ONE
āThe time of revolution has startedā
āEvents, however great or suddenā, as John William Draper once reflected, āare consequences of preparations long ago madeā (Draper, 1875, vol. 2: 152). The emergence and evolution of the Partiya KarkerĆŖn Kurdistan provides sound verification of this astute observation. It was the product of nationalist and protonationalist uprisings and events hundreds of years earlier, which had divided Kurdistan into enclaves subservient to domination by a number of foreign states, as Figure 1 illustrates.
The Kurdish and Turkish left in Turkey almost universally regard Turkish Kurdistan as feudal. PKK Serok (Leader) Abdullah Ćcalan is no exception, still maintaining:
the Kurds have not only struggled against repression by the dominant powers and for the recognition of their existence but also for the liberation of their society from the grip of feudalism. (Ćcalan, 2011: 19)
As several scholars have observed, the actual picture in Turkish Kurdistan is more complex. In fact, all ancient Anatolian society stagnated under a dominant āAsiaticā mode of production. Interaction with Europe increasingly evoked feudal forms there from the seventeenth century onwards. But Mustafa Kemalās Turkish nationalist takeover in 1923 ushered in an openly modernizing regime ā albeit Turkey remained a weak, underdeveloped economy, subordinate to the economies of those great powers that had successfully industrialized centuries earlier. Nevertheless, Turkey was integrated into the world economy during the 1920s and experienced real growth, including industrialization from the 1950s onwards.
FIGURE 1 Map of Kurdistan
Yet Turkish Kurdistan stumbled backwards in comparison, relatively speaking. Peasants have remained mostly landless. Kurdish economic development problems were not resolved by the economic modernization of the 1980s onwards, and political ādemocratizationā was not achieved for the Kurds. The Kurds were effectively excluded from citizenship.
As Majeed R. Jafar (1976) masterfully explains, the Kurdish region in modern Turkey is not merely underdeveloped, like Turkey as a whole, but is an exceptionally underdeveloped sector within the latter ā or, as he puts it, Turkish Kurdistan suffers from āunder-underdevelopmentā. Zülküf Aydin (1986) shows that the regionās peasants remained mostly landless sharecroppers. He verifies the general verdict of severe economic underdevelopment for the region. Aydin, along with Ronnie Margulies, Ergin YıldızoÄlu (1987) and Kemal H. Karpat (1973), explain how the mechanization of agriculture, beginning in the 1950s, forced vast numbers to migrate either to western Turkey or even abroad. The landless rural Kurds who remained were caught in a horrendous poverty trap, as not even a modest degree of stunted industrial development in Turkish Kurdistan soaked up the jobless and underemployed.
The continuing war in Turkish Kurdistan has massively impacted upon all who live there. Kurdish sociologists estimate that about 3,500 Kurdish villages have been destroyed, rendering some 4 million people homeless. Severe unemployment prevails even in Amed (Diyarbakır), the largest city. In Turkey as a whole the mean annual income is US$7,000, whereas in the four poorest neighbourhoods in Amed it is a mere US$500 (Tatort Kurdistan, 2013: 70; Cagaptay and Jeffrey, 2014: 10).
İsmail BeÅikƧiās DoÄu Anadoluānun Düzeni: Sosyo-ekonomik ve Etnik Temeller (1969) documents the serious effects of agricultural mechanization on the Kurdish regionās economy. Seyfi Cengizās work (1990; n.d.) establishes that, despite grave economic underdevelopment in the region, a Kurdish working class not only exists but periodically organizes strikes and other forms of economic and political struggle, both inside and outside the trade unions. Basing himself on Turkish government statistics, Cengiz proves his case, showing that industrial activity by Kurdish workers in the region is intimately connected to similar action by workers throughout the Turkish state. This is potentially significant for understanding the objective factors impelling Kurds into political action, for Kurdish industry and economy today are linked with Turkish industry and economy, not that of Kurdistan as a whole. Cengizās research thus reveals potential counter-pressures to Kurdish nationalism in Turkey.
Precursors of the PKK
Taking its prehistory into account, a schematic chronological typology of the Kurdish national movement in Turkey from its earliest murmurings up to the present day would be as follows:
⢠1514ā1879: the period from division to the Sheikh Ubaydallah rebellion.
⢠1879ā1908: the period from the defeat of Ubaydallah to the (Turkish nationalist) Young Turk rebellion.
⢠1908ā1925: the period from the Young Turk rebellion to the Sheikh Said rebellion.
⢠1925ā1938: the period from Sheikh Saidās rebellion to DĆŖrsim (Tunceli).
⢠1938ā1965: the period from the DĆŖrsim rebellion to the dawn of the modern national movement.
⢠1965āthe present: the period of the modern national movement.
All of these risings unquestionably took place on the historic territory of Kurdistan, although ā as discussed in the present writerās earlier book on the Kurds (White, 2000) ā the Kızılbaį¹£ and Zaza peoples also claim most of them. Naturally, modern Kurdish nationalists reject these claims, also asserting that the Kızılbaį¹£ and Zaza are Kurds. It is quite clear that the modern Kurdish national movement considers this asserted rebellious patrimony essential for its legitimacy.
These rebellions were all evoked by a heady mix of territorial particularism (the desire to rule their own lands themselves) and economic motives. Sheikh Saidās 1925 rebellion was also animated by Islamic concerns. The modern Kurdish national movement is the product of the interaction of territorial particularist and economic motives, with leftist political radicalization, in the wake of Turkish political development and the explosion of radicalism in Western countries during the 1960s. It is Kurdish leftist political radicalization, especially, which differentiates the modern Kurdish national movement from its historical antecedents.
Emergence of the modern Kurdish national movement
In May 1960, Turkeyās armed forces ā which since the establishment of the Turkish Republic in 1923 have considered themselves the Republicās guardian ā staged a military coup. The military hierarchy asserted that the military has both the right and the responsibility to intervene in affairs of state when absolutely necessary in order to guarantee the systemās continuance. It was not a left-wing coup, but the military brought in a new, and surprisingly democratic, constitution. The prime minister and two of his ministers were executed and hundreds of right-wingers were imprisoned in 1961. The result of all these events was an unprecedented leftist resurgence.
From 1968, a rising tide of strikes began, supplemented by leftāright political violence, culminating in a series of political murders in early 1970. Hundreds of thousands of workers and students repeatedly clashed with police on the streets. On 12 March 1971 another military coup took place.
For a brief moment during this period, the need of the 1960 junta to repress the right allowed the left a breathing space. A staggering range of leftist publications emerged ā from radical populist and social democratic in inclination, such as Yƶn, Ant and Türk Solu, through to ostensible Marxist, āMarxistāLeninistā and Maoist. All of these groups looked towards a leftist reworking of the tradition of military intervention in national politics. In this scheme, the elite, technocrats (including, in some versions, the students) and officers would lead Turkey āindependentlyā on behalf of the workers and rural poor ā āfor the people, despite the peopleā. āStudents would agitate, officers would strike, and a national junta would take powerā (Samim, April/May 1981: 65ā72).
This strategy soon proved to be a failure. The radicalism sweeping across Western countries in the 1960s then swept over Turkey as well ā despite the reality that in this country right-wing radicalism had a much stronger popular base than in Europe at the time. Left-wing radicalism in Turkey now took the shape of a different leftist approach, the urban guerrilla strategy of Che Guevara (Landau, 1974: 31).
Turkish Kurdistan was not immune to these developments. Indeed, many Kurdish intellectuals were deeply affected by the political cauldron of 1960sā Turkish politics. Confused political and organizational links soon developed between the movements in Turkey proper and these intellectuals (Bozarslan, 1992: 97ā8). Crucially, this confused intellectual leftist renaissance occurred at a time when Turkeyās
Kurdish population ⦠was both more mobile and more susceptible to influence from regions to the West. Migratory movements, which were intensified by industrialization, ultra-rapid means of communication and the massive presence of Kurdish students in major Turkish towns, together with a more heterogeneous political environment were crucial in transforming EastāWest relations in Turkey. (Bozarslan, 1992: 98)
A number of bilingual (Turkish/Kurdish) nationalist journals emerged, only to be swiftly suspended (Kutschera, 1979: 4ā5). Then in 1965 the Democratic Party of Turkish Kurdistan (PDKT in Turkish) was formed (Vanly, 1986: 64). The new party name referred to the Iraqi Kurdish Democratic Party of Iraq (KDP), founded and led by the famous Barzani clan, although in the beginning it was controlled by Ibrahim Ahmad, who had nothing to do with the Barzanis. At the time, the KDP was waging a highly successful guerrilla war against the Baāathist authorities in Baghdad (Bozarslan, 1992: 98ā9; Kutschera, 1979; More, 1984: 68, 70, 193ā4; Ghareeb, 1981: 7ā8; Kendal, 1982: 91ā2).
The PDKT was never an effective organized force. Nevertheless the social and political issues that ripped it apart in the late 1960s were significant for the emergence of a fully modern national movement of the Kurds. At their core, these disputes involved the role of both traditional leaders and intellectuals in the Kurdish national movement and the relationship of the national movement itself towards the international working-class movement (Bozarslan, 1992: 98ā9). The PDKT was clearly unable to adapt to the rapid radicalization occurring among Kurdish workers and intellectuals during the late 1960s. The organization was soon branded ābourgeois nationalistā by most of the radicalized Kurdish organizations that subsequently emerged.
The catalyst of racist provocation
Kurdish resentment was growing, spurred on not just by centuries of perceived ill treatment, but also now by immediate outrages. In April 1967, a provocative article appeared in the extreme right-wing Turkish magazine Ćtüken, journal of the far-right MilliyetƧi Hareket Partisi (MHP ā Nationalist Action Party). The article stated that the Kurds were a backward people, devoid of history and culture, who wanted to cut Turkey into pieces. The author suggested that the Kurds get out of Turkey, since Turkey was only for the Turks, adding that Kurds ādo not have the faces of human beingsā (cited in Vanly, n.d.: 41ā3).
Demanding that Ankara punish the author and ban the magazine (Section 12 of the Turkish Constitution proclaimed the equality of all citizens), a furious Kurdish protest movement erupted. The government did nothing, even when a follow-up article appeared in the June issue of Ćtüken, entitled āThe Howlings of the Red Kurdsā, which declared:
the Kurds may represent a majority as high as 100 per cent of the population of the eastern provinces; yet their dreams to establish a Kurdish state on the soil of Turkey will always remain a dream comparable to that of the Armenians in a Greater Armeniaā¦
But the day when you will rise up to cut Turkey into pieces, you will see to what a hell we shall send you⦠(cited in Vanly, n.d.: 42)
The Kurds were well aware that the Armenians were massacred by the Ottoman Turks (with assistanc...