Racist concepts

Demo In Erbil , capital of  Kurdish Regional Government

This article is about some concepts in Kurdish that are racist, their use is either ignorant or intentional. As an anarchist, I need to confront and reject those who use it for whatever purpose .

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Submitted by zaher on January 30, 2026

Racist concepts

Zaher Baher
28/01/2026

The attack by the new Syrian Arab Army, with the support of Turkish forces, on the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and the seizure of areas under their control caused many killings of SDF members and civilians as well. For the Syrian Arab Army, killing was not enough; they also mutilated the bodies.
In this attack, the remaining ISIS groups within the Syrian army reached a point where they captured SDF fighters, whether alive or dead, and treated them in a barbaric way. On several occasions, the body of a young female fighter in Aleppo, in the Kurdish neighbourhoods of Sheikh Maqsood and Ashrafiyah, was thrown from the third floor of a building. Another young male fighter was killed, after which his body was burned and the ashes were spread everywhere. In another incident, when they killed a young female fighter, they cut her beautiful hair and took it with them. These are only a few examples among many, and videos of these acts have been widely published on social media.

These brutal attacks by ISIS on the Kurdish people in Rojava and its forces, the SDF, on the one hand created a great deal of frustration among Kurds and demonstrated a form of Kurdish unity both abroad and in Kurdistan. At the same time, they created a wave of racism and chauvinism. Similarly, many journalists, intellectuals, and members and supporters of the PKK began to use and repeat racist concepts in their writing and in posts on Facebook. These include the following racist concepts: State of Turks, government of Turks, police of Turks, members of the National Intelligence Organization (MIT) of Turks, and gendarmerie of Turks.
All of the above concepts are racist, and many of those who use them are unaware of this or do not know the Kurdish language well. There is undoubtedly a very small minority who understand their meaning very well and use them according to their own interpretation.
In January 2016, I wrote a 12-page article about this racist language and the mistakes of the PKK. I also explained that this language is the language of the PKK, not of Rojava. The media in Rojava of Kurdistan does not speak, write, or promote these racist forms of language.
We also know that PKK leaders know very little, or nothing at all, about the Sorani Kurdish dialect. However, writers, intellectuals, and many Sorani dialect speakers and Facebook users may know the meaning of these concepts, yet they still use them, perhaps because PKK leaders or PKK media use this language and they follow them.

Why is the use of these concepts racist?

First, according to a former MP of the Peoples’ Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party), the proportion of Turks in Turkey is 7 percent. This figure may be incorrect, as some people estimate it to be between 40 and 50 percent. In any case, we know the history of Turkish society since the beginning of the Turkish state. Therefore, the state is not only the Turkish people or a state of Turks; in fact, it is a state of everyone who lives in Turkey. Many of these minorities voted for this government and helped create it.
Second, the majority of DEM Party members in parliament and government are Kurds, not Turks. If they are nothing and not part of parliament, then what are they doing there?

Third, we know that many people in high government positions are Kurds, such as Hakan Fidan, the forging secretary of Turkey. The official spokesman of the Justice and Development Party (AKP), Ömer Çelik, is also Kurdish, along with many others whom I do not need to name here. Erdoğan himself is not a Turk. Not only that, but none of the other three candidates who ran for president alongside Erdoğan were Turks.

Fourth, Turkish citizens of any nationality or minority, including Kurds, must perform compulsory military service. They are also employed in sensitive departments such as the police and intelligence agencies, or in service sectors like the courts, education, health, and sports. Many Kurds are among them. So, whether you like it or not, they serve the Turkish state.

Fifth: How do you know that the policeman, soldier, or member of MIT who was killed is a Turk? Have you seen their identity? Do you know their background? Have you looked into their life history?

Sixth: Are you not the ones who say that there are 20 million Kurds in Turkey? What about these 20 million, let us say 14 million of them still live in Turkey? Where do they get their money from, and to whom do they pay taxes? Who do they benefit from? From whom do they receive passports and identity cards? Whom do they serve as police, soldiers, or spies? Of course, they serve the state, and the state supports them in return.
So, as Kurds, you are part of these people and part of this establishment. Turks, Azeris, Arabs, and others living in Turkey have participated in and stabilized the government and the state. Therefore, it is not only Turks who are doing their duty, but every citizen in Turkey, all the communities that make up the Turkish nation. In other words, all support the Turkish state.

Seventh: When you call it the “state of Turks,” you are rejecting everyone from other ethnicities who serve in different parts of this state in Turkey, including yourself, as a Kurdish person. You deny your own existence there. How can there be a land without a nation, when we know that part of Turkey is called Kurdistan? If you believe that the government or state in Turkey is only the state of Turks, and that you are not part of this establishment or society in Turkey and do not belong to it, then why do you fight against it for your rights?

Eighth: If your answer to these points is that the Kurds have been made Turks there, then you are confirming and recognizing the constitution of the Turkish state, which says that there are no Kurds there.

Nine: What remains to be said is that most of us know the state is a tool of class and serves the ruling capitalist class and the elite, including Kurds. The state protects their interests and, at the same time, acts as an institution to suppress its opponents.

Of course, there are other points, but these are the main ones for me. Please stop using racist language. Learn Kurdish before you write articles, publish statements, or become a journalist. Otherwise, you are only sowing the seeds of racism, just as racist Turks and racist Arabs do against you.

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