Kamuran Alî Bedirxan


Kâmuran Ali Bedirxan was a Kurdish politician, lawyer and writer.

Family

He came from the family of the Bedirxans, who for centuries, as autonomous vassals of the Ottomans, ruled the Principality of Bohtan with the capital Cizre. His grandfather Bedirxan Beg had rebelled against the Ottomans at the end of the 19th century and was deported to Istanbul after his defeat and family. Kamuran's father Emin Ali Bedirxan was politically active in the Kurdish movement and was the founder of the Kurdistan Teali Cemiyeti, in which Kamuran was also a member. His brother Celadet Ali Bedirxan was also politically active and the creator of the Latin Kurmanji alphabet.
Kamuran had been married to the Polish princess Nathalie d'Ossovetzky, who died in 1975, since 1954. d'Ossovetzky, who has been his student and later also secretary, was supportive of his writing. The couple had no children.

Career

Kamuran attended the French Galatasaray High School in Istanbul. Between 1905 and 1908 his family had to leave the city because of a murder at the Istanbul prefects and lived in Isparta and Beirut. He later studied law at Istanbul University and worked as a lawyer. In 1918, he became a member of the Society for the Elevation of Kurdistan, like others from his family. In 1919, Kamuran and his brother Celadet Bedirxan accompanied British officer Edward Noel in his travels through Iraq. Noel was assessing the possibility of the creation of an official nation of Kurdistan.
Bedirxan was an opponent of Atatürk's independence movement and was ordered by the British government in Istanbul to go to a planned congress in 1919 in Sivas and arrest Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. He set off with several men, including his brother, the governor of Harput and the British officer Edward Noel, but the project failed.
Kamuran was an opponent of Kemalism and when the Republic of Turkey was proclaimed in 1923, he had already left the country to Germany. He lived with his relatives in Munich and then in Leipzig. From 1927 he stayed in Syria, joined the organization Xoybûn and helped his brother with the publication of the Kurdish newspaper Hawar. Between 1943 and 1946 Kamuran published the Kurdish and French-language magazine Roja Nû in Beirut The following years he lived in Germany and France. In the thirties he stayed in Berlin and met the Iranian Karl Hadank. In 1948 he became a lecturer at the Institut national des langues et civilizations orientales in Paris.
From 1960 he became the European spokesman for the Iraqi Kurds led by Mustafa Barzani. He established important contacts between the Kurds and Israel. Israel saw the Kurds as a suitable means of weakening Iraq militarily and tying up the Iraqi army in northern Iraq. In 1970 he retired.
Kamuran died in 1978. He was posthumously appointed the co-founder of the Kurdish Institute of Paris. His works are kept in the Institute.

Selected works