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Seyid Riza

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Seyid Riza, (in Zazaki: Sey Rıza, in Kurmanji: "Seyîd Riza") was born in 1863 in the village Lirtik that is bound to the city Dersim. His father's name was Seyid Ibrahim from the Hesenan tribe.

He was a leader of the Zazas and a leader of the Kurdish movement in Turkey during the 1937-1938 Dersim Rebellion.

It has been suggested that this article be merged into Dersim Rebellion. (Discuss)

In explaining the reason for the Kurdish rebellion to the British foreign secretary Anthony Eden he said the following:

The government has tried to assimilate the Kurdish people for years, oppressing them, banning publications in Kurdish, persecuting those who speak Kurdish, forcibly deporting people from fertile parts of Kurdistan for uncultivated areas of Anatolia where many have perished. The prisons are full of non-combatants, intellectuals are shot, hanged or exiled to remote places. Three million Kurds, demand to live in freedom and peace in their own country.

He was captured on 5 September 1937 and was hanged.

References

  1. Altan Tan, Kürt sorunu, Timas Basim Ticaret San As, 2009, ISBN 9789752638846, p. 28.
  2. Celal Sayan, La construction de l'état national turc et le mouvement national kurde, 1918-1938, Volume 1, 2002, Presses universitaires du septentrion, p. 680.
  3. McDowall, David. A Modern History of the Kurds, page 208. I.B. Tauris, 2004.

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