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Where Silence Speaks
THE WEEK India
|June 08, 2025
Barzani National Memorial Museum in Iraqi Kurdistan offers a deeply personal glimpse into Kurdish resilience, memory and identity
Ignore him, you don’t have to cover your head,” said the group of men accompanying me, just as we stepped into the museum in Barzan village. Nestled in the scenic Zagros Mountains and surrounded by oak-covered hills, Barzan is about three hours from Erbil, the capital of the Kurdish regional government in Iraqi Kurdistan. Their reassurance followed a guard's quiet request that I cover my head—an exchange that, in retrospect, captured much of what I encountered in Iraqi Kurdistan: a society negotiating the delicate balance between tradition and modernity.
The Kurds are the fourth largest ethnic group in the Middle East, native to regions now divided among Iran, Iraq, Turkey and Syria. Of them, only the Iraqi Kurds have succeeded in establishing a degree of autonomy, secured after the 2003 US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein. But my visit was less about politics and more about memory: specifically, how a people remember their past, while continuing to build their future. In Kurdish society, this memory finds powerful expression through museums, monuments and symbols. These are not only tributes to sacrifice but instruments of self-definition, providing a voice to a history often silenced.
During my time in Erbil, I visited the Barzani National Memorial Museum and the monument to the Barzan genocide, both located in Barzan village. These sites are more than historical markers—they offer an intimate window into Kurdish identity, endurance and reverence for those who came before.

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