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
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
Biografie
Müslüm Aslan
17-03-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
saiten Her biji Azadi!
17-03-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Statistik
Artikel  518,985
Bilder  106,396
PDF-Buch 19,240
verwandte Ordner 96,836
Video 1,376
Biografie
Said Nursi
Artikel
Gökay Akbulut zu Solidaritä...
Bibliothek
Konflikte mit der kurdische...
Bibliothek
Themen Aus Der Kurdischen W...
Bibliothek
Der Kurdische Fürst Mîr Muh...
How a shared history of persecution brought two communities (back) together: Kurdish-Jewish cooperation in Germany
Jeder Winkel des Landes, von Ost nach West, von Nord nach Süd... wird zu einer Quelle der Kurdipedia!
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

A Kurdish-Jewish refugee family preparing to board buses to Israel (circa 1...

A Kurdish-Jewish refugee family preparing to board buses to Israel (circa 1...
By Pinar Kara
In the summer of 2017, I was doing preliminary research for my dissertation and found myself at yet another Kurdish rally in Germany. There were many rallies all over the country at the time, ahead of the Kurdish independence referendum in Iraq. Attending a rally like this wasn’t a new experience for me, as I’ve been to various cultural and political events organized by Kurdish associations in the past. The rallies during the summer of 2017 were different, though. There weren’t just Kurdish flags flying around, but plenty of Israeli flags as well.

Who are the Kurds?
The Kurds are the largest ethnic group in the world that does not have its own nation-state. Around 25 million Kurds live in the borderland areas of Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran. Though they have been trying to build their own nation-state for many years, they have not as yet been able to do so. The desire for a nation-state, or at least a certain degree of sovereignty, has remained, however, which has led to various violent conflicts between Kurdish groups and the states that they live in.
During these times of conflict, many Kurds have immigrated abroad, mostly to Europe. Germany hosts the majority of the Kurdish diaspora community and it is estimated that there are around two million people of Kurdish descent living there today. Most Kurds are Sunni Muslims, but there are also many other religious groups within the Kurdish community, including Yazidis, Alevis, and Jews.

A long history of mutual support
Leading up to the independence referendum, more and more Jewish and Israeli organizations and major publications in Germany and the Middle East came out with statements in support of the Kurdish independence referendum in Iraq. Even Prime Minister Netanyahu released a statement in which he emphasized that Israel “supports the legitimate efforts of the Kurdish people to attain a state of its own” and added that the Jewish people have a “longstanding, deep and natural sympathy” for the Kurdish people and their cause.
As I began to dig deeper into the topic, I noticed that cooperation between Kurdish and Jewish organizations in Germany had increased significantly in the past few years, with a surge of public events and lecture series intended to increase mutual understanding and support. I became increasingly interested in what explained this (re-)emergence of Kurdish-Jewish cooperation in Germany. As my summer research came to an end, it was clear that this topic would become a substantial part of my dissertation research on the Kurdish community in Germany.
While Prime Minister Netanyahu had strategic reasons for his support of the independence referendum, the Kurdish and Jewish people have a long history of mutual support. Their connection in the Middle East and the diaspora goes way beyond current geopolitics and the Kurdish independence referendum.
A black-and-white photograph showing a family of Kurdish Jews dressed for cold weather, wearing hats and scarves
A Kurdish-Jewish refugee family preparing to board buses to Israel (circa 1950-51). From the Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life, UC Berkeley.
When the Iraqi state was established in 1932, life became increasingly hard for Jews who lived there. Several members of the Jewish community died in the 1941 Nazi-inspired pogrom in Baghdad, and many Jews were eventually forced to leave for Israel in pursuit of a better life. Muslim Kurds helped them by smuggling them out of the country well into the 1970s. Many of the persecuted Jews of Iraq were themselves Kurdish.
Today, there are about 200,000 Kurdish Jews living in Israel. Although the reciprocated support of Kurdish and Jewish organizations in Germany is a newer development, Kurdish Studies scholar Dr. Ofra Bengio from the Moshe Dayan Center in Tel Aviv explains that the relationship between Jews and Kurds has deep historical roots. Muslim Kurdish tribal leaders repeatedly supported and protected members of the Jewish community in Iraq from other Muslim leaders, going back to the 16th century.
Tragedy leads to a re-emergence of ties in the diaspora
More recent years have seen a re-emergence of this historic relationship in the European and North American diasporas of the two communities. As I continued my research this summer and talked to representatives of Jewish and Kurdish organizations in Germany, both sides emphasized their shared experience of persecution as a leading cause of their increased support for each other. Most recently, the events of August 2014 in Sinjar in Iraq led to a repeated outpouring of solidarity and support in the diaspora and Middle East alike when thousands of Yazidis were were faced with genocide by ISIS.
“The events in Sinjar seemed too familiar,” a representative of a Jewish organization stated, referring to the events of August, 2014, when thousands of Yazidi men were massacred, and women taken into sexual slavery. “Our memory of genocide and our shared goal to educate people about past and present atrocities is what repeatedly brings us together with the Kurdish and Yazidi community.”
The importance of showing solidarity
The #Yazidis# are a mostly Kurdish-speaking religious minority in the Middle East. (It is important to note that some Yazidis consider themselves both an ethnic and religious group that is distinct from the Kurdish community.)
Yazidi#ISIS# survivors Nadia Murad and Lamiya Bashar, who received the 2016 Sakharov Prize from the European Union. From the European Union.
When ISIS attacked the Yazidis in 2014, they were forced to escape to the Sinjar Mountains. Whole families were killed and there was barely any support or media attention.
An old Kurdish proverb states that the Kurds have no friends but the mountains. Many Kurds in Germany felt a great deal of pain at that time and were again reminded of that saying.
As the crisis continued, Jewish organizations in Germany came out with public statements and organized events that aimed to raise awareness of the atrocities, expressing solidarity with the Kurdish and Yazidi communities. A representative of a Kurdish organization in Germany reflects: “We felt so helpless at the time. Experiencing such support and solidarity meant a lot to us.” A representative of another organization remarked, “Our history of persecution and suffering is not only at the basis of our understanding of each other but our solidarity with each other.”
Ever since then, Kurdish-Jewish cooperation in Germany has been flourishing and many Kurdish representatives expressed their gratitude to Jewish organizations for their mentorship and support in the past few years. One of them stated, “We actually do have some friends.”
I would like to thank the Stroum Center for enabling me to expand on my study of the re-emergence of Jewish-Kurdish cooperation in the German diaspora. The Opportunity Grant I received allowed me to learn about how two communities that have both experienced horrific atrocities have reconnected with each other in the diaspora. Despite the atrocities they have faced, they continue to work towards intercultural and interreligious understanding with an unparalleled optimism. Their stories of solidarity are an important reminder of what is possible during these tumultuous political times in the U.S. and Europe.
Portrait of Pinar smiling, wearing a black cardigan against a gray backgroundPinar Kara is a Ph.D. candidate at the Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies focusing on immigrant and civil society studies in Germany. She is currently conducting dissertation research in Berlin as a fellow of the Free University’s Berlin Program for Advanced German and European Studies.[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 194 mal angesehen
HashTag
Quellen
[1] Website | English | washington.edu 28-12-2018
Verlinkte Artikel: 6
Gruppe: Artikel
Artikel Sprache: English
Publication date: 28-12-2018 (6 Jahr)
Art der Veröffentlichung: Born-digital
Dialekt: Englisch
Inhaltskategorie: Artikel und Interviews
Technische Metadaten
Artikel Qualität: 95%
95%
Hinzugefügt von ( هەژار کامەلا ) am 07-01-2024
Dieser Artikel wurde überprüft und veröffentlicht von ( زریان سەرچناری ) auf 13-01-2024
Dieser Artikel wurde kürzlich von ( هەژار کامەلا ) am 12-01-2024 aktualisiert
URL
Dieser Artikel ist gemäss Kurdipedia noch nicht finalisiert
Dieser Artikel wurde bereits 194 mal angesehen
Verknüpfte Datei - Version
Typ Version Ersteller
Foto-Datei 1.0.181 KB 12-01-2024 هەژار کامەلاهـ.ک.
Kurdipedia ist die grösste Quelle für Informationen
Biografie
Ismail Küpeli
Biografie
Cahit Sıtkı Tarancı
Biografie
Dilan Yeşilgöz
Biografie
Leyla Îmret
Bibliothek
FREIHEIT FÜR DIE KURDISCHEN POLITISCHEN GEFANGENEN IN DEUTSCHLAND
Biografie
Mely Kiyak
Bibliothek
Themen Aus Der Kurdischen Wortbildung
Bibliothek
Die neue Kurdenfrage: Irakisch-Kurdistan und seine Nachbarn
Biografie
Kenan Engin
Biografie
Halil Öztoprak (Xalil Alxas)
Biografie
Sebahat Tuncel
Bibliothek
Der Kurdische Fürst Mîr Muhammad-î Rawandizî
Biografie
Saya Ahmad
Bibliothek
Der Iran in der internationalen Politik 1939-1948
Biografie
Fevzi Özmen
Artikel
KNK-Vorsitzende rufen zur Einheit auf
Artikel
Die Ezid:innen und das Ezidentum
Artikel
Dutzende Prominente fordern CPT-Besuch bei Öcalan
Artikel
„Die irakische Regierung muss Haltung gegenüber den Angriffen beziehen“
Artikel
Monika Morres: Mutig und beharrlich weitermachen

Actual
Biografie
Said Nursi
19-01-2022
هەژار کامەلا
Said Nursi
Artikel
Gökay Akbulut zu Solidaritätsbesuch in Amed
30-07-2022
سارا ک
Gökay Akbulut zu Solidaritätsbesuch in Amed
Bibliothek
Konflikte mit der kurdischen Sprache in der Türkei
11-06-2023
هەژار کامەلا
Konflikte mit der kurdischen Sprache in der Türkei
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
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
Biografie
Müslüm Aslan
17-03-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Bibliothek
saiten Her biji Azadi!
17-03-2024
هەژار کامەلا
Statistik
Artikel  518,985
Bilder  106,396
PDF-Buch 19,240
verwandte Ordner 96,836
Video 1,376
Kurdipedia ist die grösste Quelle für Informationen
Biografie
Ismail Küpeli
Biografie
Cahit Sıtkı Tarancı
Biografie
Dilan Yeşilgöz
Biografie
Leyla Îmret
Bibliothek
FREIHEIT FÜR DIE KURDISCHEN POLITISCHEN GEFANGENEN IN DEUTSCHLAND
Biografie
Mely Kiyak
Bibliothek
Themen Aus Der Kurdischen Wortbildung
Bibliothek
Die neue Kurdenfrage: Irakisch-Kurdistan und seine Nachbarn
Biografie
Kenan Engin
Biografie
Halil Öztoprak (Xalil Alxas)
Biografie
Sebahat Tuncel
Bibliothek
Der Kurdische Fürst Mîr Muhammad-î Rawandizî
Biografie
Saya Ahmad
Bibliothek
Der Iran in der internationalen Politik 1939-1948
Biografie
Fevzi Özmen
Artikel
KNK-Vorsitzende rufen zur Einheit auf
Artikel
Die Ezid:innen und das Ezidentum
Artikel
Dutzende Prominente fordern CPT-Besuch bei Öcalan
Artikel
„Die irakische Regierung muss Haltung gegenüber den Angriffen beziehen“
Artikel
Monika Morres: Mutig und beharrlich weitermachen

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

| Generationszeit Seite: 0.344 Sekunde(n)!