
alp wrote:shii turks make up to half of iran.
a huge portion of the members of the regime (mollas, generals, bureaucrats, ..) are shii turks.
they were the makers of safevi empire and they are historic enemies of kurd nationalism.




Rumtaya wrote:Diyarbekir: AMED
Isnt it shown sometimes is Amid in the maps? I am pretty sure this is not a original Kurdish city is it?Shemdinli: SHEMZÎNAN
That city i dont know but it sounds like one of the iranian cities.Yuksekova: GEWER
hahah thats nice we have an Assyrian tribe called gewernaye
Hakkari: COLEMÊRG
Never know it before thta it is called Colmerg till you told me, but we are use to say Hakkari cause that is what you can read in every map. And a important part of the new Assyrian History.
Arbil: HEWLÊR
The Kurds can call it so that is like a english man calling münschen Munich but still its a german city. So the same to ArbaElu its a city poppulated today in majority with kurds but not a kurdish city just like los angels is poppulated with mexicans but its not an mexican city
Tünceli: DERSÎM
????Sannandaj: SINE
????




tomjez wrote:OK no need to post it three times!
For Tunceli being Dersim, everybody knows that, even turks...
Diyarbakir is indeed not originally a kurdish city, neither is Erbil
For Colemereg it appears on some maps and in english travellers diaries in the XIXth century



tomjez wrote:OK no need to post it three times!
For Tunceli being Dersim, everybody knows that, even turks...
Diyarbakir is indeed not originally a kurdish city, neither is Erbil
For Colemereg it appears on some maps and in english travellers diaries in the XIXth century





tomjez wrote:Well first of all it was a byzantine city, then conquered by the arabs. I don't have the "evidence" here, actually I don't care too much if it is Amid or Diyarbakir, I'm not here to say it's a turkish city or whatever, I've been there I know it's kurdishJust think the name Diyarbakir is older than Amid, if you have "counter evidence" I'll be glad to believe you, no polemic here




tomjez wrote:Adam and Eve spoke breton in Paradise
Indeed, after their first diner, the woman said to the man "A dam", which in breton means "I'm thirsty". The man gave water to the woman, saying "Ev", which in Breton means "Drink!"



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