Cultural Calendar

Newroz: Event by Event

From the fire of Newroz to Halabja Remembrance, from Yazidi holy days to harvest celebrations – every month holds a piece of Kurdish memory, identity, and living tradition.

40+Annual cultural events
21 MarNewroz – Kurdish New Year
5Event categories tracked
12Months of living heritage

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Click any highlighted date to see event details and explore the connected Heritage.KRD pages. Use the category filters to focus on festivals, history, sacred days, or cultural milestones.

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The Kurdish Year at a Glance

Every month of the year carries cultural weight – sacred observances, historical remembrances, and living traditions that connect Kurds across four countries and the diaspora.

The Kurdish Solar Calendar: Salnameyî Kurdî

The Kurdish solar calendar begins on Newroz – March 21 – and counts years from 612 BC, when the Medes and their allies defeated the Assyrian Empire and destroyed Nineveh. This year is 2638 in the Kurdish calendar. Enable the Kurdish dates toggle on the calendar above to see Kurdish day numbers alongside Gregorian dates.

2638
Kurdish Solar Year
The Kurdish calendar is a solar calendar with 12 months. The first six months have 31 days each, the next five have 30 days, and the last month has 29 days (30 in a leap year). Year 1 commemorates the fall of Nineveh and the liberation of the Medes – the ancestral event behind the Kawa and Newroz origin myth. → Read the Kawa myth
Month 1
Xakelêwe
خاکەلێوە
Mar 21 – Apr 20
"The earth turns over" – ploughing season begins
Month 2
Gulan
گوڵان
Apr 21 – May 21
"Flowers" – the bloom of spring
Month 3
Cozerdan
جۆزەردان
May 22 – Jun 21
"Moving of flocks" – transhumance season
Month 4
Pûşper
پووشپەڕ
Jun 22 – Jul 22
"Scattered grass" – height of summer heat
Month 5
Gelawêj
گەلاوێژ
Jul 23 – Aug 22
"The great star" – Sirius rises, peak summer
Month 6
Xermanan
خەرمانان
Aug 23 – Sep 22
"Threshing floor" – grain harvest
Month 7
Rezber
ڕەزبەر
Sep 23 – Oct 22
"Grape harvest" – autumn fruit picking
Month 8
Gelarêzan
گەلارێزان
Oct 23 – Nov 21
"Falling leaves" – autumn turning
Month 9
Sermawez
سەرماوەز
Nov 22 – Dec 21
"Cold wind" – first winter storms
Month 10
Befranbar
بەفرانبار
Dec 22 – Jan 19
"Snowfall" – deep winter
Month 11
Rêbendan
ڕێبەندان
Jan 20 – Feb 18
"Road closure" – mountain passes blocked by snow
Month 12
Reşeme
ڕەشەمە
Feb 19 – Mar 20
"Dark water" – late winter thaw begins
"The Kurdish year does not begin with January – it begins with fire, with the mountains lit, with the cry of Newroz."
Kurdish cultural tradition – the calendar as an act of identity

March–May: Season of Fire & Renewal

Spring is the most sacred season in the Kurdish calendar. Newroz, the ancient new year of fire, falls on the spring equinox – and the weeks that follow bring both celebration and remembrance of the heaviest sorrows in Kurdish history.

Newroz – 21 March

The Kurdish new year is celebrated on the spring equinox, marking the victory of the mythological blacksmith Kawa over the tyrant Zahhak. Bonfires are lit on hilltops, families dress in traditional clothing, and communities gather for govend circle dancing. → Read about Newroz on the Festivals page

Newroz is now recognized as an official holiday in Iraqi Kurdistan, Iran (as Nowruz), and celebrated by Kurdish communities worldwide. In Turkey it was banned until 2005, making its observance an act of cultural resistance for decades.

The folklore origin story – Kawa forging freedom from the forge – is told in detail on the Folklore & Mythology page.

Spring Events

  • 16 Mar – Halabja Chemical Attack (1988) remembrance
  • 20–21 Mar – Newroz Eve & New Year's Day
  • 21 Mar – International Nowruz Day (UNESCO)
  • Apr – Anfal Remembrance Week
  • Apr – Yazidi Red Wednesday (Çarşema Sor)
  • 15 May – Kurdish Language Day
  • May – Erbil Spring Cultural Festival
"Kurds have no friends but the mountains – and every spring, the mountains are set alight."
Kurdish proverb, on the tradition of Newroz bonfires

June–August: Season of Gathering & Music

Summer brings the great Yazidi pilgrimage to Lalish, open-air music festivals across Kurdistan, and the height of the diaspora summer schools and cultural gatherings. The mountains fill with visitors returning from Europe and beyond.

Lalish Pilgrimage & Yazidi Summer Feasts

The Yazidi holy valley of Lalish, near Dohuk, receives its largest pilgrimages in summer. Families who cannot visit throughout the year make the journey during the feast days. Sacred sites are anointed with sesame oil, prayers are offered at the tomb of Sheikh Adi, and traditional Yazidi music fills the valley. → Beliefs & Customs page

International Kurdish Film Festivals

Kurdish film festivals are held across Europe in summer – Gothenburg, Stockholm, London, and Erbil all host screenings. These events showcase films from directors including Hiner Saleem, Bahman Ghobadi, and Shawkat Amin Korki. → Film & Media page

Summer Events

  • Jun – Yazidi Feast of Sacrifice (Cemaya Cemaiyê preparation)
  • Jul – International Kurdish Film Festival (various cities)
  • Jul–Aug – Mountain music gatherings in Amadiya, Akre, Barzan
  • Aug – Sinjaar (Sinjar) Yazidi Remembrance (2014 genocide, 3 August)
  • Aug – Diaspora summer cultural schools (Germany, Sweden, UK)
  • Aug – Erbil International Fair

September–November: Season of Harvest & Memory

Autumn in Kurdistan is the harvest season – pomegranates, walnuts, and the last mountain crops come in. It is also the period of the great Yazidi Assembly at Lalish, and the time when Kurdish diaspora communities hold their largest cultural festivals in Europe.

Cemaya Cemaiyê – The Great Yazidi Assembly

Held each October, the week-long Yazidi Feast of Assembly (Cemaya Cemaiyê) at Lalish is the largest gathering in the Yazidi calendar. Pilgrims arrive from Iraq, Germany, Armenia, and beyond to pray, renew vows, conduct sacred marriages, and perform the rite of baptism in the White Spring (Kaniya Sipî). → Festivals page

Diaspora Cultural Festivals

October and November see large Kurdish cultural festivals in Hamburg, Hannover, Stockholm, and London – often coinciding with the end of the European festival season. These events combine traditional music, dance, food, and diaspora solidarity. → Diaspora page

Autumn Events

  • Sep – Harvest season begins; walnut, pomegranate, grape festivals
  • Oct – Cemaya Cemaiyê: Yazidi Great Assembly at Lalish (1 week)
  • Oct – Kurdish diaspora cultural festivals (Hamburg, Stockholm)
  • Nov – Kurdish Book Fair (Erbil)
  • Nov – Kurdish Poetry Day (celebrated informally)
  • Nov – Remembrance of the Kurdish exodus from Halabja (1988)

December–February: Season of Storytelling & Fasting

The long mountain winter is the traditional season of den-fire storytelling (çîrok), the Alevi Muharrem fast, and the Yazidi winter fast of Êzî. Dengbêj singers gather in the mala dengbêja and spin long narrative poems into the cold nights.

Muharrem – Alevi Forty-Day Fast

Kurdish Alevis observe the Muharrem fast in the Islamic month of Muharrem, commemorating the martyrdom of Imam Hussein at Karbala. Communities gather for cem ceremonies, semah ritual dance, and communal meals breaking the daily fast. → Festivals page

Dengbêj Winter Gatherings

The art of the dengbêj – the Kurdish oral poet-singer – reaches its peak in winter. In the mala dengbêja (dengbêj houses) of Diyarbakır, Erbil, and village gathering rooms, master singers perform kilam epics and stran songs that can last for hours. The tradition is detailed on the Music page and the Poetry & Literature page.

Winter Events

  • Dec – Yazidi Êzî Fast (three days, Yazidi calendar)
  • Dec–Jan – Muharrem fasting period (Alevi communities)
  • Jan – Kurdish New Year by solar Hijri calendar (some regions)
  • Jan – Dengbêj festival season (Diyarbakır mala dengbêja)
  • Jan – Midwinter Newroz preparation: fire-watching rituals
  • Feb – Kurdish Language and Culture Week (diaspora communities)
  • Feb – International Mother Language Day (21 Feb) – Kurdish language advocacy