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1) For the diaspora I would say it's more about identity. You Turks don't know what it feels like to have your very existence questioned and threatened.
2) Whose to say that many of us won't eventually move back? I personally know of many Kurds who have moved back, including my siblings. Besides, most Kurds in Europe are not even from the 'Iraqi' part.
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Wth, do you even listen to yourself? Just look at the facts, kurdish and farsi (persian) are almost mutually intelligible: "My boyfriend is Kurdish and he confirmed that Kurdish/Sorani is more similar to Farsi than to any other language. But that doesn't mean that he understands everything in Farsi (they are still 2 separate languages)" - https://answers.yahoo.com/question/i...8123733AANqFF4
Now you might disagree, but lets just look for a chart of how the indo european languages developed (btw, Kurdish and Farsi are both indo european)
And what can we see here? A connection to persian, who would have guessed?
But i wanna BTFO you even more, so lets look at the distribution of Indo-european languages, shall we?
Hmmm, maybe now you can see that absolutely clear connection between kurds and persians?
i assume we get that by not being driven by some political ideology and instead actually doing some research.
And? medes tribes are literally Persian. Look at the chart above.
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You're an idiot, Medes were not Persian but a separate Iranian tribe related to them although their language was quite different. I am not denying any connections between Kurds and Persians but that doesn't automatically make all other Iranic ethnicities related to fucking Persians do they? I guess all Germanic people are "German" then by your flawed logic, get your head out of your ass.
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Turkey Desperate to Stop Kurdish Vote; 41 Killed in Iraq
Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım submitted a motion to the Turkish parliament on Friday asking to extend for another year Turkish military authority in Iraq and Syria — where Kurdish-dominated regions are holding elections. Turkey currently has troops stationed in Iraq that Baghdad wants out. Turkey views an independent state in either country as a threat to its own security due to the large population of Kurds there.
Turkey has continued to call on Iraqi Kurdistan to cancel its independence referendum, threatening Erbil with sanctions, but Kurdish President Massoud Barzani has rejected all demands to stop the vote. The Kurdish supreme council of the referendum underscored that sentiment by declaring that the voting would take place as scheduled on Monday. However, the councilmembers also intimated that talks with Baghdad were still possible on Saturday.
http://original.antiwar.com/updates/...1-killed-iraq/
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Kurds ready to pay any price for freedom, Barzani says, sticking by independence vote
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mi...-idUSKCN1BX26F
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Their referendum is tomorrow, I wonder the outcome
All around me are familiar faces, worn out places, worn out faces
Bright and early for the daily races, going nowhere, going nowhere
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Kurdish and Persian are not mutually intelligible. Sorani might be 'more' similiar, but that still doesn't mean Kurdish speakers can understand persian speakers. I can't understand shit when kurds speak to each other, I can can only pick up a couple of words and thats it.
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