The first Kurdish paper focused on raising national and ethnic awareness among the Kurds. Baderkhan called for a Kurdish revolution through education and public awareness on the cover page of the first issue. 


The paper was published in Cairo because it was a relatively free region, and the Ottoman authority in Egypt had eroded. The Baderkhan family continued to publish Kurdistan until 1902. 


Kurdistan was not published on a scheduled timeline but rather on various dates. Few issues of the paper were published in Switzerland.  


Kurdistan was a private paper, probably one of the first private papers in the Middle East and the broader world. It was funded by the Baderkhan family, an aristocratic Kurdish family who were exiled and separated by the Ottoman Empire after an unsuccessful uprising attempt. 


Kurdish papers proliferated after the liberation of Iraq in 2003. As the first autonomous Kurdish polity, Kurdistan Region has helped in the appearance of hundreds of newspapers and media outlets that maintain their independence and impartial coverage.