History of the Jews in Kurdistan

Kurdish Jews
  • יהודי כורדיסטן
  • کوردە جوولەکەکان
  • Kurdên cihû
Rabbi Moshe Gabai, head of the Jewish community of Zakho, with Israeli President Yitzhak Ben-Zvi in 1951
Total population
250,000-300,000
Regions with significant populations
 Israelc.200,000
Languages
Northeastern Neo-Aramaic (mainly Judeo-Aramaic languages), Israeli Hebrew, Kurdish (mainly Kurmanji), Azerbaijani (in Iran)
Mizrahi Hebrew (liturgical use)
Religion
Judaism
Related ethnic groups
Other Mizrahi Jews, in particular Iraqi Jews, Iranian Jews, Assyrian Jews, Bukharian Jews and Syrian Jews

Kurdistani Jews are the Mizrahi Jewish communities from the geographic region of Kurdistan, roughly covering parts of northwestern Iran, northern Iraq, northeastern Syria and southeastern Turkey. Kurdish Jews lived as closed ethnic communities until they were expelled from Arab and Muslim states from the 1940s–1950s onward. The community largely spoke Judeo-Aramaic. As Kurdish Jews natively adhere to Judaism and originate from the Middle East, Mizrahi Hebrew is used for liturgy. Many Kurdish Jews, especially the ones who hail from Iraq, went through a Sephardic Jewish blending during the 18th century.

In the present-day, the overwhelming majority of Kurdistan's Jewish population resides in the State of Israel, with the community's presence coming as a direct result of either the Jewish exodus from Muslim states or the making of Aliyah by those remaining in the following decades (see Kurdish Jews in Israel).