Chronicles of Yazidis history the battle of Semele 1758

2020/05/15460-1588669250.jpg
Read: 4406     15:30     05 Май 2020    

For centuries, the Yazidis in Mesopotamia have been fighting for their existence. No century has passed without a campaign of extermination by radical extremists against the indigenous population in the middle East. As a non-Muslim group, the Yazidis had to protect themselves from their enemies in their struggle for survival. Countless wars and battles have drastically reduced the number of Yazidis, but at the same time have strengthened the will to survive. In this century, a genocide was committed against the Yazidis in Iraq. However, past examples show that, despite all the difficulties, the Yazidis struggled for survival and inheritance.
German Explorer Carsten Niebuhr (1733-1815) was the first European to report a large tribe "This is 1785, and we are only a few kilometers from the Kurdish city of Duhok in Northern Iraq. Here's a rule of the once large and powerful tribe of Yazidi "Din". Even today, the Dina are among the largest Yazidi tribes, and they are feared because of their rebellious behavior.
About 73 km from Semile in Mosul, Mosul's Muslim Governor Abd al-Baki Pasha and his troops are planning a campaign against the Yazidis of Dina. In the same year, the Islamic scholar Muhammad Amin Ibn Heralla al-Khatib al-Omari (1737 - 1789) published a fatwa - a religious report - against the Yazidis, who religiously killed and persecuted Yazidis, desecrated and enslaved Yazidi women and children legalized.
At that time, the young man led Dina as the head of a tribe that would soon go down in Yazidi history as a hero. His name: Kor Namir Agha. Since he was blind in one eye as a child, his name was KOR Namir-blind Namir. The Dinas were a nomadic tribe and used to repeat wars against Muslim rulers. Like their brothers and sisters in Shingal, Dina always refused to bow to the rulers of Mosul. This rebellious spirit of the Yazidis in the territory of the Ottoman Empire was quickly noticed by European travelers, so they described the Yazidi Principality of Sheikhan with Shingal as "a state within a state".
Abd al-Baki Pasha, accompanied by his brother and his troops, approached the district of Din. But their villages were deserted, and Dina, who had been informed of the Pasha's arrival, fled and left her belongings without resistance. The Pasha's soldiers were looting Dina's houses in triumph, and Abd al-Baki himself arrives with his brother in one of the villages and celebrates the supposed victory over the Yazidis. However, what the Pasha and his troops did not suspect: in the hills and mountains near the villages of Kor, Namir Agha mobilized the enraged Yazidis and prepared a counterattack against the Pasha.
The Pasha and his soldiers were intoxicated by the supposed victory over the "Yazidis", they disregarded the courage and bravery of the Yazidi soldiers. Namir Agha launched a surprise counterattack on al-Baki Pasha and killed him, his bodyguards, and his brother.
The panicked Pasha soldiers, who had been victorious shortly before, were captured by the Yazidis and killed by hundreds. The demoralized troops of the slain Pasha gave way to the Yazidis. Then the Pasha's soldiers fled. But they also found no peace with the Yazidis, who are hungry for revenge: Namir AGAS militants chased fleeing soldiers as far as Mosul, 73 km. From this point on, nothing is known about the further course of the battle. However, Dina's troops returned almost without loss.Yazidis from Din left the village of Semel later. Today, many Assyrians live in Semele. Assyrians accepted thousands of Yazidi refugees.

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Tags: #yazidisinfo   #ezidi   #news   #history   #historyofezidi  



Chronicles of Yazidis history the battle of Semele 1758

2020/05/15460-1588669250.jpg
Read: 4407     15:30     05 Май 2020    

For centuries, the Yazidis in Mesopotamia have been fighting for their existence. No century has passed without a campaign of extermination by radical extremists against the indigenous population in the middle East. As a non-Muslim group, the Yazidis had to protect themselves from their enemies in their struggle for survival. Countless wars and battles have drastically reduced the number of Yazidis, but at the same time have strengthened the will to survive. In this century, a genocide was committed against the Yazidis in Iraq. However, past examples show that, despite all the difficulties, the Yazidis struggled for survival and inheritance.
German Explorer Carsten Niebuhr (1733-1815) was the first European to report a large tribe "This is 1785, and we are only a few kilometers from the Kurdish city of Duhok in Northern Iraq. Here's a rule of the once large and powerful tribe of Yazidi "Din". Even today, the Dina are among the largest Yazidi tribes, and they are feared because of their rebellious behavior.
About 73 km from Semile in Mosul, Mosul's Muslim Governor Abd al-Baki Pasha and his troops are planning a campaign against the Yazidis of Dina. In the same year, the Islamic scholar Muhammad Amin Ibn Heralla al-Khatib al-Omari (1737 - 1789) published a fatwa - a religious report - against the Yazidis, who religiously killed and persecuted Yazidis, desecrated and enslaved Yazidi women and children legalized.
At that time, the young man led Dina as the head of a tribe that would soon go down in Yazidi history as a hero. His name: Kor Namir Agha. Since he was blind in one eye as a child, his name was KOR Namir-blind Namir. The Dinas were a nomadic tribe and used to repeat wars against Muslim rulers. Like their brothers and sisters in Shingal, Dina always refused to bow to the rulers of Mosul. This rebellious spirit of the Yazidis in the territory of the Ottoman Empire was quickly noticed by European travelers, so they described the Yazidi Principality of Sheikhan with Shingal as "a state within a state".
Abd al-Baki Pasha, accompanied by his brother and his troops, approached the district of Din. But their villages were deserted, and Dina, who had been informed of the Pasha's arrival, fled and left her belongings without resistance. The Pasha's soldiers were looting Dina's houses in triumph, and Abd al-Baki himself arrives with his brother in one of the villages and celebrates the supposed victory over the Yazidis. However, what the Pasha and his troops did not suspect: in the hills and mountains near the villages of Kor, Namir Agha mobilized the enraged Yazidis and prepared a counterattack against the Pasha.
The Pasha and his soldiers were intoxicated by the supposed victory over the "Yazidis", they disregarded the courage and bravery of the Yazidi soldiers. Namir Agha launched a surprise counterattack on al-Baki Pasha and killed him, his bodyguards, and his brother.
The panicked Pasha soldiers, who had been victorious shortly before, were captured by the Yazidis and killed by hundreds. The demoralized troops of the slain Pasha gave way to the Yazidis. Then the Pasha's soldiers fled. But they also found no peace with the Yazidis, who are hungry for revenge: Namir AGAS militants chased fleeing soldiers as far as Mosul, 73 km. From this point on, nothing is known about the further course of the battle. However, Dina's troops returned almost without loss.Yazidis from Din left the village of Semel later. Today, many Assyrians live in Semele. Assyrians accepted thousands of Yazidi refugees.

ezidipress.com





Tags: #yazidisinfo   #ezidi   #news   #history   #historyofezidi