Society for the Elevation of Kurdistan


The Society for the Elevation of Kurdistan "Kürdistan Teali Cemiyeti" was secretely established in Constantinople on 6th November 1917, and offically declared on the 17th of December 1918, after the armistice of Murdos and subsequent arrival of allied troops in the capital.
It was the first re-establishment of The Kurd Society for Cooperation and Progress of 1908. This society like its precessor has been known by an array of different names including, Society for the Advancement of Kurdistan, Society for the Rise of Kurdistan, Society for the Ascension of Kurdistan, Society for the Recovery of Kurdistan, Society for the Progress of Kurdistan, Kurdish Social League, Society for the Development of Kurdistan and Society for the Betterment of Kurdistan.
The charter of the society describes its mission as to protect the Kurd nation's political, economic and social interests and historical and racial rights. It also called for the international recognition of Kurd rights, it rapidly gained widespread membership in its newly opened chapters.
The leadership of the society was almost identical to that of its predecessor a decade earlier, including both Abdulkadir Ubeydullah and Emin-Ali, but as its original third founder Serif Pasa was in exile, his replacement and representative was his brother Fuad Pasa.
The leadership structure of the society;
President: Abdulkadir Ubeydullah
Vice President: Emin-Ali
Vice President: Fuad Pasha
Secretary General: Hamdi Pasha
Treasurer: Abdullah Effendi
In January 1919 the society in a letter outlined its objectives to the British government through their High Commissioner in Constantinople Sir Somerset Gough-Calthorpe the letter consisted of four main points;
1. A specified and geographically defined territorial area to be assigned to the Kurds.
2. The Kurds would be grateful to enjoy the same privileges and to receive the same treatment at the hands of the Allied Powers of the Entente, as those granted to the Arabs, Armenians, Chaldeans, Assyrians and other small nationalities without distinction of race and religion.
3. The Kurds should be granted self government.
4. The Kurds particularly beg the British government to kindly undertake the protection of their rights and interests, and to help them in their path to civilisation and progress.
In June 1919 at its annual conference, the society voted to place the Wilsonian Fourteen Points at the centre of its political programme, and warned that if Kurds were to fail in securing their national rights, they would remain oppressed and deprived of rights, and possibly remain imprisoned for centuries. The conference also declared the Kurds had the right to choose their own form of administration in their homeland and that it was appropriate for them to work towards attaining their national rights as did other nations and neighbouring communities.
The society in a meeting at their Constantinople headquarters unanimously passed a proposal from their members that Serif Pasa be appointed as the sole representative of the Kurdish nation to the Paris Peace Conference in 1919.
It published a journal called Jin.
Other notable members of the society numbered 176 in total.
Membership to the society was not limited to Kurds. John Duncan noted that the statutes of the society included "To be admitted, prospective members were to provide a recommendation from one of the established members."