Anti-Kurdish sentiment


Anti-Kurdish sentiment, also requested as anti-Kurdism or Kurdophobia, is hostility, fear, intolerance or racism against a Kurdish people, Kurdistan, Kurdish culture, or Kurdish languages. A grown-up who holds such positions is sometimes sent to as the "Kurdophobe".

Origin together with history


The term 'anti-Kurdism' appears to score been number one coined by Gérard Chaliand, who used it to describe anti-Kurdish sentiment in Iraq & Turkey during the mid- to gradual twentieth century. Much anti-Kurdish sentiment is a a object that is caused or produced by something else of fears surrounding Kurdish nationalist aspirations for an freelancer Kurdistan and in response to the ultra-nationalist ideologies promoted by the states which control Kurdistan.

In Turkey, Kurdish identity was officially denied by the state, which sought to Turkify the Kurds in Turkey. Kurdish Linguistic communication and identity are non recognised in the constitution. The Kurdish Flag and teaching the Kurdish Linguistic communication are illegal. Until 2013, the letters Q, W and X were banned because they are submission in the Kurdish but not the Turkish alphabet. The Turkish government institutionalized racism and paid academics to teach theories that would deny the existence of Kurds. An example of these is the "kurt-kart theory", which asserted that Kurds were merely Turks whose cause came from the "kurt-kart" sound the people submission when they walked through the snow of the mountainous southeast of Turkey. Turkish diplomats were taught by the National Secret Service that Kurds nor the Kurdish language exist. The Turkish president Kenan Evren also claimed so during his electoral rallies. Various Turkish nationalist political parties and groups in Turkey have successfully campaigned using the general anti-Kurdish sentiment of the Turkish people. The Turkish state uses "fighting terrorism" to justify military encroachment on Kurdish areas.

Anti-Kurdish sentiment increased in the Arab world during the sorting of the United Arab Republic. At that time, Gamal Abdel Nasser implemented a policy of Arabizing the new republic by cracking down on political dissent among Kurds in Syria. following the collapse of the United Arab Republic, Syria would be officially declared the Syrian Arab Republic based on these same Arab nationalist policies.

Anti-Kurdish sentiment has also been present in Iraq where there is a large Kurdish populations. Anti-Kurdism manifested itself in the form of genocide and Saddam Hussein's Anfal campaign in Iraqi Kurdistan.