Kurds' Nationalist Hopes Remain Strong
While Kurdish leaders gain power in Baghdad, many Kurds
continue to demand independence.
By Frman Abdulrahman in Sulaimaniyah Jan 19, 2006
Every morning when the school day begins in northern
Iraq, students sing an anthem and raise green, red and white flags with bright
suns in the centre. Both represent Kurdish heritage, and neither have any
connection to Iraq.
"No one should say the Kurds are dead," students chant.
"Kurds are alive. They are alive, and our flag will never fall."
It has been nearly 100 years since British and French
colonial forces carved up the Middle East and split the Kurdish territories
among several countries. Despite the fact that Iraqi Kurds struggled for decades
and still do not have their own country, nationalism - and a sense of Kurdish
pride - is stronger than ever in Iraqi Kurdistan.
The ministry of education has ordered schools to stop
raising Kurdish flags and singing the anthem, but headmasters don't abide by the
directives, and the government doesn't push the issue.
"The ritual of raising Kurdistan's flag is a way to
expressing our love and respect to our nation and our own flag," said Ibrahim
Maruf, a primary school headmaster in Sulaimaniyah.
As post-Baathist Iraq is formed, Kurds who were
oppressed by the regime are fighting for as much autonomy as they can get from
Baghdad. And Baghdad does not push Kurdish authorities on such technicalities as
naming border points with Turkey "Iraqi Kurdistan" as long as the Kurds don't
push for an independent nation.
But for many Kurds, that is the ultimate goal. Years of
oppression by Saddam Hussein's regime have led to a perpetual mistrust of Arabs.
The younger generation, which grew up under a
semi-autonomous Kurdish government following a successful rebellion against
Saddam in 1991, has even less connection to the Iraqi state than older Kurdish
Iraqis. Many comprehend but do not speak Arabic and have never travelled to Arab
areas in Iraq.
The only way to fully liberate Kurdistan is by declaring
independence, said Gizing Ahmed, a 24-year-old teacher.
"The current agendas of the Iraqi Arab political powers
are not much different than the ideology of the Baath Party," he argued.
The leading Kurdish political parties, the Patriotic
Union of Kurdistan and the Kurdish Democratic Party, have endorsed a unified
Iraq by working as key players in drafting the national constitution, which
voters approved in October. The constitution was controversial, particularly
among young Kurds, because it does not allow for Kurdish self-determination.
An unofficial vote held by an organisation called the
Referendum Movement during the January 2005 parliamentary elections also found
98 per cent of those who cast ballots wanted an independent Kurdish state.
"It has become clear to the all parties what the Kurdish
people want," said Fatah Zakhoyee, a former culture minister with the Kurdistan
regional government's Sulaimaniyah administration and an advocate of an
independent Kurdistan.
Strong nationalist sentiments remain even though Kurds
are seen less as victims and more as key political players in Baghdad. Jalal
Talabani, a popular Kurdish leader and head of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan,
is widely expected to be appointed to a second term as president of Iraq. But
public confidence in Baghdad and local administrations is weak.
"People want to express their desire for an independent
and separate Kurdistan," said Dyar Ibrahim, who has a stationary shop in
Sulaimaniyah and reported that demand for Kurdish flags and maps are on the
rise, particularly among young people. "They dream of this by raising the maps
and flags of Kurdistan."
"People have little hope in political change," he
maintained, "and they want to be independent from Iraq."
Frman Abdulrahman is an IWPR trainee journalist in
Sulaimaniyah.