The Kurdish image in statist historiography: the case of Simko.
By Kamal Soleimani.
Middle Eastern Studies jurnal, 22-06-2017.
This article focuses on the uprising in 1918–1922 of Ismail Agha of Shikak (a.k.a. Simko) in Iranian Kurdistan and how he has been portrayed in Persian historiography. Painting Simko simply as another Kurdish rebellious chief with no nationalist aspirations leaves important questions unanswered. Simko introduced a number of firsts in Kurdish political history to Iranian Kurdistan, yet his innovations have generally been overlooked. Simko was conscious of, informed by, and founded his politics upon the communal distinctions deemed to legitimize varying degrees of Kurdish self-rule. In addition to his political and military activities, Simko co-founded the first Kurdish school in Iran, published the first Kurdish-Persian newspaper, and made Kurdish the official medium of his reign. This article draws on memoirs, personal accounts, and other unexplored primary documents to show a more complex picture of Simko’s resistance, problematizes some idées reçues about Simko and his ethno-nationalism, and explores inconsistencies in the existing literature on the subject. [1]
=KTML_Link_External_Begin=https://www.kurdipedia.org/docviewer.aspx?id=511084&document=0001.PDF=KTML_Link_External_Between= click to read: The Kurdish image in statist historiography: the case of Simko=KTML_Link_External_End=