Unfortunately, the site is only in Kurdi or Turkish and therefore not much good at informing the rest of the world about Kurdish history and culture
Whereas the
The Kurdish Institute of Paris has the largest Kurdish Library in the Western World available in a great many languages.
Kurdish Institute of Paris (French: Institut Kurde de Paris), founded in February 1983, is an organization focused on Kurdish language, culture and history. It is one of the main academic centers of Kurdish language in Europe. Its main publications include a linguistic journal titled Kurmancî in Kurdish, a monthly press review about Kurdish issues titled Bulletin de liaison et d'information (Bulletin of Contact and Information) and Études Kurdes, a research journal in French.
Much of the activities of the Institute are focused on the Northern Kurmanji dialect of Kurdish. The institute has a library preserving many thousands of historical documents, pamphlets and periodicals about Kurds. Two representatives from the French Ministry of Interior and Ministry of Culture provide the link between the Institute and the Government of France. The Institute is headed by Kendal Nezan as the president and Abbas Vali (Swansea University) and Fuad Hussein (University of Amsterdam) as the two vice-presidents.
To ensure democracy, pluralism and the widest possible participation of intellectuals, writers, research workers and artists of the Kurdish Diaspora in its work, the Kurdish Institute has set up a Cultural and Scientific Council (CCS) consisting of five sections: Social and Cultural Studies, Language and Literature, Arts, Information and Human Rights and Stimulation of Socio-Cultural Activities.
These sections cover the areas of activity covered by the Institute's Rules and Objectives. The CCS also forms the Institute's electoral body. Every three years, its members elect, by secret ballot, the members of the Institute's Board of Directors.
The Kurdish Institute enjoys the support of many Western intellectuals who sponsor its activities. This Sponsorship Committee includes, amongst others:
Simone de Beauvoir †, writer; Maurice Bejart, choreographer; Elena Bonner, wife of A. Sakharov; Sean McBride †, Nobel Peace Prize Winner; Gérard Chaliand, writer and expert on Third World affairs, Associate Professor of Harvard University and of the ENA (National School of Public Administration) (Paris); Bernard Dorin, French Ambassador and member of the State Council; Miguel Angel Estrella, Argentinean musician; Bernard Kouchner, Minister of Health, founder of Médecins sans Frontières and Honorary President of Médecins du Monde; Jean Lacouture, writer and journalist; Claude Lanzmann, writer and author of the film "Shoah"; Claude Lefort, writer and philosopher; Jean Malaurie, ethnologist; Leo Matarasso †, lawyer and President of the International League for the Liberation of Peoples; Rigoberta Menchu, Nobel Peace Prize winner; Danielle Mitterrand; Edgar Morin, sociologist and writer; Henri Noguères †, lawyer and former President of the French League for Human Rights; Adolfo Perez Esquivel, Nobel Peace Prize winner; Madeleine Robérioux, historian and former President of the League for Human Rights; Maxime Rodinson, orientalist and specialist in Islamic Studies; Andrei Sakharov †, Nobel Peace Prize winner, physicist; Laurent Schwartz, mathematician, Professor of Mathematics at the Ecole Polytechnique; Paul Thibaud, director of the periodical Esprit; Germaine Tillon, sociologist; Jean-Pierre Vernant, Professor at the College de France; Pierre Vidal-Naquet, Hellenist, writer and Professor at the Sorbonne; Gunter Walraaf, German journalist; Marguerite Yourcenar †, writer.
The founders of the Institute are Kurdish intellectuals and artists, well known in Kurdistan. Amongst them, the film maker Yilmaz Güney, whose film YOL won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1982; the Syrian Kurdish poet Cegerxwin; Hejar, Iranian Kurdish poet and linguist, translator of Avicenna into Persian and of the Coran and Omar Khayyam into Kurdish; Tewfiq Wahby, linguist and former Iraqi Minister of Education; Professor Q. Kurdo, grammarian and linguist at the Leningrad Institute of Oriental studies; H. Cindy, Kurdish writer from Armenia; Remzi Rasa, French Kurdish painter; N. Zaza, Swiss Kurdish writer and linguist.
DIGITALISATION OF WORKS
The Kurdish Institute maintains the largest Kurdish Library in the Western World.
This contains over 10,000 monographs about the Kurds, in 25 languages, several tens of thousands of published documents, collections of reviews and newspapers, photographs, videos, post cards and posters, as well as audio archives and music recordings.
This rich documentation fills over a third of the Institute's premises as well as a substantial part of its warehouse, located in a Paris suburb. References to these monographs and the principal documents have been computerised.
They also have an extremely experienced expert who is a well known writer, an expert translator. ands whose knowledge of everything Kurdish is probably the best in the world.