Skip to main content
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 14 May 2009

[center][size=x-large][color=#990000][b]THE SHEEP
& THE CHEVROLET[/b]

[b]A JORNEY through KURDISTAN [1945][/b][/color][/size][/center]

[center][img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto3/Sheep-&-Chevrolet-a.jpg[/img][/ce…]

[center][b]By:
FRANCOISE BALSAN[/b][/center]

[center]
LONDON: First English Edition, 1947

Publisher/Year: LONDON,Paul Elek, First English Edition 1947.
[First French Etition, 1945].

Binding: Original Cloth Hardcover, 22x14 cm
Pages: 176
Illustration 41 photo illustrations

Francois Balsan (1902-1972)[/center]

[center][img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto3/Sheep-&-Chevrolet-b.jpg[/img]
[color=#990000][b]Frontispiece Elazik[/b][/color]
[/center]

For thousands of years the Kurds have grazed their flocks in the
remote uplands - a region untouched by time, unvisited by all but
its own native nomads. This book deals very amusingly with the adventures
and misadventures of a Frenchman and his wife who set out a study sheep-breeding
there, and throws as many interesting sidelights.

[center][img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto3/Sheep-&-Chevrolet-d.jpg[/img]
[color=#990000][b]Kurdish boy - A handsome face[/b][/color]
[/center]

From Introduction ...

THE Kurds are very ancient people. Deeply rooted to their
ancestral soil, which lies astride three countries - Turkey,Irak and Iran -
they have been there, so hostory tells us, for more than three
thousands years, close to what is probably the cradle of their race,
the Zagros Mountains. Small wonder that they have allways intrigued me.
The famous Hittities, in whom the modern ethnologists of
Ankara have discovered a kinship with Turks, cannot boast of much
greater antiquity, for their ockupation of Asia Minor hardly goes back
beyond 1900 BC. Moreover, about a thousand years before our
times, such semblance of unity and civilisation as they had evolved
began to disintegrate; their dominion was therefore limited, whereas the vigour and stability of the
Kurd are almost unique.

Their neighbours the Turks consented to marriages with immigrant peoples,perhaps losing
thereby a little of the race's individuality; but in the
sixteenth century they attained the zenith of their powerunder the Khalifs with
Soliman the Magnificent and then, after a long decline,their present-day
political zenith under the Republic. During all this time the Kurds
remained barbarians, clinging to their mountains, their sole interests were for their flocks of sheep or buffalo.

The Sultans, though they reigned in principle over the eastern mountains and
embodied them in those quaint-prettily-coloured maps
with amusing annotations, visited them as little as possible, and
refrained from taking any actions there.

This situation lasted from the sixteenth century until about 1840
when Constantinople decided to make sure of its hold on
Van, an important productive centre. This necessitated
a regular campaign against the Kurdish Emir, Bedir Khan Beg, who was qonquered
on the battlefield but nearly all of whose adherents took to the mountains.

The Armenian massacres of 1893, 1895 and 1896 (there were 200,000 Armenian victims in 1895) were still living memory when those
of 1909 broke out. Those of 1916 were organised butchary.

In the meanwhile, on the plateoux,on the plains of Anatolia, the Kemalist
r´gime was steadily increasing in power. Ataturk defeated
the Greeks and showed his strength. The second Lausanne Conference therefore did not hesitate to hand over to him, in addition to
Thrace, the politically inflamable provinces of Kurdistan and Armenia which had been
emancipated three years earlier - an unfortunate experience.

PART ONE: PREPARATION

1. The Lure Of Kurdistan
2. Objective : Sheep
3. Istanbul
4. Ankara
5. Our Guide
6. Across Anatolia By Train
7. Our Chauffeur Halil

PART TWO: THE APPROACH

8. The Murad Valley
9. In the Kurd Forest
10. Hospital at Bingol
11. Among The Nomads
12. Mush : Valley of Milk And Honey
13. The Varto Incident
14. The Lights Over The Lake
15. The Retreat Of The Ten Thousand
16. The South Shore Of Lake Van
17. Among The Armenians Ruins
18. The Sport Club

PART THREE: ARROUND VAN

19. The Governor
20. Old Van
21. The Eve Of Departure
22. Amongst The Eagles
23. The Sorcerer
24. Still Higher
25. At Bey Nafi's Camp
26. The Treasures Nebirnao
27. News From His Exellency

PART FOUR: TOWQARDS IRAN

28. On The Road To Iran
29. The Curious Supper At Baskale
30. Deir Or The Last Armenian Sanctuary
32. The Rattle Of Arms

[center][img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto3/Sheep-&-Chevrolet-g.jpg[/img]
[color=#990000][b]Kurdish big-sister, near (Çolig) Bingöl[/b][/color]
[/center]

[center][img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto3/Sheep-&-Chevrolet-h.jpg[/img]
[color=#990000][b]An awkward spot - Old caravaneer, Bitlis - Kurdish shearer - Palu region
[/b][/color]
[/center]

[center][img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto3/Sheep-&-Chevrolet-i.jpg[/img]
[color=#990000][b]Kurdish shearer - Palu region[/b][/color]
[/center]

[center][img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto3/Sheep-&-Chevrolet-j.jpg[/img]
[color=#990000][b]Destruction of Van (1916) - The profaned sanctuary of Deir
[/b][/color]
[/center]

[center][img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto3/Sheep-&-Chevrolet-k.jpg[/img]
[color=#990000][b]Young scamp-south of the lake[/b][/color]
[/center]

[center][img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto3/Sheep-&-Chevrolet-e.jpg[/img]
[color=#990000][b]Bayburt[/b][/color]
[/center]

[center][img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto3/Sheep-and-Chevrolet-Sp3.jpg[/img]…]

[b]Illustrations ...[/b]

1. Frontispiece Elazik
2. The Ramparts of Istanbul
3. Islam permeates all Istanbul
4. Our official guide, Setke Bey, is thirsty
5. Mules-the lorries of Istanbul
6. New Ankara
7. Alley on the heights of ankara
8. Turkish Woman
9. Kurdish shepherd-Palu region
10. An awkward spot
11. Old caravaneer, Bitlis
12. Kurdish shearer-Palu region
13. Kurdish women do not wear the veil, but they stick to the shadows
14. A litlle dreamer
15. A handsome face
16. Kurdish big-sister, near Bingöl
17. Buffaloes bathing
18. A sybarite
19. The Kurdish forest-Soulou-Han district
20. In the bush
21. Young scamp-south of the lake
22. The women on the roof-south of the lake
23. Van-Seljuk city on the Gheruab
24. Van-Seljuk watchtower
25. Van-entrance to the fortified city
26. Va-the Seljuk donjon
27. Sealed tomb, near Van
28. Riverside village with its pile of cowdung
29. Vaneykian base of the citadel of Van
30. Harvesting
31. Panoramic view of Koshab Caste
32. Suliman the yellow guarded the pass
33. The Koshab bridge
34. The southern track round the lake, built by the Turks
35. Koshab-Kaleh, Suliman's castle
36. Destruction of Van (1916)
37. The profaned sanctuary of Deir
38. En route to Khanasur
39. An ox
40. Silhouette of the Ala Tagh
41. Bayburt

[center]:::::::o:::::::[/center]

ABOUT AUTHOR:

[b][color=#990000]François Balsan[/color][/b]
Les Surprises du Kurdistan

Prix Gallois 1945
de la Société de Géographie
2ème édition augmentée
50 photos de l'auteur

Collection : Voyage et aventure
éd. J. Susse, Paris
13 rue de Grenelle Paris -7èm

Dans son récit Les Surprises du Kurdistan (éd. Susse, Paris, 1945, Collection : Voyage et aventure), François Balsan, un négociant en laine, voyage au Kurdistan, en Turquie, juste avant le déclenchement de la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Très admirateur du régime, de la nouvelle Turquie, aucune sympathique pour les Arméniens, "chrétiens hérétiques" et qui l'ont cherché, leur génocide, donc un livre peu suspect de turcophobie.

Il note cependant cette rage turque envers tout ce qui reste du passé arménien, la destruction des églises, des monastères, de toutes traces du peuplement arménien, en parallèle des thèses de la société pseudo-scientifique lancée par Atatürk, essayant pathétiquement de prouver que les Turcs descendent des Hittites (était-ce avant qu'on ne déchiffre le hittite, langue indo-européenne, et donc, comiquement, plus proche des langues arméniennes et kurdes ?)

Exterminer un peuple, puis nier ce massacre en niant l'existence des massacrés, et voilà la spirale infernale, finir par enlever toutes traces de la victime, en ôtant la présence historique de ce peuple sur le lieu des tueries.

Pour finir, quelques années plus tard, même attitude envers les Kurdes : il n'y a pas de Kurdes. Il n'y en a jamais eu. Il faut comprendre cette dénégation schizoïde par le fantôme du cadavre qui se cache derrière la victoire toute fraîche. Admettre qu'il a des Kurdes aurait été admettre qu'il n'y a pas eu, depuis toujours, que des Turcs en Anatolie, et donc avant les Kurdes, à Van, à Mus, à Bitlis, à Kars les Arméniens, et que s'il n'y sont plus aujourd'hui, c'est qu'il y a bien une raison inavouable à cela.

Ouroboros : pour nier un génocide on va jusqu'à en amorcer un deuxième, que l'on va nier aussi, plus tard ; et alors, pour cela, etc.

"Il existe, entre les monts d'Arménie et la plaine basse de l'Irak, entre le plateau du Taurus et les contreforts du Zagros, un pays où les mots sont hors-la-loi et pour cela se figent et gèlent dans la bouche des hommes.

Ce pays est le Pays-des-mots-gelés et ses habitants ont aujourd'hui une existence des plus mystérieuses. Ils furent là sans être là, ils sont là cependant mais c'est un grand sans-gêne de leur part, car il a été prévu et décrété de toute éternité que jamais ils ne furent. Jamais. Ils n'existent pas, ce peuple est une invention, un brûlot d'agitateurs et depuis la plus haute antiquité il n'y eut sur ces terres que le vide. Les tumulus, les palais enfouis, les églises à coupoles, les monastères de pierre, les bergers des montagnes, les nomades des tentes, les commerçants, les drogmans, les tisseurs de kilims, les seigneurs des châteaux, les guerriers redoutables aux beaux chevaux, furent et ne furent pas car depuis toujours, et pour toujours, il n'y eut pas de ces gens dans ce pays. Et tout ce qui affirme le contraire doit être détruit."

(Site kurde):
http://sohrawardi.blogspot.com/2005_05_01_archive.html

[color=#990000][b]Kurdish Book Bank - SARA[/b][/color]
[img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto2/saraloggo.jpg[/img]
http://www.kurdishbookbank.org/jorneythroughkurdistan.htm

[b]NIMÛNE JI BERHEMÊN GRANBUHA:[/b]
http://www.kurdishbookbank.org/granbuha.htm

Anonymous (not verified)

Thu, 05/14/2009 - 23:10

[center][size=x-large][color=#990000]Road Through KURDISTAN The Narrative of an Engineer in Iraq[/color][/size][/center] [center][img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto3/Road-through-Kurdistan-dj4.jpg[/img] [img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto3/Road-through-Kurdistan-47-a.jpg[/img][/center] [center][size=large] By: A. M. Hamilton with forward by ROWAN-ROBINSON LONDON 1947[/size][/center] [center][img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto3/Road-through-Kurdistan-l.jpg[/img] [color=#990000]Shaikh Ahmad of Barzani with his Cheiftains[/color] [/center] [color=#990000][i][b]For more interesting text and unique pictures - CLICK HERE BELOW![/b][/i][/color] [color=#990000][i][b]Simdiye Kadar Baska Bir Yerde Yayinlanmamis Tekst Ve Ilginc Resimler icin Asagidaki Linki Tiklayiniz![/b][/i][/color] Kurdish Book Bank - SARA: [img]http://www.saradistribution.com/foto2/saraloggo.jpg[/img] http://www.kurdishbookbank.org/roadthroughkurdistan.htm

Add new comment

Plain text

CAPTCHA This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.