Saturday, April 07, 2012

March program:United Nation Association of US & UN Foundation

United Nation Association of US & UN Foundation

March program:
San Fernando Valley Chapter of UNA-USA hosts the Southern California Division Meeting was held on Saturday, March 24, 2012 - 11:00 AM. The program was include a presentation by Karin Mak which chronicles the struggle for justice by women factory workers in China who have been poisoned by cadmium while manufacturing nickel-cadmium batteries. all inclusive Ms. Mak is a documentary filmmaker, who will present her award-winning film, "Red Dust,"
THE EVENT WAS HELD AT:
Mandarin King Restaurant which is located in Northridge, CA

unausa-amirsharifi.jpg













































Thursday, April 05, 2012

First Kurdish display in Library of Congress

us-libraryofcongress.jpg

The Middle Eastern and African Division of The Library of Congress presents
April 5th, 2012
A Nowruz Display
Welcome to the African and Middle Eastern Division and to its Reading Room where Nowruz and the arrival o

f Spring is being celebrated this year with a special display of textiles and material culture from Kurdish lands, Iran and Central Asia. The items on display have become part of the Near East Section's collections over the years and all the Kurdish clothes and textiles are a gift from the Fallah - Moradian family i
n California.

The Near East Section's staff has arranged this display withthe help of the Interpretive Programs Office at the Library.

Nowruz is an age old tradition celebrated in lands spreading from western China to the Cau
casus, Anatolia and beyond. It's a tradition based on celebrating the rebirth of nature and honoring the arrival of spring each year as earth's new cycle of life begins. Starting in ancient Zoroastrian Persia, the tradition of celebrating Nowruz continues to this day to be the most important annual festival. Symbols of Spring are etched with rich color in floral and animal motifs seen in the material culture of the regions that once was in the realm of the Persian Empire.


The display today vividly showcases in textiles, ceramics, clothing and
material culture the effective use of the flower, the symbol of spring and the longing for Spring's arrival.

The Near East Section retains custody of materials in over 40 languages of the area known as the Near East, including the countries and peoples of the Caucasus and Central Asia. The main linguistic groupings- Arabic,Armenian, Central Asian, Georgian, Iranian languages, Persian, Turkic languages, Turkish and Armeno Turkish -form the basis of a vital research center on all things Middle Eastern. Its specialists are available for br
iefings, for rapid and long-term reference and research assistance, and for detailed bibliographic and subject analyses.

kurd_rug2.jpgI hope you will enjoy this year's display and will return to our reading room to use

If you wish to know more about these programs



this photo is in Library of congress

and the activities of the section and the Division you can access our home page at :its many resources for your own research and enjoyment. The African and Middle Eastern Division holds many noon programs and lectures in the Reading Room which are open and free to the public.
www.loc.gov/rr/amed
Mary-Jane Deeb, Chief African and Middle Eastern Division
The African and Middle Eastern Division
The Library of Congress
The Thomas Jefferson Building Room LJ220, Washington DC, 20540


For Information contact: Hirad Dinavari (202) 707-4518 or hdin@loc.gov
kurd_boy.jpg
kurd_man_1.jpg
kurd_woman_dress.jpg kurd_woman_-shoeshat.jpg

Friday, March 23, 2012

Radio KPFK Interview Soraya Fallah on Mothers of Laleh in Iran


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwJJlY6jeo0












THURSDAY، MARCH 22، 2012


http://archive.kpfk.org/mp3/kpfk_120321_143030rintifada.MP3

RADIO INTIFADA
Intifada=shaking off - oppression/silence
Voices from Kolkata to Casablanca
Voices of Struggle, Voices for Change
Month Of International Women’s Program
Iran's Mourning Mothers
With Soraya Falah
Wednesday, March 21, 2012, 2:30-3:00pm
KPFK/Pacifica Radio 90.7 fm, Los Angeles
Streaming at http://kpfk.org and available on audio archive for 90 days

The Mourning Mothers of LALEH

A report on an Iranian women's movement called the Mourning Mothers these Mothers whose sons or daughters were killed or jailed by the Iranian regime during and after the protests against the disputed Presidential elections of 2009 have formed a group that has been gathering in Parks around the world as well as Iran demanding justice and a stop to the continued violence, arrests, death and disappearances of their children. The Iranian regime continues to brutally attack the protesters and imprison them.

Guest: Soraya Falah Women's and Human Rights activist


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mourning_Mothers


Produced and Hosted by Nyma Ardalan
of the
SWANA Collective, KPFK/Pacifica
(South and West Asia and North Africa)

Tuesday, February 07, 2012

Kurdish Community of Southern California participated in Chinese Vietnamese's festival

On Feb 5th 2012 Kurdish community of Southern California participated in Chinese-Vietnamese's new year festival.the program held at Whittier Narrows Park in Los Angeles.
Delegation was included of women and men who are acitive in the community to introduce culture, cloth, dance,and food. The group's name is :Kurdistan's Dance group and during year participates in many festivals such as:Mehregan Festival,Global village, and many more.the following are members of the group.

http://www.latetfest.net/







Program LA Tet Festival 2012

LA Tet Festival
February 04 & 05, 2012
at Whittier Narrows Park
(Rosemead Blvd. & Freeway 60, South El Monte)
(714) 270-4515
Fax: (714) 539-1267
Read more..

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Republic of Kurdistan






The Republic of Mahabad (Kurdish: Komarî Mehabad/کۆماری مەھاباد, Persian: جمهوری مهاباد ), officially known as Republic of Kurdistan and established in Iranian Kurdistan, was a short-lived, Kurdish government that sought Kurdish autonomy within the limits of the Iranian state.[1] The capital was the city of Mahabad in northwestern Iran. The state itself encompassed a small territory, including Mahabad and the market towns of Piranshahr, Sardasht, Bukan, Naqada and Ushnaviya.[2] The republic's founding and demise was a part of the Iran crisis during the opening stages of the Cold War.

Contents

[hide]

[edit] Background

Iran was invaded by the Allies in late August 1941, with the Soviets controlling the north. In the absence of a central government, the Soviets attempted to attach northwestern Iran to the Soviet Union, and promoted Kurdish nationalism. From these factors resulted a Kurdish manifesto that above all sought autonomy and self-government for the Kurdish people in Iran within the limits of the Iranian state.[1]

In the town of Mahabad, inhabited mostly by Kurds, a committee of middle-class people supported by tribal chiefs, took over the local administration. A political party called the Society for the Revival of Kurdistan (Komeley Jiyanewey Kurdistan or JK) was formed. Qazi Muhammad, head of a family of religious jurists, was elected as chairman of the party. Although the republic was not formally declared until December 1945, Qazi's committee administered the area with commendable efficiency and success for over five years until the fall of the republic.[3]

[edit] Soviet attitude

The Soviets were generally ambivalent towards the Kurdish administration. They did not maintain a garrison near Mahabad and also did not have any civil agent of sufficient standing to exercise any great influence. They encouraged Qazi's administration by practical benevolent operations such as providing motor transport, keeping out the Iranian army, and buying the whole of the tobacco crop. On the other hand, the Soviets initially did not like Kurdish administration's refusal to be absorbed into the larger Democratic Republic of (Persian) Azerbaijan, and discouraged the formation of an independent Kurdish state.[3] The Soviets allowed for safe passage of Mustafa Barzani and his followers into the Soviet Union following the fall of Mahabad.

[edit] Foundation

In September 1945, Qazi Muhammad and other Kurdish leaders visited Tabriz to seek the backing of a Soviet consul to found a new republic, and were then redirected to Baku, Azerbaijan SSR. There, they learned that the Democratic Party of Azerbaijan was planning to take control of Iranian Azerbaijan. On December 10, the Democratic Party took control of East Azerbaijan Province from Iranian government forces, forming the Azerbaijan People's Government. Qazi Muhammad decided to do likewise, and on December 15, the Kurdish People's Government was founded in Mahabad. On January 22, 1946, Qazi Muhammad announced the formation of the Republic of Mahabad. Some of the aims mentioned in the manifesto include:[2]

  1. Autonomy for the Iranian Kurds within the Iranian state.
  2. The use of Kurdish as the medium of education and administration.
  3. The election of a provincial council for Kurdistan to supervise state and social matters.
  4. All state officials to be of local origin.
  5. Unity and fraternity with the Azerbaijani people.
  6. The establishment of a single law for both peasants and notables.

[edit] End

On March 26, 1946, due to pressure from Western powers including the United States, the Soviets promised the Iranian government that they would pull out of northwestern Iran. In June, Iran reasserted its control over Iranian Azerbaijan. This move isolated the Republic of Mahabad, eventually leading to its destruction.

The Republic of Mahabad depended on Soviet support. Archibald Bulloch Roosevelt, Jr., grandson of the former U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt, wrote in "The Kurdish Republic of Mahabad" that a main problem of the People's Republic of Mahabad was that the Kurds needed the assistance of the USSR; only with the Red Army did they have a chance. However, this close relationship to the USSR alienated the republic from most Western powers, causing them to side with Iran. Qazi Muhammad did not deny that his republic was funded and supplied by the Soviets, but did deny that the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP) was a communist party. He claimed that this was a lie fabricated by the Iranian military authorities, and added that his ideals were very different from the Soviets'.[4]

Qazi Muhammad's internal support eventually declined, especially among the Kurdish tribes who had supported him initially. Their crops and supplies were dwindling, and their way of life was becoming hard as a result of the isolation. Economic aid and military assistance from the Soviet Union was now gone, and the tribes saw no reason to support Qazi Muhammad. Many tribes began to leave. The townspeople and the tribes had a large divide between them, and their alliance for Mahabad was crumbling. As previously stated, the tribes and their leaders had only supported Qazi Muhammad for his economic and military aid from the Soviet Union. Once that was gone, many did not see the purpose in staying with Qazi Muhammad. Other tribes resented the Barzanis, since they did not like sharing their already dwindling resources with them. Some Kurds deserted Mahabad, including one of Mahabad's own marshals, Amir Khan. Mahabad was economically bankrupt, and it would have been nearly impossible for Mahabad to have been economically sound without harmony with Iran[5]

Those who stayed began to resent the Barzani Kurds, as they had to share their resources with them.

On December 5, 1946, the war council told Qazi Muhammad that they would fight and resist the Iranian army if they tried to enter the region. The lack of Kurdish tribal support however made Qazi Muhammad only see a massacre upon the Kurdish civilians performed by the Iranian army rather than Kurdish rebellion. This forced him to avoid war at all cost, even if it meant sacrificing himself for his people, which eventually happened and lead to his execution.

On December 15, 1946, Iranian forces entered and secured Mahabad. Once there, they closed down the Kurdish printing press, banned the teaching of Kurdish language, and burned all Kurdish books that they could find. Finally, on March 31, 1947, Qazi Muhammad was hanged in Mahabad on counts of treason.[6]

[edit] Aftermath

Mustafa Barzani, with his soldiers from Iraqi Kurdistan, had formed the backbone of the Republic's forces. After the fall of the republic, most of the soldiers and four officers from the Iraqi army decided to return to Iraq. The officers were condemned to death upon returning to Iraq and are today honored along with Qazi as heroes martyred for Kurdistan. Several hundred of the soldiers chose to stay with Barzani. They defeated all efforts of the Iranian army to intercept them in a five-week march and made their way to Soviet Azerbaijan.[3]

In October 1958, Mustafa Barzani returned to Northern Iraq, beginning a series of struggles to fight for an autonomous Kurdish region under the KDP, carrying the same flag that was used in Mahabad.

Massoud Barzani, the President of Iraqi Kurdistan as of 2012, is the son of Mustafa Barzani. He was born in Mahabad when his father was chief of the military of the Mahabad forces in Iranian Kurdistan.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Allain, Jean (2004). International Law in the Middle East: Closer to Power than Justice. Ashgate Publishing Ltd. pp. 27–28.
  2. ^ a b McDowall, David (2004). ["http://books.google.com/books?id=1tarN6gfxX8C&dq=%22on+22+January+1946%22&lr=&as_brr=3&source=gbs_navlinks_s" A modern history of the Kurds]. "I.B. Tauris". pp. 244–245. ISBN 1850434166.
  3. ^ a b c C. J. Edmonds, Kurdish Nationalism, Journal of Contemporary History, pp.87-107, 1971, p.96
  4. ^ Meiselas, Susan (1997). Kurdistan In the Shadow of History. Random House. pp. 182. ISBN 0-679-42389-3.
  5. ^ McDowall, David, A Modern History of the Kurds, I. B. Tauris, 1996 (Current revision at May 14, 2004). ISBN 1-86064-185-7. pp.244-245
  6. ^ McDowall, 2004. pp.243-246

[edit] References

  • "The Republic of Kurdistan: Fifty Years Later," International Journal of Kurdish Studies, 11, no. 1 & 2, (1997).
  • The Kurdish Republic of 1946, William Eagleton, Jr. (London: Oxford University Press, 1963)
  • Moradi Golmorad: Ein Jahr autonome Regierung in Kurdistan, die Mahabad-Republik 1946 - 1947 in: Geschichte der kurdischen Aufstandsbewegungen von der arabisch-islamischen Invasion bis zur Mahabad-Republik, Bremen 1992, ISBN 3-929089-00-9 (German)
  • M. Khoubrouy-Pak: Une république éphémère au Kurdistan, Paris u.a. 2002, ISBN 2-7475-2803-0 (French)
  • Archie Roosevelt, Jr., "The Kurdish Republic of Mahabad", Middle East Journal, no. 1 (July 1947), pp. 247–69.
  • William Linn Westermann, "Kurdish Independence and Russian Expansion", Foreign Affairs, Vol. 24, 1945–1946, pp. 675–686
  • Kurdish Republic of Mahabad, Encyclopedia of the Orient. [1]
  • The Kurds: People without a country, Encyclopædia Britannica [2]
  • Meiselas, Susan Kurdistan In the Shadow of History, Random House, 1997. ISBN 0-679-42389-3
  • McDowall, David A Modern History of the Kurds, I. B. Tauris, 1996 (Current revision at May 14, 2004). ISBN 1-86064-185-7
  • Yassin, Burhaneddin A., "A History of the Republic of Kurdistan", The International Journal of Kurdish Studies, 11, nos. 1-2 (1997): 115-240.
  • Yassin, Burhaneddin A., Vision or Reality: The Kurds in the Policy of the Great Powers, 1941-1947, Lund University Press, Lund/Sweden, 1995. ISSN 0519-9700, ISBN 91-7966-315-X Lund University Press. ou ISBN 0-86238-389-7 Chartwell-Bratt Ltd.
  • Масуд Барзани. Мустафа Барзани и курдское освободительное движение. Пер. А. Ш. Хаурами, СПб, Наука, 2005. (Russian)
  • М. С. Лазарев. Курдистан и курдский вопрос (1923—1945). М., Издательская фирма «Восточная литература» РАН, 2005. (Russian)
  • Жигалина О. И. Национальное движение курдов в Иране (1918—1947). М., «Наука», 1988. (Russian)
  • История Курдистана. Под ред. М. С. Лазарева, Ш. Х. Мгои. М., 1999. (Russian)
  • Муртаза Зарбахт. От Иракского Курдистана до другого берега реки Аракс. Пер. с курдск. А. Ш. Хаурами. М.-СПб, 2003. (Russian)

[edit] External links

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Happy NewYear

Wishing you a Happy Holiday, New Year,Christmas, Hanuka ...
پیشاپیش سال نو میلادی 2012 بر شما مبارک باد
سه ر سالی تازه ی زایینی پیروز بیت
هه مو کاتیکتان شاد
به هیوای ئه وین و یه کسانی و عه دل و مروفایه تی
برایتان عشق و عدالت و برابری آرزو می کنیم

Wishing peace,Love,Justice, and Equality

for all of Humanity

Sunday, November 20, 2011

VOK Radio Interview with Dr.Elise Auerback

VOK Radio Interview with Dr.Elise Auerback, Iran Country Specialist, At Amnesty International USA during Amnesty International annual Regional Conference in LosAngeles ,California, November 2011



مصاحبه با خانم دكتر اليس آوربك، متخصص در امور ايران سازمان
عفو بين الملل در خصوص گزارش مقدماتى آقاى احمد شهيد در مورد نقض حقوق بشر در ايران، انتقاداتى كه به اين گزارش وارد است و همچنين نظر سازمان عفو بين الملل در مواردى از نقض حقوق بشر كه بايد در اين گزارش آورده شود.( به زبان انگليسى)وتو ويژ له گه ل خاتو ئه ليس ئاوربك، به رپرسى به شى وه لاتى ئيران له ريكخراوى لي بوردنى نيو نه ته وي دا سه بارت به ريپورتى ئاغاى ئه حمه د شه هيد سه بارت به پي شه ل كردنى مافى مروڤ له ئيراندا، بيرو راى ئه م ريكخراوه له سه ر ريپورته كه و رخنه يك كه به م ريپورته له لايه نى گه لانى ئيران و ريكخراوه جيوازه كان هاتوه ته ئاراوه ( به زمانى ئنگلیزی