The Kurds - Youtube Clips from a honest point of few

Rumtaya

Active member
Hey Guys, I was kind of bored and found these two clips.

Just check it out, quit interesting. It seems to be done by a "honest kurd" who takes up with a kurdish "professor" Izady who has written a book "The Kurds" where he claims that almost every nation or people that live on the ground of what some might call "kurdistan" today as ancient kurds. However this Guy conters against those claims and writes even that there are probably any political agendas behind it. It does also include some bullshit as always. Still we got a Kurd admitting some kurdish fabricated lies. (Probably making some other new once lol, but at least stopping this many claims everyone and everything is kurdish)

Anyway just have a look, its kind of easy made with alot of pictures, but still interesting.

Part one

[youtube]b7Rlbmy5qfU[/youtube]

Part two

[youtube]I7RRchCDMyA[/youtube]
 
You want an honest opinion? I think the video is a joke historically, he's comparing costumes and dresses to connect Kurds to Europeans, that's pretty darn credible :lol:
 
Tambur said:
You want an honest opinion? I think the video is a joke historically, he's comparing costumes and dresses to connect Kurds to Europeans, that's pretty darn credible :lol:

Haha I know man. Actually he proves what we are saying in one sense.. Kurds are a mix from people who came to northern mesopotamia and asia minor :D. he just puts it in another way. The good thing was that at least there seems to be one kurd who says that this professor izady is a bullshiter (although talking himsel1f bullshit) :D....

 
I honestly don't even think the Kurds come from Medes, I mean I understand that their language probably comes from Northwest Iranian groups (Medes, Parthians, etc), but the name "Kurd" existed a very long time ago around the same time as some of these groups.

They were mentioned as early as the 4th century BC by the Greeks, and their homeland seems to be the mountains of eastern Anatolia and stretching all the way to the Zagros, if we go by this then they very likely do have Caucasian roots, they were probably Caucasian tribes of these regions that were Iranianized, probably a lot similar to us, they were Caucasians of eastern Anatolia while we were Caucasians of North Mesopotamia, they ended up mixing and adopting Iranian language/culture while we mixed and adopted the Semitic language/culture.
 
Tambur said:
I honestly don't even think the Kurds come from Medes, I mean I understand that their language probably comes from Northwest Iranian groups (Medes, Parthians, etc), but the name "Kurd" existed a very long time ago around the same time as some of these groups.

They were mentioned as early as the 4th century BC by the Greeks, and their homeland seems to be the mountains of eastern Anatolia and stretching all the way to the Zagros, if we go by this then they very likely do have Caucasian roots, they were probably Caucasian tribes of these regions that were Iranianized, probably a lot similar to us, they were Caucasians of eastern Anatolia while we were Caucasians of North Mesopotamia, they ended up mixing and adopting Iranian language/culture while we mixed and adopted the Semitic language/culture.

Probably, a wide scaled dna test would give probably an answer to this. Btw. isnt there any dna test (new and update) done on the Kurds? I am sure they would have alot of diffrent types and would not show anykind of homogenousity within the people that call themselves "Kurds".

btw. I once was readin on an germny speaking dna website, where a Kurd send in his samples. The Result for him was that he is of "celtic" origins. Thus some celitcs that moved somewhen into east anatolia and assimliated there with the local population.

maybe one can split up the kurds. Like those that live between urmia and khabour are more likly to be close to us or armenians. Whereas those living in suleiymaniyah and those areas on the east (westiran, south of urmia) are more likly to be a diffrent group. ...

 
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