Muslim Peshmerga

Organization of Kurdish Muslim Peshmergas
سازمان پیشمرگان کرد مسلمان
ڕێکخراوی پێشمەرگەکانی کوردە موسڵمان
Also known as- Kurdish Frontier Knights
- Protectors of the faith
- Guardians of the prophet’s household
- Kurdish loyalists
- Shah Ismail brigade
Founding leaderRuhollah Khomeini
Ali Khamenei
LeadersMohammad Boroujerdi
Foundation1980
Dissolved1985
Country Iran
Active regionsIranian Kurdistan
IdeologyIranian nationalism
National conservatism
Religious conservatism
Shia Islamism
Pan-Iranism
Islamic fundamentalism
Kurdish-Islamic synthesis
Islamofascism
Extremism
Feyli interest
Kurdish feudalism
Anti-separatism
Anti-communism
Anti-Sunnism
Antisemitism
Anti-Bahà’ism
Social conservatism
Anti-Kurdish nationalism
Size60,000
100,000 (peak)
Allies Iran
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
KDP
Opponents Ba'athist Iraq
Salvation Force
Komala
KDPI
Khabat
Battles and wars1979 Kurdish rebellion in Iran
Iran-Iraq war

The Muslim Peshmerga, officially the Organization of Kurdish Muslim Peshmergas (Persian: سازمان پیشمرگان کرد مسلمان, romanizedSâzmân-e Pešmargân-e Kord-e Musalmân; Kurdish: ڕێکخراوی پێشمەرگەکانی کوردە موسڵمان) was a violent Shia-Kurdish fundamentalist militia group founded by conservative Shia-Kurdish landlords, princes, tribal chiefs, clerics and merchants with the help of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps after the 1979 Kurdish revolts.[1] The milita led by different warlords was responsible for violently suppressing the Sunni-Kurdish separatist uprising in western Iran, massacring tens of thousands of militant Sunni Kurds, communists, Baha’is and groups who consider to be enemies of the state.

History

The group was established in February 1980 during the Iran–Iraq War, and was led by Mohammad Boroujerdi. The term "Peshmerga" meant "to face death" in Kurdish, and had no correlation to the more commonly known Peshmerga, the armed forces of the Kurdistan Region, aside from the fact that Iran had supported the Peshmerga against Saddam Hussein. The purpose of the group was to recruit natives of Iranian Kurdistan as a way to guide the military forces against the separatists.[2][3] During the Iran-Iraq war, after Kurdish separatists captured parts of Iranian Kurdistan, many locals joined the Muslim Peshmerga after seeing the chaos brought to their communities under separatist rule, while others were from poor communities and joined for income.[4] The organisation was active until 1985, when its members were gradually incorporated into Basij.[5][6] In February 2024, the head of the Kurdistan Beit-ol-Moqaddas Corps committee announced that its goal was to reward 4,600 Muslim Peshmerga veterans, and that it had so far given loans of 15 billion Iranian Rials ($265,000) in total.[7]

References

  1. ^ ""پیشمرگان مسلمان کرد" چه کسانی بودند؟" [Who were the "Peshmerga Muslim Kurds"?]. خبرگزاری فارس (in Persian). 2021-09-25. Retrieved 2022-05-25.
  2. ^ "روایت فارس از جسارت پیشمرگ مسلمان کُرد/ بیاید شاه‌تون را تحویل بگیرید، من رفتم! | خبرگزاری فارس" [Fars tradition by brave Peshmerga Muslim Kurds]. www.farsnews.ir. Retrieved 2022-05-25.
  3. ^ "پیشمرگان کرد مسلمان پیشگام در دفاع از انقلاب/سازمانی در خدمت مردم" [Peshmerga Kurdish Muslim pioneers in the defense of the revolution / organization in the service of the people]. خبرگزاری مهر (in Persian). 2020-09-28. Retrieved 2022-11-29.
  4. ^ "عملیات اورامان تخت و پایان عمر سیاسی گروهک رزگاری" [The Avroman Takht operation and the end of the political life of Rizgari group]. Šabake-ye Ettelāresāni-ye Rāh-e Dānā (in Persian). 13 February 2017.
  5. ^ رنجبران, علی اکبر (1394). "نقش سازمان پیشمرگان مسلمان کرد درتامین امنیت پایدارمنطقه کردستان" [The role of the Muslim Kurdish Peshmerga organization in ensuring sustainable security in the Kurdistan region]. نخستین کنگره گرامیداشت شهدای پیشمرگان مسلمان کرد (in Persian). نخستین کنگره گرامیداشت شهدای پیشمرگان مسلمان کرد.
  6. ^ شفیعی, محمد جواد (2019-02-02). "چهل سالگی انقلاب ۵۷؛ مطالبات قومی و بحران هویت ملی" [Forty Years Revolution 57; National demands and identity crisis]. euronews (in Persian). Retrieved 2022-11-29.
  7. ^ "اقوام مختلف ایران پایه افتخار و سربلندی کشور هستند" [Different nations are proud of Iran]. kurdpress (in Persian). 2024-02-20. Retrieved 2024-12-07.