Bibliotheek Bibliotheek
Zoek

Kurdipedia is de omvangrijkste Koerdische informatiebron!


Search Options





Geavanceerd zoeken      Toetsenbord


Zoek
Geavanceerd zoeken
Bibliotheek
Koerdische namen
Chronologie van de gebeurtenissen
Bronnen
Geopende items
Mijn verzamelingen
Activiteiten
Hulp bij het zoeken?
Publikatie
Video
Classificaties
Willekeurig artikel!
Verzenden
Stuur een artikel
Afbeelding verzenden
Survey
Uw mening
Contact
Wat voor informatie hebben wij nodig!
Standaarden
Algemene voorwaarden
Item Kwaliteit
Gereedschap
Over
Kurdipedia Archivists
Artikelen over ons!
Integreer Kurdipedia in uw website
Toevoegen / Verwijderen Email
Bezoekers statistieken
Item statistieken
Converteren van fonts
Converteren van kalenders
Spellingscontrole
Talen en dialecten van de paginas
Toetsenbord
Handige links
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
Talen
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Mijn account
Aanmelden
Lidmaatschap!
Wachtwoord vergeten!
Zoek Verzenden Gereedschap Talen Mijn account
Geavanceerd zoeken
Bibliotheek
Koerdische namen
Chronologie van de gebeurtenissen
Bronnen
Geopende items
Mijn verzamelingen
Activiteiten
Hulp bij het zoeken?
Publikatie
Video
Classificaties
Willekeurig artikel!
Stuur een artikel
Afbeelding verzenden
Survey
Uw mening
Contact
Wat voor informatie hebben wij nodig!
Standaarden
Algemene voorwaarden
Item Kwaliteit
Over
Kurdipedia Archivists
Artikelen over ons!
Integreer Kurdipedia in uw website
Toevoegen / Verwijderen Email
Bezoekers statistieken
Item statistieken
Converteren van fonts
Converteren van kalenders
Spellingscontrole
Talen en dialecten van de paginas
Toetsenbord
Handige links
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Aanmelden
Lidmaatschap!
Wachtwoord vergeten!
        
 kurdipedia.org 2008 - 2024
 Over
 Willekeurig artikel!
 Algemene voorwaarden
 Kurdipedia Archivists
 Uw mening
 Mijn verzamelingen
 Chronologie van de gebeurtenissen
 Activiteiten - Kurdipedia
 Help
Nieuwe item
Bibliotheek
Classificatie Van de Koerdische Muziek
04-08-2022
بەناز جۆڵا
Bibliotheek
GEOGRAFI OM KURDISTAN
08-11-2018
زریان سەرچناری
Biografie
Venus Faiq
15-10-2018
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Bibliotheek
Het pad van de gele slippers
07-10-2018
زریان سەرچناری
Bibliotheek
De ıraakse Anfal - Campagne tegen de Koerden Feiten en nasleep (1988 - )
08-11-2016
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Biografie
Shwan Rashid Ahmad Gaffaf
23-10-2016
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Biografie
Shene Baban
09-03-2018
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Bibliotheek
Oorlog en Vrede in Koerdistan
29-07-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Bibliotheek
Poëzie uit Koerdistan
16-09-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Bibliotheek
Koerdistan
22-04-2015
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Statistiek
Artikelen 517,421
Fotos 105,714
Boeken 19,160
Gerelateerde bestanden 96,493
Video 1,307
Plaatsen
Mardin
Bewijsstukken
Oproep aan onze politici: d...
Bibliotheek
De ıraakse Anfal - Campagne...
Bibliotheek
21 STRALEN
Bibliotheek
Classificatie Van de Koerdi...
The Kurdish Voice of Radio Yerevan
Kurdipedia is geen rechtbank, het bereidt gegevens voor voor onderzoek en feitenonderzoek.
Groep: Artikkelen | Artikel taal: English
Share
Facebook0
Twitter0
Telegram0
LinkedIn0
WhatsApp0
Viber0
SMS0
Facebook Messenger0
E-Mail0
Copy Link0
Warderen
Uitstekend
Heel goed
Gemiddeld
Armoedig
Slecht
Toevoegen aan mijn verzameling
Schrijf uw commentaar over dit item!
Aanpassingen
Metadata
RSS
Zoek in Google voor een afbeeldingen voor het geselecteerde item!
Zoek in Google voor het geselecteerde item!
کوردیی ناوەڕاست0
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû0
عربي0
فارسی0
Türkçe0
עברית0
Deutsch0
Español0
Française0
Italiano0
Nederlands0
Svenska0
Ελληνική0
Azərbaycanca0
Fins0
Norsk0
Pусский0
Հայերեն0
中国的0
日本人0

The Kurdish Voice of Radio Yerevan

The Kurdish Voice of Radio Yerevan
Gayane Ghazaryan
Tören, kemal ve alevi bilgisi
Ve sonradan kızıl ve küçüksün diyordu Erivan radyosunda bir şarkı “tu sor î û biçûkî”
– Hüseyin Kaytan
(Translation: Later, a song on Yerevan Radio was saying, “You are small and red.”)
Public Radio of Yerevan, known as Radyoya Erîvané or Erivan Radyosu* beyond the Armenian-Turkish border, has left a mark in the memories of Kurdish poet and guerilla Hüseyin Kaytan and thousands of Kurds across the Middle East, Europe and the former Soviet republics. Throughout the years when the Kurdish language and culture were banned in Turkey, Radio Yerevan served as a bridge between the Kurdish people and their culture. People who were deprived of the right to study their native language got an opportunity to hear it on the radio as well as explore the many layers of Kurdish culture, especially music. According to Artur Ispiryan, the head of the archival department, there are over 10,000 recordings of Kurdish folk songs and theatrical plays in the archives of Public Radio.
The first broadcasts of Kurdish programs on Radio Yerevan began in the 1930s but were shut down in 1937 as a result of the Great Purge under Stalin’s rule. However, the Khruschev era marked the reopening of Kurdish programs when in 1955, Casim Celil, the broadcast director, took on the responsibility of producing the programs. The programs were broadcast on the radio three times a week for 15 minutes per day.
Director Hamo Beknazaryan’s film “Zarê” is considered the first film about the Kurds. Shot in 1926, the film portrayed the daily life of Kurds living in the villages of Armenia. “Zarê” was originally a silent film, however in the 1970s sound was added. Casimê Celîl and his daughter, musician Cemîla Celîl, contributed to the creation of the film’s new version, adding songs recorded for the Kurdish programs of Public Radio.
Although the Department of Kurdish Programs at Yerevan Radio didn’t face any technical difficulties or challenges during the Soviet years, the topics covered by the programs were directly regulated by the Communist Party and Moscow. It was prohibited to talk about nationalism, politics and Kurdish unity. Instead, the programs focused on culture, broadcasting songs and radio plays. However, there were some restrictions with music as well.
Things began to gradually change when on April 1, 1961, Radio Yerevan started to broadcast Kurdish programs daily, for 1.5 hours at a time. That’s when the broadcasts crossed Armenia’s borders reaching Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Iran as well as several countries within the Soviet Union.
When Halil Muradov took over the position of broadcast director, he was in constant touch with Kurdish communities and received letters and phone calls from Kurds in the Soviet Union as well as the Middle East. As the number of listeners around the world grew, Muradov announced a competition of radio hosts for the new programs. Out of 26 applicants, they selected two male and two female hosts: Sewaza Abdo, Eznifi Resid, Keremi Seyyad and Sidar Emin.
In the early 1990s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Armenia faced social and economic challenges that directly affected the broadcasts of the Kurdish programs as the government wasn’t able to finance the radio. With increasing unemployment in the country, almost the entire staff of the Kurdish department, 13 people, left the country. The only one who stayed was Keremi Seyyad, who worked for the radio for 55 years. “There was no electricity, no transportation and it was terribly cold in the winter. But my father would walk 8 km from our home to Public Radio with the hope that things would get better,” Seyyad’s son explains. “He knew that if the Kurdish department was shut down, it would never open again.” Keremi Seyyad’s son, Tital Seyyad Choloyan, is currently the head of the Kurdish department of Public Radio.
By building a bridge between people and their culture, the Public Radio of Armenia also contributed toward establishing better relations between the Armenian and Kurdish people. “A few years ago, when Osman Baydemir, the former mayor of Diyarbakır was in Yerevan, he visited Public Radio. At his meeting with the staff of Kurdish programs, he noted that he had two mothers; one was his biological mother, and the second was Radio Yerevan, as that’s where he learned his language and got to hear Kurdish songs when it was prohibited in Turkey,” said Tital Choloyan.
Memories about Radio Yerevan
Ahmet Kaya, 50, from Erzurum Province, Turkey, grew up facing much social and economic hardship. As a young boy, Kaya was deprived of the right to get an education in his native Kurdish. However, he remembers his childhood and adolescent years with nostalgia. With no textbooks in his native language and no electricity in the village, the only exposure to Kurdish, and one of his greatest joys was the radio. Radio Yerevan served as a medium through which Kaya explored Kurdish culture, especially music.
Artur Ispiryan, the head of the archival department, listening to one of the over 10,000 recordings of Kurdish folk songs and theatrical plays in the archives of Public Radio.

I listened to polyphonic Kurdish music for the first time on this radio. The song “Kerr u Kulik” was played over and over, and I was shocked. I was both proud and shocked. It was a testing, but it affected me a lot. Again, the instruments used in the music of this radio, especially reed flute, stick in all Kurds’ hearts. Now whenever I hear the reed flute of Egidê Cimo**, I attach my own roots to the roots of the tree of life.
Ahmet Kaya and his friends of the same generation share similar memories revolving around Radio Yerevan.
My father was an imam, and he has been related, attached to the Kurdistan case since his childhood and he was aware of world politics. For that reason, we were also aware of the struggle for freedom for Kurdistan. Therefore we, as the whole family, would like to know immediately what is going on about Kurds in whatever place. We used to listen to the Sound of Radio America, Radio Sofia, Radio Baghdad, BBC and especially Radio Yerevan systematically. At that time we saw Radio Yerevan and the radio of the south (Radio Baghdad) as our own. We would listen to the agenda of Kurdistan and the world in Turkish, Arabic and Kurdish but we enshrine Radio Yerevan in our heart because it was broadcasting in our language. We used to listen to Kurdish minstrels, dengbêj*** and Kurdish songs via these radio programs. When we were exiled to the Black Sea in 1984, these radio programs became our relatives, mates and friends. We understood loneliness and statelessness better there. Radios broadcasting in Kurdish smelled like our home. Later on, we grew up and thank goodness many Kurdish radio and television stations were established.
– Süheyla İnal
During the 1960s, there wasn’t anyone in Kurdistan who knew Turkish except for the men who had completed their compulsory military service. And they would speak a very half-baked Turkish. They spoke Turkish only inasmuch as was enough for basic communication. We were far away from the Turkish culture. We couldn’t find any pleasure in their songs, instruments or theatre plays. In the evenings, we would gather in the houses of notable people in our villages, sit before the radio and tune in to the Yerevan radio. Just as the English have “tea time,” we had our “Yerevan radio time.” Until the broadcast ended, our elders would scold anyone who made any noise: naughty kids, women who were touched by listening to the songs and moved to tears, and the sick who would cough too much…
Unfortunately, the news stories that were broadcast were too distant to our reality, lives and daily concerns. They would usually be about Armenia and the Soviet Union. If once a year a story about the Northern Kurds was broadcast, it would become the talk of the day among people and would spread. The generations before ours had seen the First World War, the forced migration. Due to the provocations of the Great Powers, a blinding nationalism, and the backwardness and ignorance of Kurds and Armenians, the two had killed a lot from one another. Especially during the forced migration, there was nobody left in the Kurdish villages of the Serhat region other than the old, the sick and the disabled. The killing of people caused the emergence of a great hatred in the hearts of Kurds against Armenians. The Armenians in the Russian army became the stick to beat the Young Turks, and they caused the deaths of many impeccable and innocent Kurds, who were killed with the intent of vengeance and died because of other Kurds that knew nothing of the national struggle.
As far as I am concerned the Yerevan radio made a great contribution to the closure of this wound. Thanks to this radio station, Armenians and Armenia started to appear much more likable to the Kurds than Ankara and [its] arrogant, powerful men. In terms of art, the instruments used in Yerevan radio were adopted in Kurdish music. The Serhat dialect of Kurdish became known, heard and recognized in the South too. To conclude, if today there is affinity among Kurds towards the Armenian people, the Yerevan radio played a great part in it. Other states, which spent billions of dollars for propaganda purposes failed to create the same impact on Kurds as the Yerevan radio.
– Mamoste Marûf
As we knew the air-time of Yerevan radio, everything felt like a burden on our shoulders as the air time approaches, we wanted to finish everything we were occupied with as soon as possible and get ready to listen to the radio. Since not every house had a radio, we either gathered at a house with a radio, or we put the radio on the windowsills so that everyone could hear it clearly. We were not really curious about the news; rather we were waiting for the news to be announced quickly so that we could listen to the songs. We were listening to the theatre plays, tales with great joy and this would be our agenda until next week. I think people who worked on the radio were not even conscious of this effect of the radio over us.
– Mehmet Kaya
I’d always cry every time I listened to a song on the radio. I did that as my heart was burning when I’d think of my father’s illness. It didn’t matter what the song was about. The fact that the song was in our language and mostly about painful events was enough for me to get emotional and start to cry.
– Fazile
——————————————
*Radyoya Erîvané (Kurdish), Erivan Radyosu (Turkish)
**Egîdê Cimo – born in 1932, Cimo was a musician of Kurdish origin, whose family migrated from Van to Armenia
***dengbêj – a Kurdish singer, bard
sources used in the articel
Agos newspaper.[1]
Dit item werd in het (English) geschreven, klik op het pictogram om het item te openen in de originele taal!
This item has been written in (English) language, click on icon to open the item in the original language!
Dit item is 130 keer bekeken
HashTag
Bronnen
[1] Website | English | evnreport.com 24-01-2019
Gekoppelde items: 2
Groep: Artikkelen
Artikel taal: English
Publication date: 24-01-2019 (5 Jaar)
Boek: Artistiek
Dialect: Engels
Provincie: Armenië
Publication Type: Born-digital
Soort document: Originele taal
Technical Metadata
Item Kwaliteit: 94%
94%
Toegevoegd door ( هەژار کامەلا ) op 13-01-2024
Dit artikel is beoordeeld en uitgegeven door ( زریان سەرچناری ) op 14-01-2024
Dit item is voor het laatst bijgewerkt door ( هەژار کامەلا ) op: 13-01-2024
URL
Dit item is volgens Kurdipedia's Standaarden nog niet afgerond en verder moet het herzien/aangepast worden!
Dit item is 130 keer bekeken
Attached files - Version
Type Version Toegevoed door
Bestaandsfoto 1.0.1103 KB 13-01-2024 هەژار کامەلاهـ.ک.
Kurdipedia is de omvangrijkste Koerdische informatiebron!
Bibliotheek
Oorlog en Vrede in Koerdistan
Bibliotheek
De ıraakse Anfal - Campagne tegen de Koerden Feiten en nasleep (1988 - )
Artikkelen
Turkse aanval in Syrië moet Koerden breken
Artikkelen
Ook in Iraaks Koerdistan volgt macht de lijn van het bloed
Biografie
Shwan Rashid Ahmad Gaffaf
Biografie
Araz Talib
Biografie
Shene Baban
Bibliotheek
Irakese vluchtelingen in Nederland
Artikkelen
Turkse grondtroepen trekken noordoosten van Syrië binnen
Afbeelding en tekst
Gevangene van het Turkse leger tijdens de Dersim opstand. (1938)
Bibliotheek
Classificatie Van de Koerdische Muziek
Bibliotheek
Werkbezoek Iraaks Koerdistan
Artikkelen
Sherefxane Bedlisi: vader van de geschiedenis
Afbeelding en tekst
Koerdische vrouwen aan de oever van de Kaspische Zee begin 20e eeuw

Actual
Plaatsen
Mardin
25-08-2012
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Mardin
Bewijsstukken
Oproep aan onze politici: doorbreek het stilzwijgen rond Afrin
23-03-2018
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Oproep aan onze politici: doorbreek het stilzwijgen rond Afrin
Bibliotheek
De ıraakse Anfal - Campagne tegen de Koerden Feiten en nasleep (1988 - )
08-11-2016
هاوڕێ باخەوان
De ıraakse Anfal - Campagne tegen de Koerden Feiten en nasleep (1988 - )
Bibliotheek
21 STRALEN
13-07-2020
ڕێکخراوی کوردیپێدیا
21 STRALEN
Bibliotheek
Classificatie Van de Koerdische Muziek
04-08-2022
بەناز جۆڵا
Classificatie Van de Koerdische Muziek
Nieuwe item
Bibliotheek
Classificatie Van de Koerdische Muziek
04-08-2022
بەناز جۆڵا
Bibliotheek
GEOGRAFI OM KURDISTAN
08-11-2018
زریان سەرچناری
Biografie
Venus Faiq
15-10-2018
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Bibliotheek
Het pad van de gele slippers
07-10-2018
زریان سەرچناری
Bibliotheek
De ıraakse Anfal - Campagne tegen de Koerden Feiten en nasleep (1988 - )
08-11-2016
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Biografie
Shwan Rashid Ahmad Gaffaf
23-10-2016
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Biografie
Shene Baban
09-03-2018
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Bibliotheek
Oorlog en Vrede in Koerdistan
29-07-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Bibliotheek
Poëzie uit Koerdistan
16-09-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Bibliotheek
Koerdistan
22-04-2015
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Statistiek
Artikelen 517,421
Fotos 105,714
Boeken 19,160
Gerelateerde bestanden 96,493
Video 1,307
Kurdipedia is de omvangrijkste Koerdische informatiebron!
Bibliotheek
Oorlog en Vrede in Koerdistan
Bibliotheek
De ıraakse Anfal - Campagne tegen de Koerden Feiten en nasleep (1988 - )
Artikkelen
Turkse aanval in Syrië moet Koerden breken
Artikkelen
Ook in Iraaks Koerdistan volgt macht de lijn van het bloed
Biografie
Shwan Rashid Ahmad Gaffaf
Biografie
Araz Talib
Biografie
Shene Baban
Bibliotheek
Irakese vluchtelingen in Nederland
Artikkelen
Turkse grondtroepen trekken noordoosten van Syrië binnen
Afbeelding en tekst
Gevangene van het Turkse leger tijdens de Dersim opstand. (1938)
Bibliotheek
Classificatie Van de Koerdische Muziek
Bibliotheek
Werkbezoek Iraaks Koerdistan
Artikkelen
Sherefxane Bedlisi: vader van de geschiedenis
Afbeelding en tekst
Koerdische vrouwen aan de oever van de Kaspische Zee begin 20e eeuw

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2024) version: 15.42
| Contact | CSS3 | HTML5

| Pagina wordt gegenereerd in: 0.329 seconde(n)!