کتاووخانه کتاووخانه
مِنِی کردن(گێردین)

 کوردی پدیا کەڵنگتەرین بنچەک چەن زوون دار أڕا زانستەنیەل کؤردیە!


Search Options





مِنِی کردن(گێردین) ترەختی کریا      تەختە کلید


مِنِی کردن(گێردین)
مِنِی کردن(گێردین) ترەختی کریا
کتاووخانه
نامنامەی کردی
کرونولوژیا از وقایع
بنچەکەل(سەرکەنی=سرچشمە)
وەرینە(پێشینە)
کووکریائەل(گردآکریائەل)کاربەری
کارەل(فعالیتەل)
چؤی مِنِی کەم ؟
انتشار(بەشآکرن)
Video
ڕزگ بەنی(دەسە بەنی)
بەخش بەختەکی!
کِل کِردِن
 مەقاڵە کِل کە
عەسگێ کِل کە(ڕئ کە)
Survey
قسەل(گەپەل) هۆمە
تماس
چه نوع اطلاعاتی را که ما نیاز داریم!
إستانداردەل
 إگرەک بینەل استفاده
 کیفیت بەخش
 أبزار
دەربارە
Kurdipedia Archivists
 درەباره ایمە چە مووشن !
اضافه کوردیپیدیا به وب سایت شما
اضافه کردن / حذف ایمیل
آمار مهمان
 آمار بەخش
 فونت چاوواشآکەر(مبدل)
 تەقویم چاوواشآکەر(مبدل)
زبان و گویش از صفحات
تەختە کلید
پیوەندەل خوو(خاس)
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
زبان
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی
Kurmancî
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Français
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Fins
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
 سامانە مإ
ورود به سیستم
هامیاری أگەرد هۆمە
رمز عبور خود را فراموش کرده اید!
مِنِی کردن(گێردین) کِل کِردِن  أبزار زبان  سامانە مإ
مِنِی کردن(گێردین) ترەختی کریا
کتاووخانه
نامنامەی کردی
کرونولوژیا از وقایع
بنچەکەل(سەرکەنی=سرچشمە)
وەرینە(پێشینە)
کووکریائەل(گردآکریائەل)کاربەری
کارەل(فعالیتەل)
چؤی مِنِی کەم ؟
انتشار(بەشآکرن)
Video
ڕزگ بەنی(دەسە بەنی)
بەخش بەختەکی!
 مەقاڵە کِل کە
عەسگێ کِل کە(ڕئ کە)
Survey
قسەل(گەپەل) هۆمە
تماس
چه نوع اطلاعاتی را که ما نیاز داریم!
إستانداردەل
 إگرەک بینەل استفاده
 کیفیت بەخش
دەربارە
Kurdipedia Archivists
 درەباره ایمە چە مووشن !
اضافه کوردیپیدیا به وب سایت شما
اضافه کردن / حذف ایمیل
آمار مهمان
 آمار بەخش
 فونت چاوواشآکەر(مبدل)
 تەقویم چاوواشآکەر(مبدل)
زبان و گویش از صفحات
تەختە کلید
پیوەندەل خوو(خاس)
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی
Kurmancî
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Français
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Fins
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
ورود به سیستم
هامیاری أگەرد هۆمە
رمز عبور خود را فراموش کرده اید!
        
 kurdipedia.org 2008 - 2024
 دەربارە
 بەخش بەختەکی!
  إگرەک بینەل استفاده
 Kurdipedia Archivists
 قسەل(گەپەل) هۆمە
 کووکریائەل(گردآکریائەل)کاربەری
 کرونولوژیا از وقایع
 کارەل(فعالیتەل) - کؤردی پدیا
 کمک
 بەخش نوو(جەدید)
 کتاووخانە
وشەێل، ئەژ هەفت دەلیا گوارننەم
07-06-2024
زریان سەرچناری
 کتاووخانە
پاش واران
07-06-2024
زریان سەرچناری
 کتاووخانە
بۊش کامە وەرزی؟
30-09-2023
زریان سەرچناری
 کتاووخانە
گوڵدەم سۊر
18-12-2022
ڕۆژگار کەرکووکی
 کتاووخانە
سەرەوژێری
17-12-2022
ڕۆژگار کەرکووکی
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
موحسن قەیسەری
01-10-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
 کتاووخانە
هۊرد کەم
20-09-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
مەهوەش سولێمانپوور
19-09-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
کەژال وەتەنپوور
18-09-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
 کتاووخانە
واژا
18-09-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
آمار
 شؤمارە مەقاڵەل
  535,884
 شؤمارە عەسگەل
  109,284
 کتاووەل
  20,189
فایل های مرتبط
  103,490
Video
  1,526
 زوون
کوردیی ناوەڕاست - Central Kurdish 
306,064
Kurmancî - Upper Kurdish (Latin) 
89,671
هەورامی - Kurdish Hawrami 
65,954
عربي - Arabic 
30,100
کرمانجی - Upper Kurdish (Arami) 
17,781
فارسی - Farsi 
9,422
English - English 
7,523
Türkçe - Turkish 
3,667
لوڕی - Kurdish Luri 
1,690
Deutsch - German 
1,635
Pусский - Russian 
1,140
Français - French 
347
Nederlands - Dutch 
130
Zazakî - Kurdish Zazaki 
91
Svenska - Swedish 
70
Polski - Polish 
54
Español - Spanish 
53
Italiano - Italian 
51
Հայերեն - Armenian 
50
لەکی - Kurdish Laki 
37
Azərbaycanca - Azerbaijani 
27
日本人 - Japanese 
21
中国的 - Chinese 
19
Norsk - Norwegian 
17
Ελληνική - Greek 
15
עברית - Hebrew 
15
Fins - Finnish 
12
Português - Portuguese 
9
Ozbek - Uzbek 
7
Тоҷикӣ - Tajik 
7
Esperanto - Esperanto 
5
Catalana - Catalana 
4
Čeština - Czech 
4
ქართველი - Georgian 
4
Srpski - Serbian 
3
Hrvatski - Croatian 
3
Kiswahili سَوَاحِلي -  
2
ترکمانی - Turkman (Arami Script) 
1
Cebuano - Cebuano 
1
балгарская - Bulgarian 
1
हिन्दी - Hindi 
1
Lietuvių - Lithuanian 
1
ڕزگ(دەسە)
لەکی
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر 
15
 کتاووخانە 
14
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە) 
6
 وەڵگەنۆمەل 
1
 
1
MP3 
323
PDF 
31,240
MP4 
2,510
IMG 
200,225
∑   مجموع 
234,298
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
وتوێژ تایبەت وەگەرد حسام لو...
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
چیرۆکی مسافرکیش لە ئێحسان ن...
 کتاووخانە
واژا
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
باشوور و بنەڕەتەل یەکاگرتن ...
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
موحسن قەیسەری
Are Kurds closer to realizing their dream of an independent state?
ڕزگ(دەسە):  مەقاڵەل گؤجەر | زبان مقاله: English - English
Share
Facebook0
Twitter0
Telegram0
LinkedIn0
WhatsApp0
Viber0
SMS0
Facebook Messenger0
E-Mail0
Copy Link0
ارزیابی مقالە
نایاب
عالی
متوسط
بد نیست
بد
اضاف کردن أ کووکریال
نظر خود را در مورد این مقاله بنویسید!
پێشینە(وەرینەل) بەخش
Metadata
RSS
به دنبال تصویر رکورد انتخاب شده در گوگل
به دنبال رکورد انتخاب شده در گوگل
کوردیی ناوەڕاست0
Kurmancî0
کرمانجی0
هەورامی0
لوڕی0
لەکی0
Zazakî0
عربي0
فارسی0
Türkçe0
עברית0
Deutsch0
Español0
Français0
Italiano0
Nederlands0
Svenska0
Ελληνική0
Azərbaycanca0
Catalana0
Cebuano0
Čeština0
Esperanto0
Fins0
Hrvatski0
Kiswahili سَوَاحِلي0
Lietuvių0
Norsk0
Ozbek0
Polski0
Português0
Pусский0
Srpski0
балгарская0
Тоҷикӣ0
Հայերեն0
ترکمانی0
हिन्दी0
ქართველი0
中国的0
日本人0

Are Kurds closer to realizing their dream of an independent state?

Are Kurds closer to realizing their dream of an independent state?
Kurds are considered the largest ethnic group in the world without a country. The turmoil in Syria and Iraq creates an opportunity to draw closer to that dream.
By Dominique Soguel Correspondent
Erbil, Iraq

Briar Abdullah comes from a proud line of peshmerga fighters. But even in this time of war in northern Iraq between his fellow Kurds and the self-described Islamic State, Mr. Abdullah chose to study law rather than fight.
It was a tough decision, he says, but rooted in the belief that knowledge is the best foundation for an independent Kurdistan.
“I dream of holding a Kurdish passport and being able to travel freely across Greater Kurdistan,” says the young man studying in the northern Iraqi city of Erbil. “Iraqi Kurdistan could be the starting point,” he says. “The Kurds are ready for independence.”
Rebaz Hassan, another young Iraqi Kurd, opted for a radically different kind of education. He trained in Qandil Mountain, the bastion of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, an insurgent movement that has long fought against the Turkish state and has powerful affiliates in Iran and Syria.
The details may differ, but his vision for the future falls within the same spectrum.
“My dream is to have a free Kurdistan” that is multiethnic, says Mr. Hassan, eating at a #PKK# cultural center. “I want to see the word Kurdistan – not Iraq – on my passport.”
Kurds are considered the largest ethnic group in the world without a state. They comprise significant minorities in Iran, Turkey, Syria, and Iraq. Most Kurds – roughly 30 million people worldwide – dream of erasing those mountainous borders and forming what they call a “Greater Kurdistan.”

Sympathy for their cause
They’ve never had the power or international support necessary to achieve that goal. But the new generation hope that their role as key partners in the US-led war against Islamic State (IS), coupled with the possible collapse of the Syrian and Iraqi states, could herald a change in fortune.
Kurdish gains in Iraq and recently in Syria have resulted in growing territorial control. In Turkey, which has the largest concentration of Kurds, a pro-Kurdish party made it into parliament this summer for the first time in history. Despite the breakdown of a peace process between Turkey and the PKK that has resulted in a resurgence of violence, the pro-Kurdish party passed the threshold for representation in new elections this week. In Iran, Kurdish militants and activists still face execution.
But it was their role in recent dramatic chapters in the war with IS, including a tide-turning victory in the northern Syrian city of Kobane, that won Kurdish fighters accolades from the international community and stoked sympathy for their cause.
Each military victory fuels a sense of destiny. Just months ago, analysts were abuzz with talk of a “Kurdish moment,” noting that the international climate had never been more conducive to a Kurdish drive for independence.
But now most warn that internal feuds are getting in the way and could even escalate into internecine Kurdish violence. And, crucially, Turkey, Iran, and the United States oppose Kurdish independence.
“We can [still] talk about a Kurdish moment because the genie is out of the bottle,” says Mutlu Civiroglu, a Washington analyst. “The Kurdish issue is now a regional, international issue. It needs to be addressed by the international powers sooner or later.”

So, who are the Kurds?
Despite facing very different realities in four nations, Kurds are bound by a common sense of belonging, Mr. Civiroglu says. When Kobane was under siege, Kurds in Iraq and Turkey rushed to join the fight. Those in Iran – persecuted for being Sunni as well as Kurds by the Shiite regime – also staged demonstrations of support.
Kurdish identity and history run deep.
“The Kurds predate Christ,” says Mesud Serfiraz, a historian and academic researcher at Mardin Artuklu University in the southeastern Turkish city of Mardin, with visible pride. “The ancient Greek general Xenophon and the Greek historian Strabo wrote about Courdoune. Many researchers, myself included, believe this region corresponds to modern Kurdistan.”
Kurds converted to Islam early and fought alongside Arabs in the Crusades. Salaheddin Eyubi, a Muslim Kurd known in the West as Saladin, was the first sultan of Egypt and Syria. Kurds were absorbed into the Ottoman and Safavid Empires, or modern-day Turkey and Iran, two dominant regional powers.
Kurdish nationalist movements first flourished as the Ottoman Empire faded, but the key treaties that carved out the present Middle East left Kurds stateless.
In the 20th century, Kurdish demands for autonomy and basic cultural and linguistic rights put them at odds or outright war with the countries they live in. One brief success – the declaration of the Republic of Kurdistan in the city of Mahabad in 1946 – was swiftly snuffed out by Iran.

Revolutionary songs
The personal journey of Saeed Gabari, an aging yet sprightly Kurdish singer born in Syria, captures a fraction of that struggle.
As his wife serves tea and nuts in their home on the outskirts of Erbil, Mr. Gabari recounts in vivid detail his glory days traveling as a peshmerga bard on horseback, but glosses over the years spent behind bars, where he was blinded.
The singer/activist experienced torture in the worst jails of the region: Diyarbakir in Turkey, Iraq’s Abu Ghraib, Iran’s Evin, and others in Syria. Chillingly precise memories linger despite his efforts to forget. Gabari says he was electroshocked 111 times during his detention in Turkey in 1965.
Of the nearly three dark years he spent in Abu Ghraib in the 1980s, he recalls a bright memory of defiance – the day prisoners burned blankets and jumped over the fire to celebrate the Kurdish New Year. It earned 400 people a beating, he says, but the torturers in charge finally gave up in fatigue.
Gabari says his crime was giving voice to Kurdish dreams. “They would say: If peshmerga shoot bullets in the mountains no one hears them, but revolutionary songs grow their ranks.”

Autonomy in Iraq
Gabari now lives in northern Iraq because this is where Kurds have come closest to achieving the elusive dream of independence. Iraqi Kurds asserted autonomy there after helping the US in 2003 topple the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein. The Iraqi leader had massacred Kurds in the genocidal Anfal campaign of the late 1980s, including the March 1988 chemical attack in Halabja that killed thousands of civilians.
“I think the Americans have understood that neither Turks, nor Iranians, nor Arabs are their friends. Their only friends are the Kurd,” says the bard, noting that Massoud Barzani, president of the Iraqi Kurdistan region since 2005, was a guest of the White House this year.
Mr. Barzani sees a referendum in Iraqi Kurdistan as the first step toward independence. But other parties see more pressing priorities: an economic crisis that has sent young Kurds fleeing to Europe, oil and budget disputes with Baghdad, and more recently how to solve a succession crisis following the end of Barzani’s term in August, which recently spilled into violence.
“The most important challenge we are facing is the war against IS,” says Jafar Eminki, deputy parliament speaker. “Declaring independence is not a priority or pressing need today. The political forces are not focused on that.”
As protests continue, cities juggle speech and safety concerns
Territorial gains
But Kamal Kirkuki, a senior official in Barzani’s party and a military commander on the front line against IS, has no doubts: Independence is the end goal and increasingly within reach, whether the world agrees or not.
“If we were fighting [just] to stay in Iraq as a federation, I would not fight IS for one minute. I would not stay in this hell,” Mr. Kirkuki says.
The stately commander has spent months fighting on the outskirts of Kirkuk, a diverse and oil-rich city some 51 miles south of Erbil that lies outside the recognized borders of Iraqi Kurdistan. Kurds view it as their “Jerusalem” and took control when the Iraqi Army fled IS advances in 2014.
Kirkuki says his troops have killed more than 1,200 IS fighters. But his greatest source of pride is the liberation of all Kurdish and mixed villages within his sector, as well as 17 Arab hamlets.
Aid workers in Iraq, however, caution that the conquests come with forced displacement and land grabs designed to change demographic realities.
Experts say the territorial gains could shape the contours of a de facto Kurdish state if Iraq and Syria splinter apart.
Recommended
Balance
Israel-Hamas: The harder hostage negotiations still to come
“What is Iraq?” scoffs the commander. “This country does not control its skies, and it does not control its land or borders. It does not control its oil and water. Iraq failed.”
Opportunity in Syria
For Syrian Kurds, the outbreak of the Arab Spring in 2011 likewise presented a golden opportunity. They quietly carved out three noncontiguous enclaves in the north of the country as President Bashar al-Assad largely turned a blind eye to their activities. In these areas, Syrian Kurds have tested the concept of democratic autonomy as theorized by jailed PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan.
Mohammed Rasho, a representative of the dominant Kurdish faction in Syria who is based in Iraq, says they have an all-inclusive goal. “Our slogan is free Rojava and a Democratic Syria,” he says, using the Kurdish name for northern Syria. “There is no 100 percent Kurdish area in Syria. We are islands in an Arab sea.”
The Kurds in Syria have rolled out Kurdish education, enforced their version of gender equality, and created decisionmaking structures generally inclusive of Arabs and the other groups in the area. While Kurdish men and women fought heroically in Kobane, rights groups say the Syrian Kurdish militias have recruited child soldiers and destroyed Arab villages.
In both the Iraqi and Syrian contexts, internal rivalries, autocratic tendencies, and fraught relations with Arab neighbors have slowed progress toward independence.
“Regionally, the biggest challenges facing the Kurds is first internal division and fragmentation,” says Kawa Hassan, director of the Middle East and North Africa Program at the EastWest Institute in Brussels. “If the Kurdish house is not in order they cannot achieve independence.”
“Second is the opposition from neighboring countries and the United States against Kurdish independence. Third is the lack of economic infrastructure that could be the basis of economic independence.”
“Of course things change very quickly in the Middle East,” adds Mr. Hassan. “Syria is crumbling. Iraq is crumbling.... The most feasible scenario is federations or Kurdish confederations.”

Kurdish culture and language
Territory is not all the Kurds care about. In fact many – including the dominant political factions in Turkey and Syria – are pragmatists willing to find a solution for the Kurdish question that is short of an independent state.
But all Kurdish factions put cultural and linguistic rights at the top of their agenda.
“As Kurds make political gains across Kurdistan, likewise the Kurdish language is experiencing a revival,” says Ulku Bingol, editor of HIVA, a publishing house producing books for children in multiple Kurdish dialects out of the southeast Turkish city of Diyarbakir.
The first Kurdish-language newspaper was published in 1898 in Istanbul, but the harsh policies of assimilation ushered in by the Turkish Republic set the stage for a generation that speaks Kurdish poorly if at all. Even some of the staunchest separatists of Diyarbakir – which Turkey’s Kurds consider their regional capital – struggle to speak in their mother tongue.
Ibrahim Halil Baran, a separatist Kurdish nationalist who switches from Kurdish to Turkish when sleepy, sums up the stakes. “For us, when a Kurd loses his language, he has become a Turk. Kurdish language is Kurdish identity.”
Kurdish linguists are now able to teach at the university level thanks to an opening that began with an amendment to Turkey’s Constitution in 1992 and accelerated under the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. But they fear the language will disappear unless Kurdish education is scaled up.
Dilvan, a Kurdology student, spent years answering to a Turkish name rather than her own at school. She hoped for progress when elections ushered a pro-Kurdish party into parliament.
By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy.
But amid recent Turkish-PKK and IS violence, Dilvan is too afraid to speak Kurdish in Istanbul, saying it draws angry glares and comments. Instead, she discreetly tries to polish her mother tongue by telling bedtime stories to her youngest sibling.
“Sometimes I lose hope,” she says. “It’s been a massive struggle with only small results. But my father told me: If you study Kurdish, thousands will learn. This is the most important battle.”[1]

اێ مەقاڵە أ زوون (English) نۆیسیائە، أڕا واز کردن بەخش أ زوون بنچێنە(اصلی)!أڕؤی آیکون کلیک کەن
This item has been written in (English) language, click on icon to open the item in the original language!
اێ بەخشە 136 گل سئرکریائە(دێینە)
نظر خود را در مورد این مقاله بنویسید!
HashTag
بنچەکەل(سەرکەنی=سرچشمە)
[1] | English | csmonitor.com 03-11-2015
آیتم های مرتبط: 4
ڕزگ(دەسە):  مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
زبان مقاله: English
Publication date: 03-11-2015 (9 سال)
Publication Type: Born-digital
لهجە: انگلیسی
کتاب: مشکل کرد
Technical Metadata
 کیفیت بەخش : 94%
94%
اێ ڕکؤردە إژ لآ 03-12-2023 أڕا( هەژار کامەلا )
اێ بەخشە گل دؤمائن(آخرین گل) إژ لآ( هەژار کامەلا ): أڕا03-12-2023 نووآ بی(بروز بی)
نیشانی مەقاڵە
اێ بەخشە إڕؤی(طبق) إستانداردەل كوردی پدیا هەنی(هالی) ناتەمامە ؤ بازنگری متن إگرەکەسێ(نیازە)
اێ بەخشە 136 گل سئرکریائە(دێینە)
Attached files - Version
نوع Version نام ویرایشگر
 پەروەندە عەسگ 1.0.1130 KB 03-12-2023 هەژار کامەلاهـ.ک.
 کوردی پدیا کەڵنگتەرین بنچەک چەن زوون دار أڕا زانستەنیەل کؤردیە!
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
موحسن قەیسەری
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
ئەفشین غوڵامی
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
چیرۆکی مسافرکیش لە ئێحسان نیک‌پەی
 کتاووخانە
گوڵدەم سۊر
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
داستانێگ لە مامووستا مەنووچێر کەێخسرەوپووڕ
 کتاووخانە
پاش واران
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
مازیار نەزەربەیگی
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
باشوور و بنەڕەتەل یەکاگرتن زوانی وژمان
 کتاووخانە
وشەێل، ئەژ هەفت دەلیا گوارننەم
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
کەژال وەتەنپوور
 کتاووخانە
سەرەوژێری
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
چرچ بوودە پاساکەر ڕەخنەگری! ئایا ڕەخنەێ هەشار یا لە پشت کەل و کورچ، تۊەنێد یارمیەتی کوومەڵگای ئیمە بەێدن؟ /مازیار نەزەربەیگی
 کتاووخانە
بۊش کامە وەرزی؟
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
یانزە مەلۊچگ مازیار حەیدەری

Actual
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
وتوێژ تایبەت وەگەرد حسام لوڕنژاد گوورانی چڕ کرماشانی
13-09-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
وتوێژ تایبەت وەگەرد حسام لوڕنژاد گوورانی چڕ کرماشانی
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
چیرۆکی مسافرکیش لە ئێحسان نیک‌پەی
15-09-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
چیرۆکی مسافرکیش لە ئێحسان نیک‌پەی
 کتاووخانە
واژا
18-09-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
واژا
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
باشوور و بنەڕەتەل یەکاگرتن زوانی وژمان
19-09-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
باشوور و بنەڕەتەل یەکاگرتن زوانی وژمان
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
موحسن قەیسەری
01-10-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
موحسن قەیسەری
 بەخش نوو(جەدید)
 کتاووخانە
وشەێل، ئەژ هەفت دەلیا گوارننەم
07-06-2024
زریان سەرچناری
 کتاووخانە
پاش واران
07-06-2024
زریان سەرچناری
 کتاووخانە
بۊش کامە وەرزی؟
30-09-2023
زریان سەرچناری
 کتاووخانە
گوڵدەم سۊر
18-12-2022
ڕۆژگار کەرکووکی
 کتاووخانە
سەرەوژێری
17-12-2022
ڕۆژگار کەرکووکی
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
موحسن قەیسەری
01-10-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
 کتاووخانە
هۊرد کەم
20-09-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
مەهوەش سولێمانپوور
19-09-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
کەژال وەتەنپوور
18-09-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
 کتاووخانە
واژا
18-09-2022
حوسێن باقری - ژاکان باران
آمار
 شؤمارە مەقاڵەل
  535,884
 شؤمارە عەسگەل
  109,284
 کتاووەل
  20,189
فایل های مرتبط
  103,490
Video
  1,526
 زوون
کوردیی ناوەڕاست - Central Kurdish 
306,064
Kurmancî - Upper Kurdish (Latin) 
89,671
هەورامی - Kurdish Hawrami 
65,954
عربي - Arabic 
30,100
کرمانجی - Upper Kurdish (Arami) 
17,781
فارسی - Farsi 
9,422
English - English 
7,523
Türkçe - Turkish 
3,667
لوڕی - Kurdish Luri 
1,690
Deutsch - German 
1,635
Pусский - Russian 
1,140
Français - French 
347
Nederlands - Dutch 
130
Zazakî - Kurdish Zazaki 
91
Svenska - Swedish 
70
Polski - Polish 
54
Español - Spanish 
53
Italiano - Italian 
51
Հայերեն - Armenian 
50
لەکی - Kurdish Laki 
37
Azərbaycanca - Azerbaijani 
27
日本人 - Japanese 
21
中国的 - Chinese 
19
Norsk - Norwegian 
17
Ελληνική - Greek 
15
עברית - Hebrew 
15
Fins - Finnish 
12
Português - Portuguese 
9
Ozbek - Uzbek 
7
Тоҷикӣ - Tajik 
7
Esperanto - Esperanto 
5
Catalana - Catalana 
4
Čeština - Czech 
4
ქართველი - Georgian 
4
Srpski - Serbian 
3
Hrvatski - Croatian 
3
Kiswahili سَوَاحِلي -  
2
ترکمانی - Turkman (Arami Script) 
1
Cebuano - Cebuano 
1
балгарская - Bulgarian 
1
हिन्दी - Hindi 
1
Lietuvių - Lithuanian 
1
ڕزگ(دەسە)
لەکی
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر 
15
 کتاووخانە 
14
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە) 
6
 وەڵگەنۆمەل 
1
 
1
MP3 
323
PDF 
31,240
MP4 
2,510
IMG 
200,225
∑   مجموع 
234,298
 کوردی پدیا کەڵنگتەرین بنچەک چەن زوون دار أڕا زانستەنیەل کؤردیە!
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
موحسن قەیسەری
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
ئەفشین غوڵامی
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
چیرۆکی مسافرکیش لە ئێحسان نیک‌پەی
 کتاووخانە
گوڵدەم سۊر
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
داستانێگ لە مامووستا مەنووچێر کەێخسرەوپووڕ
 کتاووخانە
پاش واران
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
مازیار نەزەربەیگی
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
باشوور و بنەڕەتەل یەکاگرتن زوانی وژمان
 کتاووخانە
وشەێل، ئەژ هەفت دەلیا گوارننەم
 زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە)
کەژال وەتەنپوور
 کتاووخانە
سەرەوژێری
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
چرچ بوودە پاساکەر ڕەخنەگری! ئایا ڕەخنەێ هەشار یا لە پشت کەل و کورچ، تۊەنێد یارمیەتی کوومەڵگای ئیمە بەێدن؟ /مازیار نەزەربەیگی
 کتاووخانە
بۊش کامە وەرزی؟
 مەقاڵەل گؤجەر
یانزە مەلۊچگ مازیار حەیدەری
Folders
 کتاووخانە - کتاب - پرورش  کتاووخانە - نوع سند - زبان اصلی  کتاووخانە - لهجە - ک. لری  کتاووخانە - PDF -  زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە) - Education level -  زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە) - Political trend - Nationalist  زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە) - جنس شخص - مردان  زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە) - لهجە - ک. لری  زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە) - - شرق کردستان  زنی نۆیسە (ژیان ناۆمە) - نوع شخص - ادیب

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2024) version: 15.83
| تماس | CSS3 | HTML5

| زمان دؤرسکردن وەڵگە(پەڕە): 2.14 ثانیه(اێس)