World Congress of
KURDISH STUDIES
Irbil, 6-9 September 2006
Organized by the Kurdish Institute of Paris in partnership with
Salahadin University (Irbil) and with the support of the
Kurdistan Regional Government and of the
French Ministry for Foreign Affairs
Kurdish militias and the Ottoman state:
Implication for prsent-day conflict resolution
By Janet KLEIN (*)
Esteemed colleagues,
I am very honored at the invitation to join you in what I am sure will be an engaging, productive, and valuable conference. I am very excited to hear about what all of you work on, and to have this opportunity to learn from your scholarship and experiences, particularly at this critical moment in Kurdish history. As a historian I am especially pleased to be in the historic city of Hawler, which has been continuously inhabited for over 8000 years. I would also like to share with you some of the ideas I’ve been working through. I will focus primarily on my book manuscript, which is tentatively titled Power in the Periphery: Kurdish Militias and the Ottoman State, 1890-1914, which is an outgrowth of my Ph.D. thesis
I’ll begin with a curious piece of writing from the turn of the 20th century that helped to inspire this project
In December, 1900, Abdurrahman Bedir Khan took a moment, while composing a critique of the Hamidiye Light Cavalry in his journal, Kurdistan, to write the following:
…Before [Abdülhamid II] ascended the throne, the Kurds were knowledgeable and civilized people, having brotherly relations with Armenians and avoiding any kind of confrontation. Then what happened? Did [Kurdish] civilization and knowledge turn into barbarity, ignorance, and organized rebellion? Who else carries out the atrocities in Kurdistan but the members of the Hamidiye divisions, who are armed by the sultan and proud of being loyal to him. For example, there is Mustafa Pasha, the head of the Mîran tribe, within the borders of Diyarbekir [province]. He used to be a shepherd ten or fifteen years ago in his tribe, and was called ‘Misto the Bald’ [Misto Keçelo]. We do not know what he did to become a favorite of the sultan, but his talent in creating scandals appealed to the sultan, who thought that he would assist in shedding blood and hurting people. He made him a pasha and introduced him with the title of Commander of a Hamidiye division. Now imagine what such a man is capable of doing—a traitor whose own son has even become an enemy to him, and a person who has outraged his daughter-in-law. Would he not butcher the Armenians and pillage the Muslims?
This strange little piece initially attracted my attention while I was researching and writing my M.A. Thesis on Kurdish nationalism and the Kurdish-Ottoman ten years ago. At the time, I believed that it held clues as to some of the not-so-obvious elements in the story of early Kurdish nationalism. But years later this piece stayed with me, and I increasingly came to think that its significance extended beyond the story of Kurdish nationalism. At the same time, it brought me to acknowledge that there were a number of other elements in the history of Kurdish nationalism that could only be understood by gaining a better picture of power relations in Kurdish society in the late Ottoman period. After all, the history behind this piece is as much, if not more, about these power relations and about important social, economic, and political transformations underway in Kurdish society, than it is about nationalism itself
I set out to study the transformation of the local power structure in Ottoman Kurdistan at the turn of the 20th century. But this piece, and many other sources continually pointed, even if between the lines, to the centrality of the Hamidiye Light Cavalry in their story. Finding that there was only a handful of studies on this Kurdish tribal militia, and also finding that whatever had been written about the Hamidiye mostly drafted the topic into other, largely nationalist, narratives, I chose to write its history as the topic for my dissertation. The more research I conducted, the more the significance of the institution was affirmed to me, not only in and of itself, but also for the light it could shed on numerous facets of Kurdish, Ottoman, and even Armenian, history. I also came to believe that its content is relevant to scholars of other peoples as it adds to the literature on the complicated interplay of center-periphery relations and addresses themes that relate to the many layers of conflict, and indeed collaboration, that can emerge between state and regional actors and how these multiple threads might interact
This project began with this trek of mine through various sources, including the Kurdish-Ottoman press, which sparked the topic, as well as various archives, travel literature, missionary reports, and secondary sources
The story of the Hamidiye Light Cavalry, which I will tell you a little bit about today, also began with a journey—the voyage of select Kurdish chiefs and their retainers from the empire’s remote eastern regions to the capital to meet their sultan and caliph, Abdülhamid II. The chiefs had been chosen to gather their tribesmen into irregular cavalry regiments, which the chiefs themselves would head. The sultan named this organization, which would come to be widely regarded as one of his most prized projects, after himself—Hamidiye—to emphasize the personal relationship and bond of loyalty he wanted the Kurdish tribes to recognize not only to the empire, but to his person
The Hamidiye Light Cavalry was formed with a number of objectives in mind. The idea for the cavalry likely came from one of the sultan’s close advisors, Sakir Pasha, who had served in the Ottoman diplomatic service in Russia and who thought that a Cossack-like institution for the empire’s tribal peoples would help to address a number of issues the central Ottoman government viewed as being of primary importance with regard to the Russian and Iranian frontier districts and the peoples who lived there. In spite of the centralizing reforms aimed at bringing the region closer within the grasp of the central government, promoted throughout much of the nineteenth century, significant segments of the population remained quite beyond the state’s reach, not only in body, but also in spirit. This was the case not only for the mostly Kurdish mobile tribal population, whom the government was barely able to tax, let alone conscript, but also for the Armenian and Kurdish peasantry, for whom the state seemed largely redundant as they were already taxed by local notables and Kurdish aghas. There was the additional wariness of Russia’s designs on the region, as Russia had been steadily moving southwards with its eye on the eastern regions of the Ottoman Empire. For several decades, the Russians had formed relationships not only with the Armenians, whose blossoming nationalist movement Russia sought to advance for its own ends, but also with Kurdish tribal leaders as far in the interior of the Ottoman dominions as Dersim. Thus, while the ostensible aim of the new tribal cavalry formation was to increase the forces in existence along the frontier regions, which could serve in case of need against an invasion by Russia, the Hamidiye Light Cavalry was, as I have demonstrated in Chapter 1 of my manuscript, a much more manifold mission than this.
It was also to act as a check on this Armenian-Russian alliance and the slow but steady spread of Armenian nationalism in the eastern regions, and particularly against Armenian revolutionary activities, which although minimal in the years immediately preceding the formation of the irregular cavalry units, began to step up in pace around the time the Hamidiye was created, and which, in the following years, then, only reinforced this aspect of the militia’s raison d’etre.
I should pause for a moment to elaborate on this point, as it has been one of the most controversial in the literature on the Hamidiye. Armenian scholarship has generally presented the Hamidiye as being concrete evidence of a long-standing Ottoman policy to uproot and annihilate the Armenian population of the empire, particularly those who lived in historical Armenia and its environs. But proponents of this view have generally offered little evidence to support this claim, aside from citing the role of the Hamidiye in the massacres of Armenians that bloodied the region from 1894 to 1896. In other words, they are citing a post-facto event in order to assert what the agendas of the militia’s organizers were. I mapped the Hamidiye Regiments in order to assess this, and other claims. What I have found is that while the aim of the state at this point seems not to have been the annihilation of the Armenian population of the eastern provinces, the Hamidiye was certainly put together with the so-called Armenian conspiracy in mind. Most of the regiments were in areas where there were substantial Armenian populations, and perhaps more significantly, around points where Armenian revolutionaries were active or which they traversed as they smuggled men and weapons into the empire from across the borders. This is why, incidentally, although the initial plans for the Hamidiye also included Arab and Turkmen tribes, it was Kurdish tribes who formed the overwhelming bulk of these regiments. This is because they were the ones who lived along the threatened and fluid frontier, and they were the ones who lived near and amidst the perceived Armenian threat
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