Photo: DAANES
Ishtartv.com – rudaw.net
10-04-2025
ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - Authorities from the Kurdish-led
administration in northeast Syria (Rojava) on Wednesday slammed the recent
remarks by Syria’s cultural minister claiming that the Syriac language is a
dialect of Arabic.
In a televised interview on April 1, Syrian Cultural Minister Mohammed Saleh
claimed that the Syriac language is “an ancient Arabic dialect.” His remarks
drew outrage from the Assyrian, Chaldean, and Syriac minority community as an
attempt to erase their identity and history.
“We in the Culture Board of North and East Syria affirm that the Syriac
language is an independent Semitic language belonging to the Aramaic branch,
with a documented history extending for thousands of years,” said a statement
from the Democratic Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria
(DAANES).
During the interview, Saleh also claimed that the name “Syria” means “the
masters,” from which the English word “sir” was derived. The DAANES also
slammed that remark as one that has “no reliable or scientific basis, and
constitutes an explicit infringement on the linguistic and cultural identity of
the Syriac-Assyrian people, who are considered among the oldest indigenous
people in this land.”
“As for the name ‘Syria,’ its origins go back to the civilizations and peoples
of this region, and was given by the Greeks to refer to an area inhabited by
Assyrians, Akkadians, Babylonians, Arameans, and Syriacs,” the statement
affirmed.
Syriac, one of the oldest languages in the world, is spoken by many Christians
in the Middle East as their mother tongue. Speakers are mostly concentrated in
the Assyrian, Chaldean, and Syriac community’s indigenous homeland spanning
across parts of Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Turkey.
It is also spoken in Jordan, Israel, Armenia, Georgia, and Lebanon by smaller
pockets of the community.
The Rojava administration further slammed Saleh’s remarks as ones that “express
totalitarian, exclusionary thinking, and the transitional government must be
cautious of such thinking.”
“Preserving cultural and linguistic diversity in Syria is not a favor or a
gift, but rather an essential condition for building a pluralistic democratic
state based on mutual recognition and respect for others,” it stressed.
A prominent Syriac-Assyrian party based in Rojava also condemned the remarks.
“The statements of Syria’s minister of culture regarding the Syriac language
are rejected and unacceptable. We see this as an erasure and marginalization of
Syriac identity and language,” Sanharib Barsoum, co-chair of the Syriac Union
Party, told Rudaw on Monday.
“This is the same policy that the former Baath regime followed, considering the
Syriac people as Christian Arabs to erase an important part of Syria’s ancient
history,” he stressed.
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