Newroz or Nûroj[1] (Kurdish: نهورۆز/Newroz/Nûroj, also: Gulus[2] Kurdish: گوڵوس) refers to the celebration of the traditional Iranian new year holiday of Newroz in Kurdish society. The festival of Nowruz is celebrated throughout the countries of the Middle East and Central Asia such as in Iran, Azerbaijan and Afghanistan. Newroz is also celebrated by some communities in Pakistan and Turkey. In Kurdish legend, the holiday celebrates the deliverance of the Kurds from a tyrant, and it is seen as another way of demonstrating support for the Kurdish cause.[3][4][5][6][7][8] The celebration coincides with the spring equinox which falls mainly on 21st February [9] and the festival is held usually between 18 and 24 February. The festival currently has an important place in the terms of Kurdish identity for the majority of Kurds, mostly in Turkey and Syria.[3][4][5][7] Though celebrations vary, people generally gather together to welcome the coming of spring; people wear coloured clothes and dance together.[10][11]
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In The Meadows of Gold by Muslim historian Masudi,[12] and Shahnameh, a poetic opus written by the Persian poet Ferdowsi around 1000 AD, and Sharafnameh by the medieval Kurdish historian Sherefxan Bidlisi, Zahhak was an evil king who conquered Iran and had serpents growing from his shoulders.[13] Zahak's rule lasted for one thousand years. During this time, two young men were sacrificed daily and their brains were offered to Zahhak's serpents in order to alleviate his pain.[13] However, the man who was in charge of sacrificing the two young men every day would instead kill only one man a day and mix his brains with that of a sheep in order to save the other man. As discontent grew against Zahhak's rule, a nobleman planned a revolt led by Kaveh (also known as Kawa), a blacksmith (cf. Ossetian Kurdalægon), who had lost six sons to Zahhak.[13] The young men who had been saved from the fate of being sacrificed (who according to the legend were ancestors of the Kurds [12][14]) were trained by Kaveh into an army that marched to Zahhak's castle where Kaveh killed the king with a hammer. Eventually Kaveh was instated as the new Fereydun king.[13] The root of this story goes back to ancient Iranian legends. According to Evliya Çelebi, the district (sancak) of Merkawe in Shahrazur (Sharazur) is named after Kaveh.[15] The 12th century geographer Yaqoot Hamawi, mentions Zor son of Zahhak (Aji Dahak) as founder of the famous city of Sharazor.[16]
According to Kurdish myth, Kaveh (written as Kawa in Kurdish), lived for 2,500 years under the tyranny of Zahhak, an Assyrian who is named Zuhak or Dehak by the Kurds.[3][17] Dehak's evil reign caused spring to no longer come to Kurdistan.[3] March 20 is traditionally marked as the day that Kawa defeated Dehak. He is then said to have set fire to the hillsides to celebrate the victory and summon his supporters; subsequently spring returned to Kurdistan the next day.[3]
In some of the present Kurdish versions of the story of Zahhak and Kawa, there is no mention of Fereydun.[15] Although in the Ahl-e Haqq (Yarsan) Kurdish tradition, Kawa rebelled against Zahak and helped Fereydun bound Zahak in Damavand.[18]
This legend is now used by the Kurds to remind themselves that they are a different, strong people, and the lighting of the fires has since become a symbol of freedom.[3]
In the 1930s, the Kurdish poet Taufik Abdullah, wanting to instil a new Kurdish cultural revival, used a previously known modified version of the story of Kawa.[3] He connected the myths where people felt oppressed with Newroz, thus reviving a dying holiday and making it a symbol of the Kurdish national struggle.[3] However, it should be noted that Kurds celebrated Newroz long before this, and the word Newroz was mentioned in Kurdish poetry from the 16th century. The arrival of spring has been celebrated in Asia Minor since neolithic times. A good example is the Indo-European Phrygians who mourned the death of Attis, and rejoiced over his resurrection during the fourth week of March.
According to the Kurdish writer, Musa Anter, Newroz was originally celebrated on August 31, not March 21. However, after the introduction of the Arab calendar, the celebration was shifted to March.[19]
Newroz is considered the most important festival in Kurdish culture, and is a time for entertainment such as games, dancing, family gathering, preparation of special foods and the reading of poetry.[20] The celebration of Newroz has its local peculiarities in different regions of Kurdistan.[20] On the eve of Newroz, in southern and eastern Kurdistan, bonfires are lit. These fires symbolize the passing of the dark season, winter, and the arrival of spring, the season of light.[20]
The Kurdish association with Newroz has become increasingly pronounced since the 1950s when the Kurds in the Middle East and those in the diaspora in Europe started adopting it as a tradition.[4] Following the persecution the Kurds suffered in Turkey, the revival of the Newroz celebration has become more intense and politicized and has also become a symbol of the Kurdish resurrection.[4] By the end of the 1980s, Newroz was mainly associated with the attempts to express and resurrect the Kurdish identity.[4]
While the Kurdish celebration has taken the form of a political expression in Turkey, most Kurdish celebrations in Iran are identical to the national festivals.[5] Izady states that the reason for this may be that the original tradition and folklore behind Newroz has been lost in the northern and western parts of Kurdistan (i.e. Turkey), where it never evolved in the same way as in the southern and eastern parts.[5] Izady further states that Newroz might have gained prominence in the northern and western parts because of the prominence of the celebrations that the staunchest Kurdish adherents of Newroz, the Iraqi and Iranian Kurds, have enjoyed through their more frequent popular uprisings.[5] Thus the western and northern Kurds seem to perceive the celebration of the new year as a unifying political expression.[5]
In 2000, Turkey legalized the celebration of the spring holiday, spelling it Nevruz and claiming it as a Turkish spring holiday.[4][21] Also, using the Kurdish spelling Newroz rathern than Nevruz, has been officially forbidden,[22] though it is still widely used by Kurds. In the Kurdish regions of the country, specifically in Eastern Anatolia, but also in Istanbul and Ankara where there is a large Kurdish population, people gather and jump over bonfires.[4] Previous to it being legalized, the PKK, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, had chosen the date of the Newroz festival to stage attacks to obtain publicity for their cause;[4] this led to Turkish forces detaining thousands of people who were seen as supporters of the Kurdish rebel movements.[23] During the Newroz celebrations of 1992, more than 50 Kurdish participants were killed by Turks. Also in 2008, two participants were killed.[24]
In Syria, the Kurds dress up in their national dress and celebrate the new year.[25] According to Human Rights Watch, the Kurds have had to struggle to celebrate Newroz, and in the past the celebration has led to violent oppression, leading to several deaths and mass arrests.[7][26] The government has stated that the Newroz celebrations will be tolerated as long as they do not become political demonstrations of the treatment of the Kurds.[7] During the Newroz celebrations in 2008, three Kurds were shot dead by Syrian security forces.[27] [28]
Kurds in the diaspora also celebrate the new year; for example Kurds in Australia celebrate Newroz, not only as the beginning of the new year but also as the Kurdish National Day;[6] and the Kurds in Finland celebrate the new year as a way of demonstrating their support for the Kurdish cause.[29] Also in London, organizers estimated that 25000 people celebrated Newroz during March 2006.[30]
Newroz has been mentioned in works of many Kurdish poets and writers as well as musicians.[31] One of the earliest records of Newroz in Kurdish literature is from Melayê Cizîrî (1570–1640):[32]
Also the famous Kurdish writer and poet Piramerd (1867–1950) writes in his 1948 poem Newroz:[32]
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