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The Kurds: A People in Search of Their Homeland [Hardcover]

Kevin Mckiernan (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0312325460 978-0312325466 March 7, 2006 First Edition
Kevin McKiernan has reported on the Kurds of Iraq, Iran, Turkey, and Syria since 1991, but he began his career as a journalist in the 1970s covering armed confrontations by Native Americans. In The Kurds: A People in Search of Their Homeland he draws parallels---using examples of culture, language, and genocide---between Native American history and the experience of the Kurds. With a population of more than twenty-five million, the Kurds are the largest ethnic group in the world without their own state, but until recently their long struggle for autonomy has received relatively little attention. Following World War I, the Kurds were promised a homeland, but the dream collapsed amid pressures of Turkish nationalism and the Allied realignment of the Middle East. For the remainder of the century, the story of the Kurds was one of almost constant conflict, as Middle East governments repressed Kurdish culture, language, and politics, destroyed thousands of Kurdish villages, "disappeared" and even gassed the Kurds---often as the West provided military assistance or simply looked away.

The Kurds are politically and ideologically diverse and were never a "nation" in the modern sense, but their struggles for self-determination have been repeatedly betrayed by outside powers. Yet in 1996, a Syrian Kurd would boldly inform the author that the Kurds "were a key to the stability of the Middle East"---prophetic words today, McKiernan writes, as the fallout from the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and other developments join to make Kurdish independence a likely, if not imminent, prospect.

McKiernan mixes Middle East history with personal narrative, as he comes face-to-face with Kurdish refugees in the mountains of Iraq and Iran, a hidden war in Turkey, guerrilla safe houses in Syria and Lebanon, backpacking trips behind army lines, scrapes with hostile soldiers, and, finally, the discovery that his personal translator during the Iraq war was also a spy for Saddam Hussein. His complex portrait of the Kurds includes interviews with Jalal Talabani, the first Kurdish president of Iraq, members of the legendary Barzani family, and Abdullah Ocalan, the now-imprisoned leader of the lengthy Kurdish uprising in Turkey. Interwoven throughout is the story of the author's charming and resilient driver who survived a terrorist attack in Iraq, and the American doctors who nursed him back to health.

McKiernan's coverage of the war in Iraq includes a visit to the camp of militants linked to al-Qaeda who were responsible for a series of suicide bombings in the Kurdish region, and he examines how U.S. preoccupation with toppling Saddam Hussein allowed many of these insurgents to escape to Iran, regroup, and later turn their jihad against the American occupation. McKiernan also examines the role of journalists in the run-up to the war as he tells how his Kurd-provided "scoop" about Iraqi scientists came to be used in U.S. claims that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. The world's largest ethnic group without a state of their own, the Kurds saw their historic lands divided by colonial powers early in the last century, and their recent history at the hands of the Turkish, Iranian, Iraqi and Syrian governments has been dismal. In this groundbreaking book, experienced war reporter McKiernan traces the path of the Kurds since 1975. It's a journey planted in realpolitik and signposted by poverty, genocide, terrorism, war and, finally, maybe, liberation. As McKiernan recounts his travels among the Kurds, a picture emerges of a diverse and disconnected people, riven by internal disputes even as they are set upon by rapacious foreign rulers. McKiernan's engrossing tale—told in the first person—brings to life a population that, despite its geopolitical importance, has rarely been covered so thoroughly for a general audience. Recounting in detail the situation of the Kurds in Turkey, Syria and Iraq (though not Iran), McKiernan sometimes presents overly simplistic explanations for complex regional trends and conflicts, but the sympathetic and compassionate treatment he gives his subjects makes up for many of his book's shortcomings. Finally, McKiernan asks American readers to examine their own responsibility for—and, indeed, culpability in—the mistreatment of the Kurds. (Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

Praise for The Kurds

"Kevin McKiernan's astonishing book is investigative journalism at its best. He lays bare the open secret of Kurdish genocide that fuses past to present, the Then to Now. His storytellers offer us an oral history that reveals the sources of all genocide. It is as contemporary and prophetic as tomorrow's news."
---Studs Terkel

"This searing record of many decades of 'secret horror,' of scandalous betrayal, and willful silence could not be more timely or important. Written from intimate knowledge and rich personal experience in war and peace, laced with sympathy and understanding, this remarkable memoir-history is at once painful and inspiring. It provides incomparable insight into the suffering and courage and undying hopes of people who have suffered far too much, not least at our hands."
---Noam Chomsky

"Kevin McKiernan demonstrates what hard work, insight, and familiarity can produce---a wholly refreshing and informative piece of journalism. His countless days and nights in Kurdistan provide a window on an immensely complex and important society, not merely its renowned tragedies and betrayals, but its vibrancy and potential. This may be the best work on the Kurdish people in Iraq that has ever been written. A must read."
---John Tirman, executive director, MIT Center for International Studies, author of Spoils of War: The Human Cost of America's Arms Trade

"Kevin McKiernan turns an unblinking eye on the Kurds, warts and all, and presents vivid accounts of some of their lives. He also tells us much about the life of a journalist committed to tell his reader truths obtained at great cost to himself."
---E. Roger Owen, the A. J. Meyer Professor of Middle East History at Harvard


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Press; First Edition edition (March 7, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312325460
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312325466
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #329,841 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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17 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the truth and the courage to talk about it, April 3, 2006
This review is from: The Kurds: A People in Search of Their Homeland (Hardcover)
this book deserves kudos and nothing else. the fact is, mckiernan has spent several decades researching the kurds' story "in the field" inside turkey and he has had the courage to write about the truth, an unsettling truth for those of us who honor human and cultural rights. do not believe the turkish government and military forces, and what is said for example in the review by oki oki on this book. that is all sheer propaganda, exactly what the usa and turkey want the world to believe. i encourage all to read this book and think about it profoundly. it speaks the truth.
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6 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Kurds: A People in Search of Their Homeland., May 7, 2007
This review is from: The Kurds: A People in Search of Their Homeland (Hardcover)
In The Kurds, journalist and filmmaker McKiernan offers a gripping tale of travel among the Kurds of northern Iraq, Turkey, and, briefly, Iran. Based on trips taken over fifteen years, his anecdotes give depth and perspective to Kurdish society. He augments his narrative with historical background. In describing the origins of the Kurds, for example, he relays not only the local Kurdish explanation that they are descended from the Medean Empire (seventh century B.C.E.) but also the scholarly debate which pours cold water on that myth.

McKiernan's tale begins in Iran where he headed at the behest of a nongovernmental organization to assist Iraqi Kurdish refugees fleeing the 1991 uprising. He relates a midnight interrogation by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards while the hotel manager, "a Kurd in a police state," looked on, "a look of embarrassment on his face." Over the next chapters and years, McKiernan shuttles between Iraq and Turkey where he meets local Kurds, as well as officials and others. Importantly, he traces the evolution of the Kurdish issue in Washington, recalling how in 1992, Kurdish officials such as Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) leader Jalal Talabani--Iraq's current president--had difficulty getting meetings at the State Department.

It is easy to romanticize the Kurds - the perennial underdogs who have overcome great odds - and too many journalists do so. But McKiernan does not, nor does he whitewash Kurdish history in Iraq. He addresses the 1994-97 internecine civil war in which Talabani and his rival, Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) president Masoud Barzani, sent each other's supporters to mass graves. He also describes the KDP obsession with spying upon and controlling foreign press and visitors.

Such balance, however, does not extend to the Turkish Kurds. McKiernan's account oozes with antipathy toward Turkey. He wrongly calls Kurds "second class citizens" in Turkey, ignoring that presidents, foreign ministers, and scores of parliamentarians have been Kurdish. Lack of education and urban-rural divide better explain the social differences in Turkey than ethnicity. Too often McKiernan uncritically accepts the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) narrative, though many Kurds consider it a terrorist group.
The second half of The Kurds discusses the 2003 Iraq war. McKiernan captures the atmosphere of anxiety that [...] might again launch chemical weapons against the Iraqi Kurds. His provides a gripping account of the [...] attempt on PUK prime minister Barham Salih. He describes how Iraqi Kurds would sell stories about weapons of mass destruction (WMD) to U.S. reporters willing to pay for them. This raises an important but unaddressed question: how much of what entered U.S. news accounts originated with Kurdish political parties?

McKiernan's writing is eloquent, but uneven analysis weakens his narrative. That U.S. government officials cite the open press in speeches should not lead to the conclusion that they derive their information from newspaper stories. Conspiracy theories lace his account, such as the silly idea that the Pentagon hid the death of U.S. servicemen during the 2003 war. While a frequent theme of Baathist propaganda, such cover-ups are impossible given soldiers' parents, wives, and children, as well as the U.S. government's pension system. It is unclear how representative McKiernan's encounters are, or whether he reinterprets or revises observations in order to appear more astute. He appears to exaggerate Kurdish-Shi'ite distrust. Analogies to American Indians and false predictions of civil war cheapen what is ultimately a good read but an uneven account of an important time and region.

Michael Rubin
Middle East Quarterly
Summer 2007
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13 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars It was for real, March 26, 2006
By 
OKi "OKi" (United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Kurds: A People in Search of Their Homeland (Hardcover)
I always wondered if the Turkish Army really burned Kurdish villages and killed innocent Kurdish people. Many of my friends in college told me that it was for real and that they "heard" a "real" story from one of their friends. Then I joined the Turkish Army and became a team commander leading an infantry commando team in the heart of the region. I visited more than 100 Kurdish villages only to help the Kurdish people there giving them clothes, trees, and food. I took injured Kurdish men and women to a Military Hospital after they got shot by the PKK militants. Then I always wondered why in the US people say that the Turkish Army kills Kurdish people and burns Kurdish villages. The answer I came up with was they "heard" it from one of their friends and it was for "real".

Even though Kevin spent a lot of time with the terrorist organization PKK, his observations in my opinion were made based on what some of his terrorist friends told him - not based on what he actually saw there. It is very unfortunate that Kevin misrepresented the situation in Turkey in his book and blamed the Turkish Army relentlessy. If you read the book and if you have any doubts about what you read, please go to the region and see what is happening with your own eyes. I would highly recommend that you go to these Kurdish villages and talk to the people there. Talking to people that belong to the PKK or any other terrorist organization won't reveal the reality.

I wish that Kevin actually spent some time with the Turkish Army (instead of a terrorist organization that has killed both Turkish and Kurdish people) to see the truth. I am sure that he couldn't write this book and make any of his money. Who knows, maybe his primary reasons for telling unreal stories were to make people buy this book.

Read the book, but also do some research and read more reliable articles (on US and Turkish government websites) to find out what the truth is. As far as I saw (with my own eyes), the Turkish Army does not harm any innocent Kurdish civilians.

Here is the truth:
http://pkk.ataturk.org/whatispkk.shtml
http://pkk.ataturk.org/pictures.shtml (Viewer discretion is advised) Please be aware that some pictures are extremely graphic. These pictures show how barbaric this (or any) terrorist organization can be. They were all Kurdish people.

The PKK has killed more than 5,000 innocent Kurdish civilians in the region. They killed more than 100 teachers, 120 goveners, thousands of soldiers, imams, nurses, doctors, and even animals (sheep and cows) just to prevent the region from becoming stable both economically as well as socially. They burned down schools, destroyed bridges, construction equipment, and threathened government employees that they would be killed if they kept working for the government. They killed two high ranking soldiers just today and bombed a religous school. This is not fighting for your rights. This is called terrorism and it is very real.

I hope that the readers of this book will find out what the truth really is by doing some more research.

Regards,
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
triple canopy, direct relief, secret nation, poison lab, village guards
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Saddam Hussein, Iraqi Kurds, Iraqi Kurdistan, Middle East, Gulf War, Santa Barbara, Kaka Hama, Barham Salih, Turkish Kurds, United Nations, Jalal Talabani, Massoud Barzani, Land Cruiser, World War, State Department, New York, Mullah Mustafa Barzani, Black Hawk, Special Forces, White House, Abu Ghraib, Ashti Hotel, Tigris River, President Bush
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