





yes my friend i know what also happend after the second world war with the kurdish people. dont think i just have information about my own nation that would be wrong you have always to see bouth sites and that i always do.
but there are some things if you read them of the genozid you get mad you cant stop the armenian and assyrian at the time of genozid have been killed like you kill a sheep our woman have been abused and our children make to muslims. there are like 3-5 millon assyrian muslims in turkey living.
to the kurdish people that have been happend in this centery with you i know that and i am very sory for every innocent killed person that does heart my hart.
you know we are christians and we handle after the words of jesus forgive and pray for your enemy. but that is also sometimes hard to make
but i wish a better future where we have on a map a kurdistan and an assyrian and for sure more land for armenian.















In 1988 when Armenia became involved in the issue of the Karabagh and its independence from Azerbaijan, Azeris under duress left the new state. Thereafter the single remaining obstacle to the creation of a homogenous Armenia was the presence on Armenian soil of about 60,000 Yezidi and Muslim Kurds. In an effort to deal with the problem, Armenian nationalists initially set these two groups of Kurds against each other. Newspapers reported that Yezidi Kurds were not Kurds; but a completely distinct people. This brought loud protests from Kurdish intellectuals, among them S. Kotsyoy, candidate in Law Sciences, who made these statements whic-h appeared in the newspaper, Voice of Kurds: "Whether deliberately or not, actions in Armenia are designed to set Yezidi Kurds against Muslim Kurds. Despite this, Yezidis consider themselves Kurds and one must take that sentiment into account...During the 1989 census, suddenly the Yezidis were discovered, as if they were a people formerly unknown. The word 'Yezidi' was used to qualify the nationality of many Yezidi Kurds, although the government refused to change their passports. This of course causes many international difficulties. Almost all Yezidis and their intelligentsia consider themselves Kurds and reject the artificial division of the nation. I raised the issue of the unfair separation of Yezidis from the Kurdish tree because it is a total absurdity."



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