The word
Kerkuk1 has no any implications in Turkmen, Arabic, Persian or
Kurdish languages. The mostly similar words to Kerkuk are Kerkluk and
kurkluk in Turkmen, which mean partridge and the beauty, consequently.
Kerkluk means in Turkmen also the place which worth to be seen. Therefore,
Kerkuk word can be originated from the changes of these words.2
The cuneiform writings on the signboards, which were founded coincidentally
on the foot of Kerkuk Citadel in 1927, demonstrated that the city Erebga of
Babylonian was the present Kerkuk City.3 Other sources considered
Erbega as a part of bigger city Arrapha, which was the name of Kerkuk City
during the Assyrian prominence.4 At that time, the city was
considered the temple of thunderbolt and rain gods “Edd”. Saint Polus
Beijcan5 mentioned that Kerkuk City was called Kora Bajermy in
the Assyrian era.
It is stated on fairly authoritative grounds to be Qalat d Slukid – the
castle of Seleucids, a Chaldaeo-Syriac name dating from about the time of
Christ. 6 The name of city appeared as Beth Garma in Syriac
chronicles. It is thought to be the Garmakan region of the Sassanian era.
The city is written under the name Kunkun in the Romans map. Kerkura used by
Bathlimous too. At the start of the first millennium Kerkuk city was called
Kergini, which remained until the 7th century.7 The name Kerkuk
started to be used for the first time by the Turkmen state Kara Koyunlu
(1375 – 1468). The two names Kergini and Kerkuk were used at the same time
until the city remained to be mentioned only by the name Kerkuk toward the
ends of first millennium.
The history of Kerkuk City is returned back to the third millennium BC. In
1948, the Copper tools and calf statue, which were founded during the
archaeological evacuations in the New Kerkuk or Arafa neighborhood, dated
the history of Kerkuk City back to the 26th century at the Sumerian era. The
Assyrian king Nasirbal II built the Kerkuk Citadel between 884 and 858 BC as
a military defense line. The king Sluks built a strong rampart with 72
towers around the citadel, two entries and 72 streets.
Kerkuk City is located near the foot of the Zagros Mountains and at the
lower boundary of the northern region of Iraq.4 The city was
built over a hill on a river called Hasa Su. It is the central district of
the Kerkuk governorate. Salahaddin governorate is in the west, Diale
governorate in the south. In the east and north of the governorate located
Suleymaniyya and Mosul governorates, consequently. Kerkuk is a trade and
export center for the surrounding area's agricultural products, sheep, wool,
cheese8 and cattle. Textiles are manufactured there. After the
discovery of the oil in 1927 it became a major center of the Iraq's
petroleum.
According to D. McDowell; for both Arabs and Kurds the value of Kerkuk city
had been greatly enhanced by the nationalization of the oil industry. At the
beginning of 1974 oil revenue was expected to be ten times higher than in
1972. A huge resource was now at stake. Kerkuk accounted for 70 per cent of
the state’s total oil output and Mulla Mustafa felt bound to claim both the
town itself and a proportion of its oil revenue.9 Until before
the Economic Embargo in 1990, Kerkuk remain producing 70 per cent of the
Iraqi oil output10 and 2.2% of world oil11 were
produced in Kerkuk city. The oil of Kerkuk city is well known with its good
quality and shallowness of the wells, the petrol layers lay 840-1260 meter
under the surface of the earth.8 The underground of the city
contains a substantial amount of natural gas,12 which is
unfortunately wasted by burning, and sulphur,13 which is
exploited since the seventies. A huge petrol refinery13, 14 is
present at the north of the city.
The Encyclopedia Britannica in its old versions,4 until few years
ago mentioned that the most of Kerkuk City population is of Turkmen stock,
while in the last internet version15 of the same Encyclopedia the
expression has been changed to “The city's population is of mixed Turkmen,
Arab and Kurdish stock”. Here we see that the Turkmen is mentioned before
the other nationalities, which means that the Turkmen still forms the
majority. The new comment of the Internet version of the Encyclopedia
Britannica may explain the degree of Arabization and Kurdization, which
Kerkuk city has faced in the second half of the last century.
Unfortunately, most of the Encyclopedias present unreliable16
official government statistics over the ethnic structure and population
distribution in Iraq as a real data.17, 18, 19, 20. This
contradicts clearly with the reports of the writers who personally dealt
with the region.
W. R. Hay mentioned21 that Kerkuk City is the place where Turkmen
are the majority.
F. Hussein mentioned in his book “Mosul Problem” that the Turkmen was
publishing the only newspaper in Kerkuk in the early 20th century.22
According to E. Y. Odisho; “the largest Turkmen population concentration is
in the city of Kirkuk whose linguistics, cultural and ethnic identity is
distinctly coloured by their presence”. 23
M. Farouk affirmed, when he described Kerkuk Massacre July 1959; “The
original population of Kerkuk City were Turkmen and the Kurds were more
recent incomers. The Turkmen had always dominated the socio-economic and
political life of the Kerkuk city”. 24
Kerkuk City has encountered three emigration waves in the latter century,
two of them were massive:
Firstly, the Kurdish emigration, which can be divided into 3 stages:
-
Early stage (Until 1910s), which was
gradual and due to the economical and the social factors.
-
Intermediate stage (1920 – 1960), which
was heavier and due to the social, economical and the political factors.
-
Late stage. (1960 - until now), which is
the heaviest and mainly due to the political factors.
Secondly, the forcedly Arabic emigration,
which can be divided into 2 stages:
-
Monarchical stage (1920 – 1958), which was
gradual and mainly due to the political factors.
-
Republican stage (1958 – until now), which
is very intensive and purely due to the political factors.
Thirdly, Assyrian emigration:
The Christians of Kerkuk City can be
divided in to two groups. The first group called the Christians of
Kerkuk Citadel who are the original natives of the city. They are from
the Turkmen origin. They bid and celebrate the religious activities in
Turkmen from the holly book Medrash. They have separate church, which
was called Red Church in the eastern side of the Kerkuk City. Secondly,
the Petroleum Company, which was completely administrated by English,
brought Christian workers from the other governorates. They were mainly
settled in the neighborhoods around the Company: New Kerkuk, Almaz and
Gavur Bagi.
The population of Kerkuk City was almost all
Turkmen until not too past25 except few sporadic Kurdish families
scattered mainly in the peripheral quarters of the city. The second stage of
Kurdish emigration to the Kerkuk City started with the industrialization of
the Kerkuk oil by the English companies in the 1920s. D. McDowall pointed
out that the Turkmen were originally predominant element of the Kerkuk city,
the Kurds were settled increasingly in the city during the 1930s and 1940s.
26 In this stage established a large number of Kurds in the Imam
Kasim Neighborhood at the eastern north of the city.27 The second
threshold of the Kurdish emigration waves, in this stage, took place in the
fifties of the 19th century. At this time almost all the legal and political
machinery of Kerkuk city were hold by the Kurds. 28 In this time
started to appear the first houses of Al-Shorje quarter in the eastern south
of Kerkuk city. During this period, the fields of oil consumption increased,
and lead to the huge economical growth of the city, which farther encouraged
the Kurdish emigration. The third stage of Kurdish emigration, which started
with the Kurdish uprising in the north of Iraq, was the heaviest. The
Kurdish neighborhood Rahim Ava appeared in the north of the city. Nowadays,
the Kurds are the majority in only two Kerkuk neighborhoods Imam Kasim and
Rahim Ava, while al-Shorje neighborhood is mainly Kurdish region. Few
sporadic families established in some other neighborhoods of the city.
Mentioning Kerkuk city inside the boundaries of the imaginary Kurdistan has
really no any logic historical or geographical explanations.
The Arabization policies of Kerkuk City began as early as in the 1930s, when
the cabinet of Yasin Al-Hashimi made 2 racist decisions:
1. The huge al-Hawije project to cultivate
the vast plain at the west of Kerkuk City to settle the Arab tribes of Al-Ubeyd
and Al-Jubur.
2. Termination of study in Turkmen in the
schools at the Turkmen regions as; Kerkuk and Kifri.27
The second stage of Arabization policy of Kerkuk city set up with the
establishment of the Republic. Appointment of Turkmen dropped off and the
Turkmen were discharged from the important positions in the governmental
offices. In the dictatorial Bath period, the assimilation and forcedly
deportation of Turkmen from kerkuk City started. The Turkmen were not
allowed to buy immovable proprieties in the governorate.
The economic importance of the city and the racist dictatorial identity30
of the Iraqi regimes have brought serious disasters for the Turkmen
population in Iraq, especially in Kerkuk City. After 1970s, Arabs have
enjoyed special incentives and rights, which encouraged thousands of
families to obey the order of Bath Party and settle in the historically
Turkmen area Kerkuk. In the later half of the 1970s, the names of tens
villages and districts in Kerkuk governorate were officially given Arabic
names. Large numbers of Turkmen families were given deportation notification
from kerkuk at the end of November 1993. 31
In one of the many attempts to divide the Turkmen concentrations of the
Kerkuk governorate, the present regime had changed the administrative
boundaries in January 1976. Two large administrative Turkmen districts were
separated from this governorate. 31
The special reporter of the Human Rights commission of the United Nations
reported that 25,000 Turkmen Shiite families were apparently relocated to
other places. He continues in his report: although the Turkmen population
constitutes the third largest ethnic community in Iraq with a historical
presence dating back to one thousand years principally in the north-central
plains of the country, the group still faces the rudimentary problem of
official recognition of its identity in terms.
Being Kerkuk City located to the south of 36th parallel, it was left out of
the international protection and remained under the hostilities of the Iraqi
regime.
References:
-
Kerkuk City is considered the capital
of Turkmen inhabited region. Turkmeneli and the Iraqi Turkmenistan
are the two new synonym terms, which started to be mentioned mainly
in the Iraqi Turkmen publications and literatures during the last
few decades. They refer to the region from Telefer district in Mosul
governorate to the Bedre district in al-Kut governorate. This area
is mainly inhabited by the Turkmen.
-
Ziyad Akkoyunlu,
“Kerkuk we al-Aklat al-Hassa bil al-Munasabat”,
– Kerkuk and the dinners of festivals, Copyrights By "Kirkukcity.cjb.net"
2001.
- Nusret Merdan,
“Ightiyal Kalat Kerkuk” - Assassination of Kerkuk Citadel -
“Karda§lik Journal”, version 6,
year 2, Published by Kerkuk Foundation, Istanbul 2000, p. 43.
- “Encyclopedia
Britannica” 1989, volume 6, p. 890.
- Saint Polus
Beijcan, “The News of Martyrs and Saints”, version 2, Leipzig
library 1891.
- William R. Hay,
“Two Years in Kurdistan 1918 – 1920”,
(William Clowes and Sons, Limited, London and Beccles 1921), p. 94.
- Cemaleddin Baban,
“Usul Esma al-mudun ve al-mawaki al-Iraqiyya” - The manners by which
the Iraqi cities and other places were named - Baghdad 1989, p. 246.
- “The Great
Oosthoek Encyclopedia and Dictionary” 1978, Dutch version, volume
11, p. 264 - 265.
- David McDowall,
“A Modern History of the Kurds”,
I.B.Tauris & Co Ltd Publishers 1996, London & New York, p. 335.
- “Great Larousse
Encyclopedia”, Dutch version, volume 13, p. 3.
- Ziyad Köpürlü,
“Turkish Presence in Iraq”,
By
Ornek Limited Company, Ankara 1996, p.22.
- “Encyclopedia
Britannica” 1992, volume 6, p. 377.
- “Great Soviet
Encyclopedia” 1976, English version, volume 12, p. 510.
- “Great Winklier
Prins Encyclopedia” 1984, Dutch version, volume 13, p. 374.
- “Encyclopedia
Britannica”, Internet version, title Kirkuk, 1999 - 2000 Britannica.
com Inc.
- “Collier’s
Encyclopedia” 1988, volume 13, p. 241.
- “Meyer
Encyclopedia” 1975, volume 6, p. 890.
- “The Great Brock
Haus Encyclopedia” 1976, German version, volume 5, p. 593.
- “Encyclopedia
Universalis” 1989, France version, volume 12, p. 580.
- “Great Larousse
Encyclopedia” 1962, France version, volume 6, p. 220.
- William R. Hay,
“Two Years in Kurdistan 1918 – 1920”,
p. 106-107.
- Fazil Hussein,
“Mushkilat al-Mosul” - The Mosul Problem - 1967, p. 92.
- Edward Y. Odisho,
“City of Kerkuk: No historical authenticity without multiethnicity”.
North eastern Illinois University, Chicago, IL U.S.A.
- Marion Farouk,
"Iraq since 1958 – From Revolution to
dictatorship", IB Tauris &co. Ltd, London 2001, p. 70 –
72.
- Hanna Batatu,
“The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary
Movements of Iraq” , Princeton University Press, New
Jersey 1978, p. 914.
- David McDowall,
“A Modern History of the Kurds”, p.
305.
- Aziz Samanci,
“Al-tarikh al-siyasi li Turkman al-Iraq”
- The Political History of Iraqi Turkmen - El-Saki Print House,
First edition, Beirut 1999, p. 87.
- Hanna Batatu,
“The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary
Movements of Iraq” ,
p. 913. Aziz Samanci,
“Al-tarikh al-siyasi li Turkman al-Iraq”
-
The Political History of Iraqi
Turkmen - p. 112.
- US Department of
State,
“Iraq, Country Report on Human rights Practise
for 1998”.
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and labor,
February 26, 1999.
- Max van der Stoel,
Special Reporter of the Commission Human Rights, “Report on the
Situation of Human Rights in Iraq” , E/CN.4/1994/58, p. 49.
Source:
KERKUK CITY WEB SITE