Ibrahim Pasha Milli


Ibrahim Pasha Milli, 1843 – 1908, was the chief of the Kurdish Milan tribal federation in Upper Mesopotamia, the Aleppo Vilayet, and the Syrian Vilayet of the Ottoman Empire and the commander of several paramilitary Hamidiye regiments.

Life and military career

Ibrahim was a descendant of the Kurdish tribal leader Eyyub Beg whose clan headed a multi-confessional, but mostly Sunni Muslim and Kurmanji speaking federation of tribes that dwelled between Viranşehir, Urfa, Mardin and Diyarbakir and Dêrsim in modern-day Turkey, but also in what is now Northern Iraq's Niniveh Governorate, the Syrian Governorates of Aleppo and Hasakeh, and the Iranian West Azerbaijan Province.
During the first Egyptian military campaign of Ottoman Syria under Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt which weakened the Ottoman rule over the region, the Milli had taken control of the Euphrates east bank. Members of Ibrahim Pasha's family had also repeatedly quarrelled with the Arab Tayy and Shammar bedouins. During the Ottoman Tanzimat reform period several Milli clans members were imprisoned.
Ibrahim Pasha took over the chieftainry of the tribe in 1877 and developed political ties with the Ottoman Palace. Within the framework a new policy of tribal mobilisation by Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II. the Hamidiye regiments were established in 1891, following a decree published in November 1890.
At the end of the 19th Century Ibrahim Pasha had raised the substantial number of six regiments, 500 to 1150 men each, for the Ottoman Hamidiye.
In 1902 Ibrahim Pasha was given the actual rank of paşa at the occasion of a visit to the Ottoman capital Constantinople. He established his rule over Viranşehir and encouraged Christian craftsmen and traders, mainly Armenians and Chaldeans, to settle there. During the Armenian massacres of 1895 committed also by several Hamidiye paramilitary troops, Ibrahim Pasha is said to have protected and saved a considerable number of Christians.
Ibrahim Pasha extended his zone of influence progressively and, due to a conflict with the notables of the city of Diyarbakir among which was the Turkish writer and politician Ziya Gökalp, laid siege to the city in 1907 and coerced the citizens to pay him a tribute. Before the incident, representatives of the city had sent a telegram to the Sultan in Constantinople in which they demanded the withdrawal of Ibrahim Pasha's military credentials and those of his sons "who gave up the honor of being a soldier through brigandage and murder". General Talaat Pasha, who would later become a member of the ruling Committee of Union and Progress, was sent as special envoy to Diyarbakir by the Sublime Porte to deal with Ibrahim Pasha.
After the Young Turk Revolution of 1908 Ibrahim Pasha lost much of his influence in Upper Mesopotamia and left for Damascus where his forces were assigned to secure the construction of the German-Ottoman Hijaz railway project. In 1909, upon his return to the Diyarbakir region, he was persecuted by forces of the Young Turk government, who wanted to restore direct control over the region, and died during the escape. Other sources claim that a group of rival tribesmen had pursued him and that he died as a result of dysentery near the town of Nusaybin.

Legacy

In light of ethno-sectarian conflicts during and after Ottoman rule in Syria, and in spite of his reputation as a plundering gang-leader in Upper Mesopotamia, Ibrahim Pasha's measures to protect of Christians during the massacres, risking confrontation with Ottoman authorities, made him a reference figure for later generations of Syrian nationalists in their striving to overcome sectarianism.
Ibrahim Pasha received a number of European travellers, diplomats and scholars of Oriental Studies. The British colonal officer and politician Sir Mark Sykes who studied the tribes in Syria, wrote about Ibrahim Pasha's that he was the "most interesting" tribal leader and that his "mother was an Arab of the noblest race, his father a Kurdist chieftain of renown." In 1899 Ibrahim Pasha encountered the German archaeologist, historian and spy Max von Oppenheim and gifted him a peculiar stone statue from Ras al-Ayn. This led to Oppenheim's excavation campaign and the discovery of the 9th Century BC Aramaen kingsize of Tell Halaf.
After World War I and the Establishment of the French Mandate over Syria and Lebanon, members of Ibrahim Pasha's family took part in several uprisings against colonial rule, such as the Jazirah Revolt along the Euphrates against British Mandate for Mesopotamia or the nationalist movement of the Syrian National Bloc for Syrian independence from French rule. The leading clan of the Milli tribe allied with several urban notables of Aleppo such as Abd al-Rahman al-Kayyali, Ibrahim Hananu, or the Barazis, another significant Kurdish clan from Hama. The sons of Ibrahim Pasha took parts in Guerilla operations against the French forces during the so-called Hananu Revolt in 1920 and fought alongside the Ottoman an Sharifian officer Ramadan al-Shalash. One of Ibrahim Pasha's grandsons today is the tribal leader Ibrahim Ibrahim Pasha who co-founded the 'Council of the Syrian Charter' and is a Syrian political and civil society activist.