Talk:Jaladat Ali Badirkhan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

WikiProject Kurdistan This article is within the scope of the WikiProject Kurdistan, which aims to improve Wikipedia's coverage of Kurdistan-related topics. Please visit the project page if you would like to participate.

Happy editing!

B This article has been rated as B-Class on the project's quality scale.
High This article has been rated as high-importance on the project's importance scale.


Chinese character "Book" This article falls within the scope of WikiProject Writing systems, a WikiProject interested in improving the encyclopaedic coverage and content of articles relating to writing systems on Wikipedia. If you would like to help out, you are welcome to drop by the project page and/or leave a query at the project’s talk page.
??? This article has not yet been assigned a rating on the Project’s quality scale.
??? This article has not yet been assigned a rating on the Project’s importance scale.

_ _ This needs some sourcing: our article Republic of Kurdistan has "independence" declaration 1927 and defeat 1931. His bio seems to have him elected to a movement coordinating committee in '27, "involved" until the defeat, and then moving (from Beirut? from Agri?) to Iran, Iraq, & in 1930 to Syria. That puts the defeat no later than 1930, and unless he "moved to" these three countries rapidly enough to be described instead as merely "visiting" them, the "defeat" of the bio may be more than a year earlier than the "defeat" in the article on the movement.
_ _ What was the nature of the July 1951 "incident" that led to his death? Family dispute? Encounter with the authorities, or fellow Kurdish activists? Just a work place accident, that constitutes an "incident" only from the medical point of view?

He was involved in agriculture in Syria. In 1951, he simply fell in to a well and died. no disputes no authorities. Sometimes death can be very sudden and simple.Heja Helweda 03:25, 29 June 2006 (UTC)


_ _ Issues 24 thru 57 are 34 in number. Issued bimonthly, they would span 66 to 68 months, or upwards of 5.5 years. Jan '41 thru Dec '43 is 36 months. Clearly i misconstrued something!
--Jerzyt 09:26, 3 January 2006 (UTC)

Apparently it was bi-monthly in the first series in 1930s, but the second series (in 1940s) was monthly.Heja Helweda 03:32, 29 June 2006 (UTC)