Ali Şeriati is Iranian, not Kurd. Go fight with him.
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I am out here, i didn’t claim anything what this donkey ass addicted monkey is spreading here.
But there is no village who is Lak and speaks the language - maybe some settled there but it doesn't make the region "Lak Kurds". The region was armenian-turkish mixed, especially areas like Kozan. Also Dortyol is shown as "Canpolat" again no village with such tribe exists in the region. It's made up for justifieing such maps. Notice how there is always dot in Hatay/Dortyol shown as kurdish majority (which is not true at all)
https://www.edmaps.com/assets/images..._territory.png
Imagine showing this region as kurdish.
http://umap.openstreetmap.fr/de/map/...7.2932/36.4581
I also read once that all Afshars and tribes listed as "Turkmen" in Anatolia were in fact Kurdish.
So I guess the ignorance goes both ways
I don't want to dismiss all these theories right away, but thankfully a lot of them are not accepted by the mainstream academia.
Moving on. I've found an interesting sample titled Sakrat Palu. Sakrat was originally an Armenian village in Palu (Elazig) but now is mostly Kurd.
Gedrosia 22.59 Pct
Siberian 0.39 Pct
Northwest_African 1.85 Pct
Southeast_Asian 0.83 Pct
Atlantic_Med 11.44 Pct
North_European 3.34 Pct
South_Asian 0.50 Pct
East_African -
Southwest_Asian 14.98 Pct
East_Asian -
Caucasus 44.03 Pct
Sub_Saharan -
Target: sakratpalu
Distance: 3.4470% / 3.44703960 | ADC: 1x
55.6 Zaza
44.4 Azeri_Jew
Although he is Kurd like, the sample deviates from the Kurdish average. It has low South Asian, low North European and high Caucasus.
There is a turkish village Seydilli in Palu which has been there for 200 years, wonder how they would score.
https://www.houshamadyan.org/fileadm...54428ad6e2.jpg
Guys, trolling should have no place here. Just saying. 1-2 posts are okay but no more.