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ANFAL, ARABS & AUSCHWITZ
AN OPEN LETTER TO MY KURDISH FRIENDS
Gerald A. Honigman
25-8-2006
For over three decades now, I have admired
and staunchly defended youat times, at great cost to myself.
As a doctoral student in the 70s--whose career was nipped in the
bud by a tenured anti-Israel professor at Ohio State University,
whose only mention of Kurds in any of his courses was when he
mocked their cause while telling tales about his travels through
Turkey--I, alone, had to bring the plight of your people up in
the midst of ceaseless discussions centered around creating a
22nd state for Arabs at the expense of the Jews sole,
resurrected one. The most advanced doctoral student in the
program never got a dissertation advisor.
For over three decades now, I have admired and staunchly
defended you at times, at great cost to myself.
As a doctoral student in the 70s--whose career was nipped in the
bud by a tenured anti-Israel professor at Ohio State University,
whose only mention of Kurds in any of his courses was when he
mocked their cause while telling tales about his travels through
Turkey--I, alone, had to bring the plight of your people up in
the midst of ceaseless discussions centered around creating a
22nd state for Arabs at the expense of the Jews sole,
resurrected one. The most advanced doctoral student in the
program never got a dissertation advisor.
Today, I take pride in the wonderful progress you have made in
Iraqi Kurdistan.
Stay united, my friends--your divisions have repeatedly played
into the hands of your surrounding enemies in the past, and many
will work to resurrect them in the future.
My country’s overthrow of Saddam was commendable. But with
Saddam gone, it was somewhat like the loss of Marshall Tito for
Yugoslavia.
As the latter was an artificial country that was really never
meant to be, consisting of age-old enemies pieced and glued
together, for others interests, with the collapse of an empire
after World War I, so too was Iraq.
You were promised independence back then, when folks were
proclaiming Arabia for the Arabians, Judea for the Jews, Armenia
for the Armenians, and so forth. President Woodrow Wilson
supported your cause. But that was not to be British petroleum
politics acted in collusion with Arab nationalism to abort your
aspirations.
You see, many of the same forces at work to deny your
rights--the rights of some thirty million Kurds who are still
stateless today, never knowing what the morrow will bring ,
while Arabs proclaim over six million square miles of territory
as purely Arab patrimony--have been at work to deny the same to
your ancient neighbors, the Jews. The Hebrew Bible speaks of the
Hurrians your ancestors. And those forces include powerful ones
right in my own country.
While our histories are not exactly analogous, there is still
much that is indeed too often tragically similar.
There were times when you joined the Pan Islamic movement to
subjugate your Christian and Jewish neighbors, holding them as
virtual slaves as my friend and scholar, Dr. Andrew Bostom,
recently reminded me. And Salah al-Din became Islams hero
against the Crusaders.
But what would the latter have said had he lived today, in the
very Syria where his statue is now featured, or in Iraq, where
Saddam, on trial for Anfal, sees himself as the modern day
Salah-al-Din?
My dear Kurdish friends, do you not see a similarity between how
Arabs have viewed your aspirations and rights in the age of
nationalism and how they view that of the Jews? Recall that
one-half of Israels Jewish population are refugee families from
that allegedly purely Arab patrimony, and another million of
these folks fled to France, the Americas, and elsewhere.
Like the Kurdish child forced to sing songs in Syria praising
his Arab identity, Jews also had to consent to a forced
Arabization in order to just survive.
While there was no Holocaust per se in the
Arab East (though in modern times the Mufti of Jerusalem was
Hitlers good buddy), the Jew also frequently never knew what to
expect from day to day and there were plenty of massacres,
pogroms, forced conversions, and such to go around. Not to
mention the expected state of dhimmitude and forced Arabization
that was simply expected to be accepted. And any of whom the
Arabs call kilab yahud--Jew dogs--who dared dream the same dream
Arabs proclaim solely for themselves--a life of dignity and
political self expression--paid the ultimate price that same
price hundreds of thousands of your own people have paid for
also dreaming that same exclusively Arab dream.
Long ago I predicted the obvious, while hoping I would be wrong.
As Yugoslavia imploded and exploded with Tito gone, Iraqs days
were numbered as well with the overthrow of the Saddam. Whatever
else he was, he was also the temporary glue. And without him,
the age-old blood feuds were bound to eruptespecially with the
Big Brother Shia Ayatollahs to the east.
Call it a civil war or not as of yet, a unified Iraq’s days are
numbered. It’s a matter of just how much longer America is
willing to bleed its economy and its blood.
And, my Kurdish friends, if you believe the Shia have your own
best interests close to their hearts, guess again. But you are
not that foolish. And we already know quite well what Sunni
Arabs think about your cause. We’ve had close to a century of
those lessons.
I guess I can understand some of you distancing yourselves from
Israel, the Jew of the Nations.
You have to live, after all, amongst those who have already
proclaimed that the birth of Kurdistan would be viewed as that
of another Israel.
And Israel, at times, has also distanced itself from
you--largely in order to appease its powerful on again, off
again Muslim friends, the Turks. I’m not thrilled about that.
While the Turks have no trouble demanding a 22nd state for
Arabs--and second one for them in Palestine (Jordan already
created in 1922 from the bulk of the original 1920 mandate),
they expect everyone, including Israel, to oppose Kurdish
aspirations for a sole state of their own.
Now, when the Arabs Anfal campaign to eradicate your people a
few decades past is again at least being mentioned (but
certainly not showcased as it should), the gassed Kurdish
children of Anfal and those of the Jews at Auschwitz share this
other nasty thing in common. They were both targeted for
genocide because of who they were.
Think of the charges that have been brought against Israel
because of its war against Hizbullah--an organization which
hijacked a nation and which is dedicated to Israel’s destruction.
Disproportionate force we have constantly heard.
Truth be told, if killing Arabs was all that Israel wanted to
do, with the amount of bombs and such dropped, there would not
be one Arab left by now in the targeted areas. Israel tried as
hard as possible--given the fact that Hizbullah, like Hamas &
Co., habitually uses their own people as human shields--to limit
the loss of innocent life. But I believe you already know this.
So, whats next?
Demand your rights when the inevitable comes. Do not settle for
less this time.
The hard-won autonomy you have must be solidified.
Hopefully, my own country will come to its senses--despite the
Arabists too often in control at the State Department--and
realize that the one best shot at furthering American values in
the region lies with the creation of a strong Kurdish state,
willing to live in peace with its neighbors, but also able to
deflect their aggression. As Israel has been a haven for Jews
seeking freedom and safety, open your even larger doors to your
own oppressed brethren elsewhere.
Dont foment turmoil amid Kurdish populations in Iran, Turkey,
and Syria, for this will backfire both on yourselves in Iraq and
your brothers across the borders. Having said this, you should
not shy away for demanding civil rights for those folks. Those
who seek to live in an independent Kurdish state will have--like
Jews with Israel--a place to go to.
While Ahmadinejad sets up cartoon exhibitions denying the
Holocaust and demanding Israel’s destruction allegedly for Arab
rights, he continues to butcher Azeris, Kurds, Baluchis, and
Arabs in his own country for the crime of demanding their own
rights in Iran.
I dare dream a dream. Are you ready? Here it goes
America sets up bases in the Kurdish north--with your consent,
of course. Like Incerlik in Turkey.
It trains and equips a powerful Kurdish military, equipped with
the same state of the art weapons it supplies to Arab despots.
While the Arabs blow each other apart to the south and Iran
plots its long-awaited revenge, an economically, politically,
and militarily secure Kurdish state emerges in the only area in
Iraq that has any real chance at stability your own.
I see a future alliance between the forces of peace and
tolerance Israel and Free Kurdistan.
While I would like to include others in this as well, the sad
fact is that even in the so-called moderate Arab countries, most
are still just biding their time and have still not reconciled
to the fact that other peoples, besides Arabs, are entitled to a
slice of national dignity in the region especially since those
folks have suffered under Arab rule. And for those who claim
that all was well for Jews until they dared dream that dream
spoken of earlier, I have not one but two bridges to sell you.
The Sorbonne’s Tunisian Jewish professor, Albert Memmi, and the
Egyptian Jewess, Bat Yeor (dhimmitude), are essential reading on
this topic. As with Kurds, Jews were simply expected to submit
and accept Arab subjugation and Arabization.
Together our peoples hold the promise for a better future for
all in the region. Hopefully, others will eventually join us in
building that better tomorrow for all.
Impossible, you say? The Jews King Solomon had an alliance with
Hiram from Phoenicia--Lebanon--millennia before the Arabs
Caliphal imperialist armies conquered both lands (around the
same time they took yours as well). The Temple of Jerusalem was
built from Hirams cedars.
An Israeli child is born with the expectation that he or she
will help heal and bring good to the world including to those
who seek only to destroy. I wish I could say the same for the
Arab child. Too often the latter is seen as a potential human
bomb to blow up those who simply want a small slice of the same
rights Arabs demand so much of for themselves. Arafat loved to
call the Arab mother his best weapon.
Sadly, for the Arab, there are too many Darfurs, Anfals, and
such--in both the past and the present--for this self-centered,
subjugating, intolerant behavior to be mere coincidence.
And, my dear Kurdish friends, both of our peoples deserve
something better.
Think of the potential in the days, months, and years which lie
ahead.
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