Called Ayn Al-Arab and known to Kurdish settlers as Kobani. - TopicsExpress



          

Called Ayn Al-Arab and known to Kurdish settlers as Kobani. The Kurds living there today, are the descendants of the same Kurds who committed the genocide against the Christians on the promise that they could keep all Christian properties as the spoils of war. In other words, these very same Kurds are the descendants of the likes of ISIS. After killing Christians, they followed their paths of flight and settled among them, eventually outnumbering them and claiming their new home as being Kurdish from the beginning of time when so-called Kobani was only founded several decades ago by Armenians, NOT Kurds! This same history is true of the city of Qamishli, which was founded by Syrian Christian survivors of the genocide perpetrated at the hands of Kurdish militias and citizens who responding to a call for jihad against all Christian citizens massacred men, women, children and the elderly turning entire rivers red from the amount of blood they spilled, rounding up Christians and burning them alive, beheading men, raping women and taking children as slaves. This is the real history of the Kurds of Ayn Al-Arab and Qamishli, two towns founded by Christians fleeing the Kurds and ultimately colonized by Kurds fleeing their Turkish allies and masters who after promising them the spoils of war crushed Kurdish ambitions to turn historically Syrian lands and ancient Christian regions into a Kurdish homeland. Instead of wasting lives defending what they stole from others, Kurds should migrate beyond the Zagros to historically Kurdish lands instead of perpetuating the persecution that their ancestors inflicted on others as the foot soldiers and butchers of their 400 year long allies the Ottoman Turks. I suppose those who support the Kurdish claims to the ancient Syrian heartlands of Mesopotamia will tomorrow support recognition of the Islamic State occupation of lower Mesopotamia. Just sayin
Posted on: Sun, 12 Oct 2014 04:23:53 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015