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Simko Shikak

Simko Shikak[a] born 1887, was a Kurdish chieftain of the Shekak tribe. He was born into a prominent Kurdish feudal family based in Chihriq castle located near the Baranduz river in the Urmia region of northwestern Iran. By 1920, parts of Iranian Azerbaijan located west of Lake Urmia were under his control.[1] He led Kurdish farmers into battle and defeated the Iranian army on several occasions.[2] The Iranian government had him assassinated in 1930.[3] Simko took part in the massacre of the Assyrians of Khoy[4] and instigated the massacre of 1,000 Assyrians in Salmas.[5]


Simko Shikak
سمکۆی شکاک
Simkoyê Şikak
Born
Ismail Agha Shikak

1887 (1887)
Died(1930-06-30)June 30, 1930 (aged 42/43)
Cause of deathSurprise ambush and assassination by Imperial Iranian Armed Forces
NationalityKurdish
CitizenshipQajar Iran, and later Pahlavi Iran
Known forSimko Shikak revolt (1918–1922)
TitleChieftain of the Shekak tribe, and General of the Shekak forces.
PredecessorCewer Agha
SuccessorAbolished title
FamilyShekak

Family background Edit

His family was one of the most prominent and politically active Kurdish families throughout Qajar reign from the late 18th to early 20th century. Sadiq Khan Shikak was one of the generals and governors in the Agha Muhammad Khan's early Qajar state and was commanding a force of 10,000 soldiers. However, he was soon fell out of favor and Qajar monarch attempted to murder him. Sadiq Khan has been accused of taking part in the assassination of Qajar king in the town of Shusha in 1797. Among other prominent members of the family are Ismail Khan The Great and his son Ali Khan, Muhammad Pasha son of Ali Khan, Cewer (Ja'afar) Agha brother of Simko. Many members of the family were murdered by the Qajar state such as Cewer (Dja'far) Agha who was killed at Tabriz by the order of governor general.[6]

Political life Edit

After the murder of Cewer Agha, Simko became the head of Shikak forces. In May 1914, he attended a meeting with Abdürrezzak Bedir Khan who at the time was a Kurdish politician supported by the Russians.[7] The Iranian government was trying to assassinate him like the other members of his family. In 1919, Mukarram ul-Molk, the governor of Azerbaijan devised a plot to kill Simko by sending him a present with a bomb hidden in it.[8]

Simko was also in contact with Kurdish revolutionaries such as Seyyed Taha Gilani (grandson of Sheikh Ubeydullah who had revolted against Iran in the 1880s). Seyyed Taha was a Kurdish nationalist who was conducting propaganda among the Iranian Kurds for the union of Iranian Kurdistan and Turkish Kurdistan in an independent state.[9]

Jointly with the Ottoman Army he organized the massacre in Haftevan in February 1915 during which 700–800 Armenians and Assyrians were murdered.[10]

Simko Shikak revolt Edit

In March 1918, under the pretext of meeting for the purpose of cooperation, Simko arranged the assassination of the Assyrian Church of the East patriarch, Mar Shimun XIX Benyamin, ambushing him and his 150 guards, as Mar Shimun was entering his carriage. The patriarchal ring was stolen at this time and the body of the patriarch was only recovered hours later, according to the eye-witness account of Daniel d-Malik Ismael.[11][12][13]

On March 16 after the murder of Mar Shimun, Assyrians under the command of Malik Khoshaba and Petros Elia of Baz attacked Simkos' fortress in Charah in which Simko was decisively defeated.[14] The fortress of Charah had never been conquered previously despite attempts by Iranians and the river was red from the blood of dead Shikak fighters. [15] Simko was panic stricken during the battle and managed to escape, abandoning his men.[16]

By summer 1918, Simko had established his authority in the region west of Lake Urmia.[17]

At this time, government in Tehran tried to reach an agreement with Simko on the basis of limited Kurdish autonomy.[18] Simko had organized a strong Kurdish army which was much stronger than Iranian government forces. Since the central government could not control his activities, he continued to expand the area under his control and by 1922, cities of Baneh and Sardasht were under his administration.[19]

In the battle of sari Taj in 1922, Simko's forces could not resist the Iranian Army's onslaught in the region of Salmas and were finally defeated and the castle of Chari was occupied. The strength of the Iranian Army force dispatched against Simko was 10,000 soldiers.[20]

Legacy Edit

Simko's revolts are seen by some as an attempt by a powerful tribal chief to establish his personal authority over the central government throughout the region.[21] Although elements of Kurdish nationalism were present in this movement, historians agree these were hardly articulate enough to justify a claim that recognition of Kurdish identity was a major issue in Simko's movement.[21] It lacked any kind of administrative organization and Simko was primarily interested in plunder.[21] Government forces and non-Kurds were not the only ones to suffer in the attacks, the Kurdish population was also robbed and assaulted.[21] Simko's men do not appear to have felt any sense of unity or solidarity with fellow Kurds.[21] In the words of Kurdologist and Iranologist Garnik Asatrian:[22]

In the recent period of Kurdish history, a crucial point is defining the nature of the rebellions from the end of the 19th and up to the 20th century―from Sheikh Ubaydullah’s revolt to Simko’s (Simitko) mutiny. The overall labelling of these events as manifestations of the Kurdish national-liberation struggle against Turkish or Iranian suppressors is an essential element of the Kurdish identity-makers’ ideology. (...) With the Kurdish conglomeration, as I said above, far from being a homogeneous entity―either ethnically, culturally, or linguistically (...)―the basic component of the national doctrine of the Kurdish identity-makers has always remained the idea of the unified image of one nation, endowed respectively with one language and one culture. The chimerical idea of this imagined unity has become further the fundament of Kurdish identity-making, resulting in the creation of fantastic ethnic and cultural prehistory, perversion of historical facts, falsification of linguistic data, etc.

On the other hand, Reza Shah's military victory over Simko and Turkic tribal leaders initiated a repressive era toward non-Persian minorities.[21] In a nationalistic perspective, Simko's revolt is described as an attempt to build a Kurdish tribal alliance in support of independence.[23] According to Kamal Soleimani, Simko Shikak can be located "within the confines of Kurdish ethno-nationalism".[24] According to the political scientist Hamid Ahmadi:[25]

Though Reza Shah’s armed confrontation with tribal leaders in different parts of Iran was interpreted as an example of ethnic conflict and ethnic suppression by the Iranian state, the fact is that it was more a conflict between the modern state and traditional socio-political structure of pre-modern era and had less to do with the question of ethnicity and ethnic conflict. While some Marxist political activists (see Nābdel 1977) and ethno-nationalist intellectuals of different Iranian groups (Ghassemlou 1965; Hosseinbor 1984; Asgharzadeh 2007) have introduced this confrontation as a result of Reza Shah’s ethnocentric policies, no valid documents have been presented to prove this argument. Recent documentary studies (Borzū’ī 1999; Zand-Moqaddam 1992; Jalālī 2001) convincingly show that Reza Shah’s confrontation with Baluch Dust Mohammad Khan, Kurdish Simko and Arab Sheikh Khaz‘al have merely been the manifestation of state-tribe antagonism and nothing else. (...) While the Kurdish ethno-nationalist authors and commentators have tried to construct the image of a nationalist hero out of him, the local Kurdish primary sources reflect just the opposite, showing he was widely hated by many ordinary and peasant Kurds who suffered his brutal suppression of Kurdish settlements and villages.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Kurdish: سمکۆی شکاک, romanized: Simkoyê Şikak. Birth name: Ismail Agha Shikak.
  1. ^ C. Dahlman, "The Political Geography of Kurdistan", Eurasian Geography and Economics, pp. 271-299, No.4, Vol.43, 2002. p.283
  2. ^ B. O'Leary, J. McGarry,The Future of Kurdistan in Iraq, University of Pennsylvania Press, 355 pp., ISBN 0-8122-1973-2 (see p.7)
  3. ^ M. M. Gunter, The Kurdish Question in Perspective, World Affairs, pp. 197-205, No.4, Vol. 166, Spring 2004. (see p.203)
  4. ^ John Joseph, "The Modern Assyrians of the Middle East: Encounters With Western Christian Missions, Archaeologists, and Colonial Power (Studies in Christian Mission) (Hardcover)", BRILL, 2000. p. 147: "Simko and his men had escaped to Khoi where they took part in the massacre of Assyrians
  5. ^ Maria T.O’Shea (2004). Trapped Between the Map and Reality: Geography and Perceptions of Kurdistan. New York. p. 100. ISBN 0-415-94766-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^ M. Th. Houtsma, E. van Donzel, E. J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913-1936, 1993, ISBN 90-04-08265-4, p. 290
  7. ^ Kieser, Hans-Lukas; Anderson, Margaret Lavinia; Bayraktar, Seyhan; Schmutz, Thomas (2019-07-11). The End of the Ottomans: The Genocide of 1915 and the Politics of Turkish Nationalism. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-78831-241-7.
  8. ^ Handren, Dilan (2009-02-02). "The Rebellion of Simko Agha". Kurdmania (in German). Retrieved 2009-02-23.
  9. ^ F. Kashani-Sabet,Frontier Fictions: Shaping the Iranian Nation, 1804-1946, 328 pp., I.B. Tauris, 1999, ISBN 1-85043-270-8 p. 153.
  10. ^ Gaunt, David (2006). Massacres, Resistance, Protectors: Muslim-Christian Relations in Eastern Anatolia During World War I. Gorgias Press. pp. 81, 83–84. ISBN 978-1-59333-301-0.
  11. ^ Houtsma, M. Th.; van Donzel, E. (1993). E. J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936. p. 118. ISBN 90-04-08265-4.
  12. ^ O'Shea, Maria T. (2004). Trapped Between the Map and Reality: Geography and Perceptions of Kurdistan. New York: Routledge. p. 100. ISBN 0415947669. Simko later arranged the assassination of Mar Shamon, the Assyrian patriarch in March 1918, under the pretext of a meeting to discuss cooperation.
  13. ^ Nisan, Mordechai (2002). Minorities in the Middle East: A History of Struggle and Self-Expression (2nd ed.). Jefferson, NC: McFarland. p. 187. ISBN 0786413751. Simko, their leader in Iran, had invited Mar Shimon for conference in Kuhnehshahr, west of Salmas, kissed him—and then treacherously murdered the Nestorian patriarch and his men
  14. ^ Ismael, Yaqou D'Malik (2020-11-13). Assyrians and Two World Wars: Assyrians from 1914 to 1945. Ramon Michael. p. 152.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  15. ^ Ismael, Yaqou D'Malik (2020-11-13). Assyrians and Two World Wars: Assyrians from 1914 to 1945. Ramon Michael. p. 152.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  16. ^ Ismael, Yaqou D'Malik (2020-11-13). Assyrians and Two World Wars: Assyrians from 1914 to 1945. Ramon Michael. pp. 151–152.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  17. ^ W. G. Elphinston, The Kurdish Question, International Affairs, Vol.22, No.1, pp. 91-103, 1946. p. 97
  18. ^ The Kurds in Iran 2007-09-29 at the Wayback Machine, David McDowall, 1991.
  19. ^ F. Koohi-Kamali, "Nationalism in Iranian Kurdistan" in The Kurds: A Contemporary Overview, ed. P.G. Kreyenbroek, and S. Sperl, 252 pp., Routledge, 1992, ISBN 0-415-07265-4 pp. 175, 176
  20. ^ S. Cronin, "Riza Shah and the disintegration of Bakhtiyari power in Iran, 1921-1934", Iranian Studies, Vol. 33, No. 3-4, pp. 349-376, Summer-Fall 2000 p. 353
  21. ^ a b c d e f See:
    * Entessar, Nader (2010). Kurdish Politics in the Middle East. Lanham: Lexington Books. p. 17. ISBN 9780739140390. OCLC 430736528.
    * Kreyenbroek, Philip G.; Sperl, Stefan (1992). The Kurds: A Contemporary Overview. London; New York: Routledge. pp. 138–139. ISBN 9780415072656. OCLC 24247652.
  22. ^ Asatrian, Garnik (2009). "Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds". Iran and the Caucasus. 13 (1): 65–66. doi:10.1163/160984909X12476379007846.
  23. ^ Smith, B. (2009). "Land and Rebellion: Kurdish Separatism in Comparative Perspective" (PDF). Working Paper.
  24. ^ Soleimani, Kamal (June 2017). "The Kurdish image in statist historiography: the case of Simko". Middle Eastern Studies. 53 (6): 950. doi:10.1080/00263206.2017.1341409. S2CID 148644922.
  25. ^ Ahmadi, Hamid (2013). "Political Elites and the Question of Ethnicity and Democracy in Iran: A Critical View". Iran and the Caucasus. 17 (1): 84–85. doi:10.1163/1573384X-20130106.

External links Edit

  • , 2002 (in Kurdish)

simko, shikak, born, 1887, kurdish, chieftain, shekak, tribe, born, into, prominent, kurdish, feudal, family, based, chihriq, castle, located, near, baranduz, river, urmia, region, northwestern, iran, 1920, parts, iranian, azerbaijan, located, west, lake, urmi. Simko Shikak a born 1887 was a Kurdish chieftain of the Shekak tribe He was born into a prominent Kurdish feudal family based in Chihriq castle located near the Baranduz river in the Urmia region of northwestern Iran By 1920 parts of Iranian Azerbaijan located west of Lake Urmia were under his control 1 He led Kurdish farmers into battle and defeated the Iranian army on several occasions 2 The Iranian government had him assassinated in 1930 3 Simko took part in the massacre of the Assyrians of Khoy 4 and instigated the massacre of 1 000 Assyrians in Salmas 5 Chieftain and GeneralSimko Shikakسمکۆی شکاک Simkoye SikakBornIsmail Agha Shikak1887 1887 Chehriq Urmia County IranDied 1930 06 30 June 30 1930 aged 42 43 OshnaviehCause of deathSurprise ambush and assassination by Imperial Iranian Armed ForcesNationalityKurdishCitizenshipQajar Iran and later Pahlavi IranKnown forSimko Shikak revolt 1918 1922 TitleChieftain of the Shekak tribe and General of the Shekak forces PredecessorCewer AghaSuccessorAbolished titleFamilyShekak Contents 1 Family background 1 1 Political life 1 2 Simko Shikak revolt 2 Legacy 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksFamily background EditHis family was one of the most prominent and politically active Kurdish families throughout Qajar reign from the late 18th to early 20th century Sadiq Khan Shikak was one of the generals and governors in the Agha Muhammad Khan s early Qajar state and was commanding a force of 10 000 soldiers However he was soon fell out of favor and Qajar monarch attempted to murder him Sadiq Khan has been accused of taking part in the assassination of Qajar king in the town of Shusha in 1797 Among other prominent members of the family are Ismail Khan The Great and his son Ali Khan Muhammad Pasha son of Ali Khan Cewer Ja afar Agha brother of Simko Many members of the family were murdered by the Qajar state such as Cewer Dja far Agha who was killed at Tabriz by the order of governor general 6 Political life Edit After the murder of Cewer Agha Simko became the head of Shikak forces In May 1914 he attended a meeting with Abdurrezzak Bedir Khan who at the time was a Kurdish politician supported by the Russians 7 The Iranian government was trying to assassinate him like the other members of his family In 1919 Mukarram ul Molk the governor of Azerbaijan devised a plot to kill Simko by sending him a present with a bomb hidden in it 8 Simko was also in contact with Kurdish revolutionaries such as Seyyed Taha Gilani grandson of Sheikh Ubeydullah who had revolted against Iran in the 1880s Seyyed Taha was a Kurdish nationalist who was conducting propaganda among the Iranian Kurds for the union of Iranian Kurdistan and Turkish Kurdistan in an independent state 9 Jointly with the Ottoman Army he organized the massacre in Haftevan in February 1915 during which 700 800 Armenians and Assyrians were murdered 10 Simko Shikak revolt Edit Main article Simko Shikak revolt In March 1918 under the pretext of meeting for the purpose of cooperation Simko arranged the assassination of the Assyrian Church of the East patriarch Mar Shimun XIX Benyamin ambushing him and his 150 guards as Mar Shimun was entering his carriage The patriarchal ring was stolen at this time and the body of the patriarch was only recovered hours later according to the eye witness account of Daniel d Malik Ismael 11 12 13 On March 16 after the murder of Mar Shimun Assyrians under the command of Malik Khoshaba and Petros Elia of Baz attacked Simkos fortress in Charah in which Simko was decisively defeated 14 The fortress of Charah had never been conquered previously despite attempts by Iranians and the river was red from the blood of dead Shikak fighters 15 Simko was panic stricken during the battle and managed to escape abandoning his men 16 By summer 1918 Simko had established his authority in the region west of Lake Urmia 17 At this time government in Tehran tried to reach an agreement with Simko on the basis of limited Kurdish autonomy 18 Simko had organized a strong Kurdish army which was much stronger than Iranian government forces Since the central government could not control his activities he continued to expand the area under his control and by 1922 cities of Baneh and Sardasht were under his administration 19 In the battle of sari Taj in 1922 Simko s forces could not resist the Iranian Army s onslaught in the region of Salmas and were finally defeated and the castle of Chari was occupied The strength of the Iranian Army force dispatched against Simko was 10 000 soldiers 20 Legacy EditSimko s revolts are seen by some as an attempt by a powerful tribal chief to establish his personal authority over the central government throughout the region 21 Although elements of Kurdish nationalism were present in this movement historians agree these were hardly articulate enough to justify a claim that recognition of Kurdish identity was a major issue in Simko s movement 21 It lacked any kind of administrative organization and Simko was primarily interested in plunder 21 Government forces and non Kurds were not the only ones to suffer in the attacks the Kurdish population was also robbed and assaulted 21 Simko s men do not appear to have felt any sense of unity or solidarity with fellow Kurds 21 In the words of Kurdologist and Iranologist Garnik Asatrian 22 In the recent period of Kurdish history a crucial point is defining the nature of the rebellions from the end of the 19th and up to the 20th century from Sheikh Ubaydullah s revolt to Simko s Simitko mutiny The overall labelling of these events as manifestations of the Kurdish national liberation struggle against Turkish or Iranian suppressors is an essential element of the Kurdish identity makers ideology With the Kurdish conglomeration as I said above far from being a homogeneous entity either ethnically culturally or linguistically the basic component of the national doctrine of the Kurdish identity makers has always remained the idea of the unified image of one nation endowed respectively with one language and one culture The chimerical idea of this imagined unity has become further the fundament of Kurdish identity making resulting in the creation of fantastic ethnic and cultural prehistory perversion of historical facts falsification of linguistic data etc On the other hand Reza Shah s military victory over Simko and Turkic tribal leaders initiated a repressive era toward non Persian minorities 21 In a nationalistic perspective Simko s revolt is described as an attempt to build a Kurdish tribal alliance in support of independence 23 According to Kamal Soleimani Simko Shikak can be located within the confines of Kurdish ethno nationalism 24 According to the political scientist Hamid Ahmadi 25 Though Reza Shah s armed confrontation with tribal leaders in different parts of Iran was interpreted as an example of ethnic conflict and ethnic suppression by the Iranian state the fact is that it was more a conflict between the modern state and traditional socio political structure of pre modern era and had less to do with the question of ethnicity and ethnic conflict While some Marxist political activists see Nabdel 1977 and ethno nationalist intellectuals of different Iranian groups Ghassemlou 1965 Hosseinbor 1984 Asgharzadeh 2007 have introduced this confrontation as a result of Reza Shah s ethnocentric policies no valid documents have been presented to prove this argument Recent documentary studies Borzu i 1999 Zand Moqaddam 1992 Jalali 2001 convincingly show that Reza Shah s confrontation with Baluch Dust Mohammad Khan Kurdish Simko and Arab Sheikh Khaz al have merely been the manifestation of state tribe antagonism and nothing else While the Kurdish ethno nationalist authors and commentators have tried to construct the image of a nationalist hero out of him the local Kurdish primary sources reflect just the opposite showing he was widely hated by many ordinary and peasant Kurds who suffered his brutal suppression of Kurdish settlements and villages See also Edit nbsp Kurdistan portal nbsp History portalMar Shimun XIX BenyaminReferences Edit Kurdish سمکۆی شکاک romanized Simkoye Sikak Birth name Ismail Agha Shikak C Dahlman The Political Geography of Kurdistan Eurasian Geography and Economics pp 271 299 No 4 Vol 43 2002 p 283 B O Leary J McGarry The Future of Kurdistan in Iraq University of Pennsylvania Press 355 pp ISBN 0 8122 1973 2 see p 7 M M Gunter The Kurdish Question in Perspective World Affairs pp 197 205 No 4 Vol 166 Spring 2004 see p 203 John Joseph The Modern Assyrians of the Middle East Encounters With Western Christian Missions Archaeologists and Colonial Power Studies in Christian Mission Hardcover BRILL 2000 p 147 Simko and his men had escaped to Khoi where they took part in the massacre of Assyrians Maria T O Shea 2004 Trapped Between the Map and Reality Geography and Perceptions of Kurdistan New York p 100 ISBN 0 415 94766 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link M Th Houtsma E van Donzel E J Brill s First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 1993 ISBN 90 04 08265 4 p 290 Kieser Hans Lukas Anderson Margaret Lavinia Bayraktar Seyhan Schmutz Thomas 2019 07 11 The End of the Ottomans The Genocide of 1915 and the Politics of Turkish Nationalism Bloomsbury Academic p 71 ISBN 978 1 78831 241 7 Handren Dilan 2009 02 02 The Rebellion of Simko Agha Kurdmania in German Retrieved 2009 02 23 F Kashani Sabet Frontier Fictions Shaping the Iranian Nation 1804 1946 328 pp I B Tauris 1999 ISBN 1 85043 270 8 p 153 Gaunt David 2006 Massacres Resistance Protectors Muslim Christian Relations in Eastern Anatolia During World War I Gorgias Press pp 81 83 84 ISBN 978 1 59333 301 0 Houtsma M Th van Donzel E 1993 E J Brill s First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 p 118 ISBN 90 04 08265 4 O Shea Maria T 2004 Trapped Between the Map and Reality Geography and Perceptions of Kurdistan New York Routledge p 100 ISBN 0415947669 Simko later arranged the assassination of Mar Shamon the Assyrian patriarch in March 1918 under the pretext of a meeting to discuss cooperation Nisan Mordechai 2002 Minorities in the Middle East A History of Struggle and Self Expression 2nd ed Jefferson NC McFarland p 187 ISBN 0786413751 Simko their leader in Iran had invited Mar Shimon for conference in Kuhnehshahr west of Salmas kissed him and then treacherously murdered the Nestorian patriarch and his men Ismael Yaqou D Malik 2020 11 13 Assyrians and Two World Wars Assyrians from 1914 to 1945 Ramon Michael p 152 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Ismael Yaqou D Malik 2020 11 13 Assyrians and Two World Wars Assyrians from 1914 to 1945 Ramon Michael p 152 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Ismael Yaqou D Malik 2020 11 13 Assyrians and Two World Wars Assyrians from 1914 to 1945 Ramon Michael pp 151 152 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link W G Elphinston The Kurdish Question International Affairs Vol 22 No 1 pp 91 103 1946 p 97 The Kurds in Iran Archived 2007 09 29 at the Wayback Machine David McDowall 1991 F Koohi Kamali Nationalism in Iranian Kurdistan in The Kurds A Contemporary Overview ed P G Kreyenbroek and S Sperl 252 pp Routledge 1992 ISBN 0 415 07265 4 pp 175 176 S Cronin Riza Shah and the disintegration of Bakhtiyari power in Iran 1921 1934 Iranian Studies Vol 33 No 3 4 pp 349 376 Summer Fall 2000 p 353 a b c d e f See Entessar Nader 2010 Kurdish Politics in the Middle East Lanham Lexington Books p 17 ISBN 9780739140390 OCLC 430736528 Kreyenbroek Philip G Sperl Stefan 1992 The Kurds A Contemporary Overview London New York Routledge pp 138 139 ISBN 9780415072656 OCLC 24247652 Asatrian Garnik 2009 Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds Iran and the Caucasus 13 1 65 66 doi 10 1163 160984909X12476379007846 Smith B 2009 Land and Rebellion Kurdish Separatism in Comparative Perspective PDF Working Paper Soleimani Kamal June 2017 The Kurdish image in statist historiography the case of Simko Middle Eastern Studies 53 6 950 doi 10 1080 00263206 2017 1341409 S2CID 148644922 Ahmadi Hamid 2013 Political Elites and the Question of Ethnicity and Democracy in Iran A Critical View Iran and the Caucasus 17 1 84 85 doi 10 1163 1573384X 20130106 External links Edit72nd Anniversary of Simko 2002 in Kurdish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Simko Shikak amp oldid 1173517874, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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