



ideas wrote:Southern Kurds may have mixed the most, however we have always been the biggest advocates of Kurdish nationalism, for example i'm 50% Kurdish, 25% Jewish and 25% Assyrian, but I'm a nationalist Kurd and don't care about the other parts of my roots (other than them having equal rights), I don't understand why we Southern Kurds are being accused of mixing too much because as far as I'm aware there are many Kurdish-Turkish families in Turkey, the same goes for eastern Kurdistan, many Kurds married to Azeris.
Don't forget that nearly 30% of the Southern Kurdish population was Jewish! only a small percentage of them left to Israel, the rest with time converted to Islam and mixed in with the other Kurdish population (i.e. my grandfather!) and believe me, my grandfather although Jewish was a very nationalist Kurd, he had many sons on purpose and made them all peshmergas.

thesunchild wrote:First of all it's not my purpose to divide Kurds and other Kurds must be very careful with what they're saying. And I'm not a racist!
Where do you folks think that the purest and the most unmixed Kurds live?
According to me the purest Kurds (with not so much of Semitic & Turkic DNA) do live in Eastern Iran and around the area between Turkey, Iraq and Iran. And the Yezidis from USSR. I don't know about the Yezidis from Lalish.
I do know some Kurds from Southern Kurdistan who have Arab (Turkmen) 'relatives'. Everybody in the world is mixed and I do understand that mixing is human and it’s sometimes even healthy and necessary but some Southern Kurds are going too far! But I'm not saying that they're 'less' Kurdish than other Kurds.
Northern Kurds in Turkish cities are also mixing to much with Turkic people. What's wrong with them?
I don't try to insult Southern Kurds, because according to me they’re also the most nationalistic and the strongest of all Kurds.
Or am I wrong?
Btw, according to me you're a Kurd if your father is Kurd. But who am I?

jjmuneer wrote:ideas wrote:Southern Kurds may have mixed the most, however we have always been the biggest advocates of Kurdish nationalism, for example i'm 50% Kurdish, 25% Jewish and 25% Assyrian, but I'm a nationalist Kurd and don't care about the other parts of my roots (other than them having equal rights), I don't understand why we Southern Kurds are being accused of mixing too much because as far as I'm aware there are many Kurdish-Turkish families in Turkey, the same goes for eastern Kurdistan, many Kurds married to Azeris.
Don't forget that nearly 30% of the Southern Kurdish population was Jewish! only a small percentage of them left to Israel, the rest with time converted to Islam and mixed in with the other Kurdish population (i.e. my grandfather!) and believe me, my grandfather although Jewish was a very nationalist Kurd, he had many sons on purpose and made them all peshmergas.
What do you mean by mixed? How do you know? And what defines un-mixed?

ideas wrote:jjmuneer wrote:ideas wrote:Southern Kurds may have mixed the most, however we have always been the biggest advocates of Kurdish nationalism, for example i'm 50% Kurdish, 25% Jewish and 25% Assyrian, but I'm a nationalist Kurd and don't care about the other parts of my roots (other than them having equal rights), I don't understand why we Southern Kurds are being accused of mixing too much because as far as I'm aware there are many Kurdish-Turkish families in Turkey, the same goes for eastern Kurdistan, many Kurds married to Azeris.
Don't forget that nearly 30% of the Southern Kurdish population was Jewish! only a small percentage of them left to Israel, the rest with time converted to Islam and mixed in with the other Kurdish population (i.e. my grandfather!) and believe me, my grandfather although Jewish was a very nationalist Kurd, he had many sons on purpose and made them all peshmergas.
What do you mean by mixed? How do you know? And what defines un-mixed?
Without DNA tests we can only make statements based on individual circumstances and knowledge (i.e. I would be defined as 'mixed' and someone that isn't like me is not defined as mixed)

ideas wrote:Southern Kurds may have mixed the most, however we have always been the biggest advocates of Kurdish nationalism, for example i'm 50% Kurdish, 25% Jewish and 25% Assyrian, but I'm a nationalist Kurd and don't care about the other parts of my roots (other than them having equal rights), I don't understand why we Southern Kurds are being accused of mixing too much because as far as I'm aware there are many Kurdish-Turkish families in Turkey, the same goes for eastern Kurdistan, many Kurds married to Azeris.
Don't forget that nearly 30% of the Southern Kurdish population was Jewish! only a small percentage of them left to Israel, the rest with time converted to Islam and mixed in with the other Kurdish population (i.e. my grandfather!) and believe me, my grandfather although Jewish was a very nationalist Kurd, he had many sons on purpose and made them all peshmergas.


ideas wrote:jjmuneer wrote:ideas wrote:Southern Kurds may have mixed the most, however we have always been the biggest advocates of Kurdish nationalism, for example i'm 50% Kurdish, 25% Jewish and 25% Assyrian, but I'm a nationalist Kurd and don't care about the other parts of my roots (other than them having equal rights), I don't understand why we Southern Kurds are being accused of mixing too much because as far as I'm aware there are many Kurdish-Turkish families in Turkey, the same goes for eastern Kurdistan, many Kurds married to Azeris.
Don't forget that nearly 30% of the Southern Kurdish population was Jewish! only a small percentage of them left to Israel, the rest with time converted to Islam and mixed in with the other Kurdish population (i.e. my grandfather!) and believe me, my grandfather although Jewish was a very nationalist Kurd, he had many sons on purpose and made them all peshmergas.
What do you mean by mixed? How do you know? And what defines un-mixed?
Without DNA tests we can only make statements based on individual circumstances and knowledge (i.e. I would be defined as 'mixed' and someone that isn't like me is not defined as mixed)

jjmuneer wrote:Haplogroups are just markers, plus you can't really say R1a1,R1b are Kurdish and J2 or J1c3 aren't. I'm personally J1c3, so yes I'm mixed, byt I don't look it. What I'm trying to say is its stupid basing nationalism on genetics, even racialists know not to do this, becuase its flawed.

Kurdistano wrote:jjmuneer wrote:Haplogroups are just markers, plus you can't really say R1a1,R1b are Kurdish and J2 or J1c3 aren't. I'm personally J1c3, so yes I'm mixed, byt I don't look it. What I'm trying to say is its stupid basing nationalism on genetics, even racialists know not to do this, becuase its flawed.
werent you J1*?
J1c3 also originated somewhere in Mesopotamia. Only if you are J1c3d. You are for sure of Semitic or Beduin origin.

jjmuneer wrote:Kurdistano wrote:jjmuneer wrote:Haplogroups are just markers, plus you can't really say R1a1,R1b are Kurdish and J2 or J1c3 aren't. I'm personally J1c3, so yes I'm mixed, byt I don't look it. What I'm trying to say is its stupid basing nationalism on genetics, even racialists know not to do this, becuase its flawed.
werent you J1*?
J1c3 also originated somewhere in Mesopotamia. Only if you are J1c3d. You are for sure of Semitic or Beduin origin.
Yes, do I look semitic?
What haplogroup are you?


jjmuneer wrote:My result said J1 from familytreeDNA, I got told it was the same has J1c3. You can search my result on AS forums. My family don't intermarry with Arabs, so I don't know. I still need to do 23andme for a more detailed result.
Can you answer my question aswell please.

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