds had no political, social or economic rights. It was similar to how the Native Americans were treated when their land was taken.

Yet the people who abused us in school were all abused by the regime too. Every morning, before allowing us to go to class, they lined up the girls, checked if their hair was showing, and made sure there was no makeup or nail polish. I remember two of my friends being stopped in front of the class and humiliated by having their lips wiped to see if there was any lipstick. The two girls were crying hysterically, in a state of shock. Another classmate was frequently abused for having long, dark eyelashes; they would call her into the principal’s office and wipe her eyes, checking for makeup, though they could never find any, as her eyelashes were just naturally long and dark. Our Woman and Life Committee was fighting for our abusers’ rights too; they were women like me under the gender-apartheid regime.

Why and how did I start my struggle? For the first time since the last clash between the regime and Kurdish forces in the 1980s, Iranian Kurds launched significant protests in 1999, during the so-called reformist government of President Mohammad Khatami. I was there and witnessed how the regime’s forces beat and arrested people. I will never forget the memory of those days when I joined the protests with my older sister and cousins, who were arrested. I was in high school. Seeking to play the “Kurdish card” against Turkey, Khatami had authorized three days of protests after Ankara’s arrest of the Kurdish leader Abdullah Öcalan. Yet when the Iranian Kurds’ protests began, their slogans were against the Iranian regime too, for its decades-long discrimination against Kurds. So the regime withdrew permission for the protests and ordered a brutal crackdown on the protesters. Today, more than 20 years on, there are still people missing who were arrested that day in 1999. Many Kurdish students were also expelled from universities across the country. Following those protests, another mass uprising against the regime occurred in 2005 in Iran’s Kurdish region. None of these protests, nor the regime’s brutality against Kurds in Iran, received national or international attention. Perhaps this is why the regime did not anticipate a nationwide reaction after killing Jina-Mahsa Amini.

It took four decades for other Iranians and the world to hear Kurdish voices in Iran — the most forgotten people, not only in Iran, but also among their kin in Turkey, Iraq, Syria and around the world. The military attacks against civilians, including the shooting of unarmed people, that have been witnessed in the current uprising in Mahabad, Sanandaj and other Kurdish cities were a reenactment of the execution of innocent civilians following the Ayatollah Khomeini’s fatwa of jihad (holy war) against Kurds issued in August 1979. According to Shiite religion, a fatwa is valid until a marja (senior cleric) issues an order to dismiss it. As such, Khomeini’s fatwa against the Kurds of Iran remains in force.

Since taking power, the Iranian regime has imprisoned, tortured and killed Kurds in Iran without consequence, while also attacking and killing them outside the country. Iranian Kurds have paid a disproportionately high price under the Islamic Republic, representing over half of Iran’s political prisoners and more than 55% of executions. Outside prison, Iranian Kurds have been shot at the border or in the streets. If Kurds flee Iran for Iraqi Kurdistan, they are often pursued and killed by agents of the Islamic Republic, or they keep waiting their turn in the long line of UN asylum seekers for decades. According to the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center for Human Rights in Iran, the Iranian regime killed 329 Kurds in Iraqi Kurdistan during the 1990s, and 20 in the 2000s. The Joint Crisis Coordination Center in the Kurdistan Region in Iraq (KRG) estimates there are 10,548 Iranian refugees now residing in the KRG. This figure does not account for the population living in the camps of Iranian Kurdish opposition political parties, who are not counted in the refugee census. If Iranian Kurds flee to Turkey, they are likely to be deported to Iran, where they will face untold horrors. I myself fled on foot across the mountains, as a young Kurdish woman escaping Iran’s autocratic regime because I had demanded human rights for myself and my people. Like most Iranian Kurds, my destination was the KRG. I didn’t know Tehran would not leave me alone, allowing no end to my and others’ suffering.

While studying at law school in Erbil, I worked as a journalist for a student newspaper called Ruwanin. One of my first reports was on Kurdish unrest unleashed after the Iranian regime murdered Shuwana Qaderi, a young Kurdish man, in July 2005. He was shot, and the security forces tied his wounded body to the back of a car, dragged him around the city, before savagely torturing him to death. All of Iran’s Kurdish cities protested after the news emerged and photos of his tortured body were published, demanding justice and an investigation. The three-week protests went unanswered. Pressure to suppress and defeat the people intensified. Protests in Iran’s Kurdish region received neither domestic nor international support.

For my journalism, I was sentenced in absentia to 10 years in prison. I was also elected as the Iranian Kurdish students’ representative in Iraqi Kurdistan. In 2007, I was the first Iranian Kurd to be elected Secretary of the KRG Students’ Union, an unofficial youth parliament. Working with high-ranking officials in Iraqi Kurdistan made me a target for Tehran’s regime. For years, the Islamic Republic tried to discredit me and destroy my reputation by smearing me as an agent of their own; as someone doing their bidding while pretending to do otherwise, a common tactic they use against exiled activists. I was one of the first women whose name appeared on new websites such as Kurdistan Post, where unknown writers launched vicious political and even sexual attacks against me. That was the nightmare of my early 20s: crying behind closed doors while trying to smile in public to avoid being perceived as a weak woman. Unfortunately, they always taught us that women were weak and cry for everything, which is why I kept most of my tears to myself and tried not to share them with anyone.

After their years of attacks failed to prevent me achieving prominent positions in work and academia, the regime threatened to either make me work for them or kill me in a matter of weeks. I informed the Kurdistan region’s security, who advised me to remain silent, saying they would provide me a bodyguard and new living location. I could not agree to stay silent against the brutal regime and what it was doing; for me, silence was equal to death. The only option was to abandon what I had worked on for years in Iraqi Kurdistan and seek refuge in the U.S.

Threatened with death, I left my second home for a second forced exile. Because of my activism and regular appearances on Persian broadcasts into Iran, I still receive threats from the Iranian regime. Fars News Agency, an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) media outlet, recently labeled me a terrorist for commenting on recent protests and mass killings in Kurdish cities and the rest of Iran. I have received threats that I will be found and killed here in the U.S. I had assumed that obtaining U.S. citizenship would obligate the American government to protect me from the Iranian regime and provide me with a safe haven in which to continue my struggle for human rights and against the Iranian regime. Yet Tehran’s recent killing of the Iranian Kurdish U.S. citizen Omar Mahmoudzadeh in a drone and missile attack on Kurdish camps in Iraqi Kurdistan, and the Biden administration’s silence on this crime, have left me doubtful.

The reason Jina-Mahsa Amini’s murder sparked a revolutionary movement across Iran, rather than one limited to the Kurdish region, is that this time the Iranian people realized the regime cannot be reformed. The mask of the autocratic regime has fallen. For years, Tehran has attempted to divide and rule Iran by using its disinformation machine to demonize Kurds and undermine the Kurdish identity and those of other ethnic and religious groups. After four decades of division, Iranians are finally united, and they share a common goal: a democratic Iran in which all different groups with their different identities enjoy equal rights; the same goal that Kurdish political parties proposed after the 1979 revolution.[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 257 mal angesehen
HashTag
Quellen
[1] Website | English | newlinesmag.com 28-12-2022
Verlinkte Artikel: 2
Biografie
Geschichte und Ereignisse
Gruppe: Artikel
Artikel Sprache: English
Publication date: 28-12-2022 (2 Jahr)
Art der Veröffentlichung: Born-digital
Dialekt: Englisch
Inhaltskategorie: Kurdenfrage
Inhaltskategorie: Frauen
Technische Metadaten
Artikel Qualität: 97%
97%
Hinzugefügt von ( هەژار کامەلا ) am 07-09-2023
Dieser Artikel wurde überprüft und veröffentlicht von ( زریان سەرچناری ) auf 20-09-2023
Dieser Artikel wurde kürzlich von ( هەژار کامەلا ) am 20-09-2023 aktualisiert
URL
Dieser Artikel ist gemäss Kurdipedia noch nicht finalisiert
Dieser Artikel wurde bereits 257 mal angesehen
Verknüpfte Datei - Version
Typ Version Ersteller
Foto-Datei 1.0.1106 KB 07-09-2023 هەژار کامەلاهـ.ک.
Kurdipedia ist die grösste Quelle für Informationen
Artikel
Aufstandsversuche an der Oberfläche: Das Unternehmen “Mammut” (Irak) von 1943
Biografie
Dilan Yeşilgöz
Biografie
Mely Kiyak
Bibliothek
Themen Aus Der Kurdischen Wortbildung
Artikel
Von 1992 bis heute: „Die PDK greift von hinten an“
Biografie
Fevzi Özmen
Biografie
Kenan Engin
Artikel
Kobanê-Verfahren: DEM kündigt Gerechtigkeitswachen an
Biografie
Cahit Sıtkı Tarancı
Biografie
Sebahat Tuncel
Biografie
Leyla Îmret
Bibliothek
Ökologie: Aufstand der Natur
Bibliothek
FREIHEIT FÜR DIE KURDISCHEN POLITISCHEN GEFANGENEN IN DEUTSCHLAND
Biografie
Saya Ahmad
Biografie
Halil Öztoprak (Xalil Alxas)
Biografie
Ismail Küpeli
Artikel
Pteridophyta und Anthophyta aus Mesopotamien und Kurdistan sowie Syrien und Prinkipo
Bibliothek
Der Kurdische Fürst Mîr Muhammad-î Rawandizî
Artikel
Urteile im Kobanê-Verfahren gesprochen
Bibliothek
Durch Armenien. Eine Wanderung und der Zug Xenophons bis zum Schwarzen Meere. Eine militär-geographische Studie

Actual
Bibliothek
Einbruch ins verschlossene Kurdistan
24-10-2011
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Einbruch ins verschlossene Kurdistan
Bibliothek
Konflikte mit der kurdischen Sprache in der Türkei
11-06-2023
هەژار کامەلا
Konflikte mit der kurdischen Sprache in der Türkei
Artikel
Als die Guerilla die Menschen in Şengal beschützte
01-08-2023
هەژار کامەلا
Als die Guerilla die Menschen in Şengal beschützte
Bibliothek
Themen Aus Der Kurdischen Wortbildung
06-04-2024
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Themen Aus Der Kurdischen Wortbildung
Bibliothek
Der Kurdische Fürst Mîr Muhammad-î Rawandizî
27-04-2024
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Der Kurdische Fürst Mîr Muhammad-î Rawandizî
Neue Artikel
Bibliothek
Ökologie: Aufstand der Natur
26-05-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Durch Armenien. Eine Wanderung und der Zug Xenophons bis zum Schwarzen Meere. Eine militär-geographische Studie
18-05-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Der Kurdische Fürst Mîr Muhammad-î Rawandizî
27-04-2024
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothek
Themen Aus Der Kurdischen Wortbildung
06-04-2024
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothek
FREIHEIT FÜR DIE KURDISCHEN POLITISCHEN GEFANGENEN IN DEUTSCHLAND
03-04-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Der Iran in der internationalen Politik 1939-1948
03-04-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Die neue Kurdenfrage: Irakisch-Kurdistan und seine Nachbarn
03-04-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Tausend Tränen, tausend Hoffnungen
03-04-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Revolution in Rojava
28-03-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
Die türkische Filmindustrie
26-03-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Statistik
Artikel  519,053
Bilder  106,477
PDF-Buch 19,320
verwandte Ordner 97,306
Video 1,396
Kurdipedia ist die grösste Quelle für Informationen
Artikel
Aufstandsversuche an der Oberfläche: Das Unternehmen “Mammut” (Irak) von 1943
Biografie
Dilan Yeşilgöz
Biografie
Mely Kiyak
Bibliothek
Themen Aus Der Kurdischen Wortbildung
Artikel
Von 1992 bis heute: „Die PDK greift von hinten an“
Biografie
Fevzi Özmen
Biografie
Kenan Engin
Artikel
Kobanê-Verfahren: DEM kündigt Gerechtigkeitswachen an
Biografie
Cahit Sıtkı Tarancı
Biografie
Sebahat Tuncel
Biografie
Leyla Îmret
Bibliothek
Ökologie: Aufstand der Natur
Bibliothek
FREIHEIT FÜR DIE KURDISCHEN POLITISCHEN GEFANGENEN IN DEUTSCHLAND
Biografie
Saya Ahmad
Biografie
Halil Öztoprak (Xalil Alxas)
Biografie
Ismail Küpeli
Artikel
Pteridophyta und Anthophyta aus Mesopotamien und Kurdistan sowie Syrien und Prinkipo
Bibliothek
Der Kurdische Fürst Mîr Muhammad-î Rawandizî
Artikel
Urteile im Kobanê-Verfahren gesprochen
Bibliothek
Durch Armenien. Eine Wanderung und der Zug Xenophons bis zum Schwarzen Meere. Eine militär-geographische Studie

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2024) version: 15.5
| Kontakt | CSS3 | HTML5

| Generationszeit Seite: 0.937 Sekunde(n)!