By American Historical Association
Sargon George Donabed and Daniel Joseph Tower
Sargon George Donabed and Daniel Joseph Tower
In June 2014, the so-called Islamic State (IS) gave
Christian residents of Iraq’s second-largest city, Mosul (ancient
Nineveh), an ultimatum: conversion, expulsion, payment of jizya (a tax on non-Muslims), or death. IS marked Christian houses with the Arabic letter nun for naṣara
(a Nazarene), and more than 500,000 people were forced to flee the
city. Almost simultaneously, the 35 Assyrian villages along the Khabur
River in Syria were attacked; many women and children were taken hostage
and held for ransom.
Northern Iraq and the Syrian Jezirah are both currently
described as Kurdish-controlled or Kurdish-majority regions. True to
form, news reports and official statements from politicians and
religious figures highlighted the plight of the region’s Christians, but
characterizations of their ethno-cultural heritage did not include the
fact that the majority of them were Assyrians, an autochthonous people
who have lived for over two millennia as Eastern Christians, and for
thousands of years earlier as players in the rise and fall of the great
Mesopotamian empires.
The media coverage implied two things. On one hand, these
reports did aid the Assyrian community in gaining international sympathy
briefly, especially from Western Christians, at least as far as all
Christians in the region benefited from the visibility. But on the
other, Assyrians were not usually named directly in these reports. Their
antiquity and distinctiveness remained invisible, drowned out by the
focus on the Arab and Kurdish character of the region.
There are three primary reasons for this denial. First, the
Kurds continue to command political and popular attention in the
region. Their trials and tribulations are real, but they outshine others
because of their geopolitical significance—now largely accepted in such
spheres as academia, media, culture, and literature. Second, the Kurds
are viewed as the major ethnic group in the region without a homeland.
Third, additional communities are either lumped into the conversation
about the Kurds or are described as religious minority groups, such as
Christians or Yezidi.
This misunderstanding has important consequences, not only
for Assyrians but also for human history. Statuary, wall reliefs,
churches, and shrines that have been standing for millennia, artifacts
of the Assyrians’ ancient past, are also irreplaceable components of
world heritage. Before Iraqi forces ousted IS from Mosul last summer,
Islamists managed to destroy many Assyrian antiquities. In one video, a
spokesperson from the IS media office for the Mosul/Nineveh Province
narrates in Arabic the destruction of antiquities dating to the
historical period before the prophet Muhammad, or the age of jahiliyyah (ignorance). The forced mass exodus from the city separated Assyrians from the land of their ancestors.
In the wake of this destruction, Assyrians have increased
their claims to indigenous status, but being separated from their
ancestral lands and communities makes international recognition of their
case less probable: rights are harder to assert in this context,
especially for a transnational people. Moreover, unending conflict in
the homeland makes mass displacement and emigration the only means of
survival for a transnational ethnic, religious, and cultural minority.
Assyrians are not recognized by any constitution or regime in the region
as a distinct ethnocultural group, and when they are mentioned, it is
only in terms of their sectarian religious identity.
But Assyrians face obstacles in their claims of indigeneity
that are vastly unlike those of indigenous communities in Western
countries. Assyrians’ attempts to seek indigenous rights—accommodated
under the United Nations Declaration for the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples (2007)—are rejected due to regional tensions and rivalries. The
United Nations Permanent Forum for Indigenous Issues (UNPFII) provides a
platform for elevating indigenous voices to the international arena and
for highlighting their culture, history, and claims to land. In 2014,
the Assyrian Aid Society (AAS) represented Assyrians at the 13th session
of the UNPFII. The organization outlined the indigenous heritage of the
Assyrian peoples, the necessity for recognition from their host state,
and the overall goal of autonomous governance to help preserve
Assyrians’ culture and history within the Iraqi political system.
But the Iraqi response to Assyrian claims to indigenous
status—and indeed to all ethno-religious minorities of Iraq who have
made such claims—was outright denial. (1)
What’s more, at the 2014 UNPFII session, Assyrians were yet to experience the force of IS attacks on Mosul. Even afterward, when the Yezidi delegation joined forces with the AAS in 2015, the Iraqi position remained unchanged. As has been seen in the past few months with the Kurdish vote for independence, the Iraqi government fears that claims for independence will threaten the nation’s stability. Hence, there are officially no indigenous peoples of Iraq. Formal political channels have made Assyrians’ position ambiguous at best.
What’s more, at the 2014 UNPFII session, Assyrians were yet to experience the force of IS attacks on Mosul. Even afterward, when the Yezidi delegation joined forces with the AAS in 2015, the Iraqi position remained unchanged. As has been seen in the past few months with the Kurdish vote for independence, the Iraqi government fears that claims for independence will threaten the nation’s stability. Hence, there are officially no indigenous peoples of Iraq. Formal political channels have made Assyrians’ position ambiguous at best.
This situation finds echoes in the academic realm, where
there is little attention to the legitimacy of indigenous claims in the
Middle East outside of debate on the Israel/Palestine question.
Generally, discourse about indigenous issues works within a European
colonial and postcolonial paradigm—that is, case studies of peoples
colonized by Europeans dominate the literature, from Native American
nations to the Ma’sai of Kenya to the Temuntikans of Costa Rica.
Indigenous peoples such as the Assyrians break the mold of
the discussion, because the actions of European colonizers form only one
part of the group’s history. Briefly, Assyrians were colonized by the
British and French, as were most other Middle Eastern peoples. They had
also experienced colonization in a different context at the hands of
Western Catholic and Protestant missionaries, who were unable to make
much headway in predominantly Muslim communities. Even earlier,
Assyrians had experienced multiple waves of Arab/Islamic colonial
conquest. They now live amid a burgeoning Kurdish nationalist project.
In other words, colonization is not a solely European-oriented matter.
Most of the voices that have addressed indigeneity in the
Middle East have arisen from the debate over the Israel/Palestine
question. (2)
In academic circles, the leftist argument for a native-Palestinian narrative squares off against an analysis that supports the Jewish claim to the “land of milk and honey.” But leftists often see Israeli subjection of the Palestinian community as Western colonial action, enfolding it into the normative discourse about indigeneity. Similarly, among leftists there is a propensity to see the Palestinians (and interestingly, more recently the Kurds) as victims of oppression but also as heroes—people who actively resist Western colonization. Middle Eastern indigeneity, it seems, doesn’t exist without a Western gaze.
In academic circles, the leftist argument for a native-Palestinian narrative squares off against an analysis that supports the Jewish claim to the “land of milk and honey.” But leftists often see Israeli subjection of the Palestinian community as Western colonial action, enfolding it into the normative discourse about indigeneity. Similarly, among leftists there is a propensity to see the Palestinians (and interestingly, more recently the Kurds) as victims of oppression but also as heroes—people who actively resist Western colonization. Middle Eastern indigeneity, it seems, doesn’t exist without a Western gaze.
In this way, limiting the concept of Middle Eastern
indigeneity not only fails to acknowledge the many indigenous peoples of
the region, it also inadvertently legitimizes their persecution. In the
Assyrian case, it may be that few know about them or their case because
their movement has refrained from violence.
Looking forward, how can Assyrians and other indigenous
groups find a place in the Middle East and in their homelands?
Recognition and reconciliation require that both parties—the dominant
and the indigenous—agree on their roles within the national structure.
As long as Middle Eastern states do not recognize Assyrians and other
peoples as indigenous, the process cannot commence; first peoples will
be unable to negotiate in the political forum as long as their host
countries monopolize their rights.
The configuration of the current Middle East does not allow
for the cathartic opportunity of reconciliation, leaving acts of past
aggression, massacre, and even genocide unrecognized and erased from
history. Assyrians lack official recognition of their ethnocultural
existence in all of the Middle Eastern states containing portions of
their homeland: Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey. This restricts Assyrians’
rights. Without recognition, no case can be made.
Due to internal conflict and the continued
Western/Eurocentric gaze, the Middle East has been seen as an
exceptional case and is thus absent from many discussions of
indigeneity. This lacuna brings into question our own scholarly
analyses, as well as our very integrity. As scholars, we must extend to
the histories of Middle Eastern indigenous peoples the same urgency we
bring to more normative cases—of communities resisting European
colonization—by accepting that there is more than one historical
framework through which to see indigenous peoples.
Notes
1. The Iraqi delegation’s official position is that Iraq
does not have an indigenous people; instead, it has various
ethno-religious minorities. This position, however, stands in contrast
to the definition of “indigenous peoples” set out in the United Nations
Declaration of Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
2. There has been some discussion of Armenians’ claims,
including to land in Turkey, but this has been largely a legal response
to genocidal acts and mass expulsions, separate from any rubric
specifically concerning “indigenous” rights.
Sargon George Donabed is associate professor of history at Roger Williams University. He is the author of Reforging a Forgotten History: Iraq and the Assyrians in the Twentieth Century.
Daniel Joseph Tower is a PhD candidate in the Department of Studies in Religion at the University of Sydney. He is the co-editor of Religious Categories and the Construction of the Indigenous.