Iranians in Iraq
Regions with significant populations | |
---|---|
Karbalā', Najaf, Baghdad, Suleymaniyah, Maysan, Basra | |
Iraq | 486,000 |
Iran | 400,000[1] |
Languages | |
Persian, Mesopotamian Arabic, Kurdish | |
Religion | |
Shiʿa Islam[2] (minority Sunni Islam) | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Iranian diaspora (Iranians of UAE • Ajam of Bahrain • Ajam of Qatar • Ajam of Iraq • 'Ajam of Kuwait • Iranians of Canada • Iranians of America • Iranians of UK • Iranians of Germany • Iranians of Israel • Iranians in Turkey) Iranian Peoples (Lurs, Achomis, Baluchs, Kurds, Iranian Azeris), Turkic peoples (Qashqai, Azerbaijanis), Huwala |
Iranians in Iraq (Persian: ایرانیان در عراق, Arabic: الإيرانيون في العراق), are Iraqi citizens of Iranian background. Iranians have had a long presence in Iraq, since the Fall of Babylon.
Demographics
[edit]- There is a noticeable “Feylie tribe” (Lurs or Kurds) in Iraq, situated between the Iran, Iraq border.[3]
History
[edit]In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Saddam Hussein exiled between 350,000[4][5][3] to 650,000 Iraqi citizens of Iranian ancestry.[1] Most of them went to Iran. Most could prove an Iranian ancestry in Iran's court received Iranian citizenship (400,000) and some of them returned to Iraq immediately after his fall.[1] The population of Iraqis of Iranian descent is currently 486,000[citation needed] (not including Iranian residents in Iraq).
Culture
[edit]Most Feiyli Iraqis belong to Twelver Shīʿa Islam, the same religious sect that most Iraqis and Iranis belong to.[3]
While the Iraq side of Kurds on the other hand follow mostly Sunni Islam.
See also
[edit]- Iranian diaspora
- Moaved
- Medes
- Achaemenid Assyria
- Asuristan
- Parthian Empire
- Baghdad province (Safavid Empire)
- Feyli (tribe)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Hamshahri Newspaper (In Persian)". hamshahri.org. Retrieved 12 November 2014.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Pahlavan, Demographic Movements in the Region, p. 147.
- ^ a b c "History – Faili Kurds Association". failykurds.org. Retrieved 2024-12-04.
- ^ Iranica Online
- ^ U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI)[permanent dead link ]
Read more
[edit]- "History – Faili Kurds Association". failykurds.org. Retrieved 2024-12-04.