xelefdev
940 posts

xelefdev
@xelefdev
Making Xelef, adventure #indie game set in 19th century Kurdistan Discord: https://t.co/WmOo35jjNt Youtube: https://t.co/3tJqN6maDA

Because Africa? I come from a continent where problems also exist and “the Arabs” you hate have created THE WORST HUMANITARIAN CATASTROPHE IN RECORDED HISTORY in Sudan. Do Kurds give a shit about African Muslims? You people are truly convinced that your oppression should be prioritised over a literal livestreamed mass extermination spree in Sudan and Gaza. That’s a special type of arrogance I pray never finds me.



@theafroaussie How is Kurdistan ethnosupremacy? Kurds are a distinct ethnic people, with a very long history and with 4 states committing genocide and ethnic cleansing to erase Kurdish existence. Israel uses similar tactics also against Palestinians.

Ethnosupremacy is the gateway drug to mass extermination. Forget about Palestine, right, Karim? Is Missy Elliot coming to the Levant anytime soon? Asking for a friend 😭




The wind stirs. The world shifts. Stand ready.


The wind stirs. The world shifts. Stand ready.

1- the corp drinking lifestyle is real and bad 2- both sexes do this. men also do the same thing and blow up their marriages and families. 3- trust me, no amount of alcohol, “prestige”, or casual sex will be worth it when you live like this

Every type of Syrian Sunni I've been talking to demands justice in the form of capital punishment as a minimum.


Broooo this is a PS4 game??? Because the art style is so nice the game still looks gorgeous even 9 years later I love vibrant & colorful RPGs so this is gonna be great to look at for many hours 🙏🏼








An Iraqi Kurdish fighter’s appearance at the PFL MENA 9: Pride of Arabia tournament in Dubai has sparked controversy after he appeared to conceal the Iraqi flag on his shorts and then raised only the Kurdistan flag. The fighter, Harda Karim, was competing in an event framed around Arab and regional soft power. Many Iraqis view the act as disrespect toward the flag of the country he was meant to represent. In symbolic politics, perception matters. The deeper issue is that this conduct is both wrong and increasingly normalised in Kurdistan, where much of the Kurdish media ecosystem often openly celebrates such incidents. Had Karim raised the Kurdistan flag alongside the Iraqi flag, the gesture would have been easy to defend. It would have expressed Kurdish pride without affronting a symbol that millions of Iraqis hold sacred. Sport can be a potent vehicle of soft power. A Kurdish fighter from Iraq competing in Dubai could have improved how Kurds are perceived by Arab audiences. Instead, the story became one of a Kurdish athlete appearing to not just reject the Iraqi flag on an Arab stage but disrespect it. The symbolism worsened after Karim lost to Egyptian fighter Ahmed El Sisy, who then raised the Iraqi flag himself. Whether one approves of that gesture or not, its narrative effect was obvious. It allowed the controversy to be framed as an Egyptian showing more respect for Iraq than an Iraqi Kurd. For Kurdish public image, that is a very damaging optic. This is where the deeper problem lies. Parts of the Kurdish media and social-media ecosystem increasingly promote a performative nationalism that mistakes provocation for strength. In that worldview, disrespecting the Iraqi flag is treated as an act of courage. In practice, it achieves the opposite. It does not strengthen Kurdistan; it deepens many Iraqis’ suspicion of Kurdish intentions. This matters because popular culture often shapes public attitudes more quickly than politics does. A sporting moment can become a political symbol within hours. Once an image spreads, it shapes how communities view one another.



آني اتعجب على شغلة وحدة عند الأكراد العرافيين!! ليش البعض من الكورد يخفون كونهم ينتمون إلى العراق مثل اليوم لاعب عراقي كودري الأصل تعمد تغطية العلم العراقي عند التقاط صورة أثناء المشاركة بالمسابقات الدولة؟ أي ليش شنو السبب فهموني؟؟!








