Simon - Imposition of Nationalism on Non-Nation State
Tags: iraq, books, Nationalism and Outsiders in the Middle East
Summary
- Shi’is desired a state independent from foreign rule
- Kurds of Mosul and others desired an independent kurdistan
- Ancient Jewish population living in Baghdad, filled most of the civil service jobs under the british and early monarchy
- Assyrians
- Sunni Arabs were backed as the ruling elite during the mandate
- Cites Anderson - Imagined Communities, where the imagined community is “arabs” instead of “mesopotamians” or “iraqis”, although this was also somewhat debated as a result of al-Husri’s reforms
- Elites were commissioned from the Ministry of Education in Baghdad
- Kurds, Jews, and Shi’i found themselves excluded from social and political incorporation in the new Iraq
Shia
- 1/2 of the population in Central and Southern Iraq during Ottoman rule
- Governed by a series of shaykhs, who went into political systems and left as they saw fit
- Yassine al-Hashimi had to draw the shaykhs in when he returned to power per Provonce - The Last Ottoman Generation
- British bombed or empowered them in Pursely - Familiar Futures
- Faiysal used ethnicity to call into question the loyalty of the Shia’s/
- 1920’s revolt was the key point of Shia solidarity
- King Ghazi did not like to draw in Shaykhs and use visits to them as a safety valve
- Opposoed to the conscription in 1927 and 1932
- Jamali (al-Husri’s successor at the ministry of education) spent the last years of his tenure in the 1940’s advocating for shi’i mobility
- Shi’is began to attend government schools in 1930-1495
Jews
- Also attended government schools in mass
- Identified as citizens of Arab Iraq
- Became part of the Iraqi Arab intelligentsia
- Nazi propaganda and Zionism, along with Faiysal’s death in 1933 ended most Jewish aspirations
- Farhud event killed 150 Jews and began doubts of Jewish loyalty in Iraq
- Eventually obfuscated the role of Jews in Iraqi history
Kurds and Assyrians
- Both deemed political threats to the regime
- No possibility of independent Kurdistan after the treaty of ankara
- Assyrians were protected by the British, massacred in Bakr Sidiqi’s military campaign
Military and School
- Yasin al_Hashimi adovcated conscription to build a shared national identity
- capstoned with the Public Education Law of 1940
- Nationalist teaching subjects, history, geography, arabic language and literature in non-government schools
- Arabism was a mark of solidarity in the Baghdad Military College