Last modified: 2003-01-18 by ivan sache
Keywords: kurdistan | iran | iraq | sun | mahabad republic | komala | kurdistan democratic party of iran | star (red) | kurdish communist party |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
by courtesy of the CKPS
See also:
In 1944 the Communists were the most organised faction in
Kurdistan, and the Komala (Kurdish Communist Party) of Iran
adopted a plain red-white-green horizontal tricolour.
This flag was a deliberate reversal of the flag of
Iran. These Kurds were good Muslims who were
merely Communists of convenience and did not understand much
ideology. (Their password was "It is good to worship God."!)
The party emblem was a sun with jagged rays, surrounded by ears of
wheat (familiar to many Communist parties), a pen and a mountain in
the background.
T. F. Mills, 27 September 1997
The Komala was crushed in 1946, but revived clandestinely in Iran in 1969, with the following flag:
In 1941 Britain and the USSR partitioned Iran into two zones of control in order to prevent the country from entering the war on the side of Germany. In the Soviet zone, the Kurds of northwest Iran enjoyed de facto independence. At war's end, Teheran pressured the Soviets to leave which they did in December 1945. As they left, the Kurds formally proclaimed themselves independent in January 1946 with their capital at Mahabad. The government included many Kurds from Iraq, including Mustafa Barzani, the army commander. Their forces were Soviet equipped and uniformed, but they owed no ideological allegiance to the USSR. Their flag was the Komala tricolour plus a golden sun in the center.
Teheran gradually marshalled its forces, and when they were satisfied the Soviets would not intervene they crushed the Mahabad Republic in December 1946. The leaders were executed, but Barzani led the Iranian forces on a wild goose chase and eventually escaped to the Soviet Union. His escapades contributed much to Kurdish legend and nostalgia for independence. In 1946 he founded the Kurdish Democratic Party, Partiya Demokrata Kurdistane (PDK).
T. F. Mills, 27 September 1997
The sun has long been a traditional symbol of Kurdistan,
representing the "source of life and the light of the people". The
Mahabad Republic and its flag has been the inspiration for all
subsequent Kurdish nationalism.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI) still carries this
flag. Its leader Abdelrahman Ghassemlou was assassinated in 1989, and
I participated in the funeral procession in Paris where the Mahabad
flag was much in evidence, including a large one flying from the
hearse.
T. F. Mills, 27 September 1997