The Abolition of the Caliphate, Secularization and Kurdish Nationalism

Martin van Bruinessen · 2024

The abolition of the caliphate and closure of the medreses in 1924 amounted to a significant change in the relations between large segments of Kurdish society and the state.

Type:
Book Chapter
Author:
Martin van Bruinessen
Published:
2024
Publisher:
Routledge

The abolition of the caliphate and closure of the medreses in 1924 amounted to a significant change in the relations between large segments of Kurdish society and the state. The Ottoman caliphate had integrated all Muslims of the Empire under a single umbrella, irrespective of language or tribal organization. Especially Sultan Abdulhamid II had made great efforts to reach out to the Arab, Kurdish and Albanian tribes of the Empire’s peripheral zones and act as their patron and protector. Traditional medrese education had performed a similar integrative function, allowing the use of vernacular languages as the medium of instruction and oral communication although the core curriculum consisted of texts in Arabic. Graduates of Kurdish medreses constituted a local intellectual elite, literate in Arabic and Kurdish and with some knowledge of Persian and Ottoman Turkish, embedded in wide-ranging networks of learning that included Mekka’s Masjid al-Haram and Cairo’s Azhar as centres of authority. The abolition of the caliphate destroyed the last institutional link uniting Kurds and Turks, not long after Mustafa Kemal had stopped mentioning the Kurds explicitly as a component of the national fabric. The law on unification of education threatened to erase the culture of Islamic learning and its intellectual networks as well as the cultivation of Kurdish literacy. Combined, these two secularizing measures raised grave questions of identity and legitimate authority.

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What is "The Abolition of the Caliphate, Secularization and Kurdish Nationalism" about?
The abolition of the caliphate and closure of the medreses in 1924 amounted to a significant change in the relations between large segments of Kurdish society and the state.
Who wrote "The Abolition of the Caliphate, Secularization and Kurdish Nationalism"?
Martin van Bruinessen