Bibliothèque Bibliothèque
Rechercher

Kurdipedia est des plus importantes sources d'information kurde!


Search Options





Recherche avancée      Clavier


Rechercher
Recherche avancée
Bibliothèque
Noms Kurdes
Chronologie des événements
Sources
Histoire
Collections de l'utilisateur
Activités
Rechercher Aide?
Publication
Video
Classifications
Élément aléatoire!
Envoyer
Envoyer l'article
Envoyer l'image
Survey
Vos commentaires
Contactez
Quel type d'information devons-nous!
Normes
Conditions d'utilisation
Point qualité
Outils
À propos
Kurdipedia Archivists
Articles de nous!
Ajouter Kurdipedia à votre site Web
Ajouter / Supprimer Email
Statistiques des visiteurs
Les statistiques de l'article
Polices Converter
Calendriers Converter
Vérification orthographique
Langues et dialectes des pages
Clavier
Liens utiles
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
Langues
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Mon compte
Connexion
L'adhésion!
Vous avez oublié votre mot de passe!
Rechercher Envoyer Outils Langues Mon compte
Recherche avancée
Bibliothèque
Noms Kurdes
Chronologie des événements
Sources
Histoire
Collections de l'utilisateur
Activités
Rechercher Aide?
Publication
Video
Classifications
Élément aléatoire!
Envoyer l'article
Envoyer l'image
Survey
Vos commentaires
Contactez
Quel type d'information devons-nous!
Normes
Conditions d'utilisation
Point qualité
À propos
Kurdipedia Archivists
Articles de nous!
Ajouter Kurdipedia à votre site Web
Ajouter / Supprimer Email
Statistiques des visiteurs
Les statistiques de l'article
Polices Converter
Calendriers Converter
Vérification orthographique
Langues et dialectes des pages
Clavier
Liens utiles
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Connexion
L'adhésion!
Vous avez oublié votre mot de passe!
        
 kurdipedia.org 2008 - 2024
 À propos
 Élément aléatoire!
 Conditions d'utilisation
 Kurdipedia Archivists
 Vos commentaires
 Collections de l'utilisateur
 Chronologie des événements
 Activités - Kurdipedia
 Aide
Nouvel élément
Bibliothèque
Kurdistan ou Arménie: tyrans ou martyrs
09-09-2023
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biographie
Auguste de Jaba
29-06-2023
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
Réception de la littérature européenne dans les romans d\'Orhan Pamuk
02-12-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
Qui suis-je, kurde ou français(e)
02-12-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
L\'AUGMENTATION DU TAUX DE SUICIDE CHEZ LES FEMMES KURDES
02-12-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
Libérer la vie : la révolution de la femme
20-10-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
Temps et espaces de la violence interne: revisiter les conflits kurdes en Turquie à l\'échelle locale
07-09-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
La révolution kurde. Le PKK et la fabrique d\'une utopie
05-09-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
Osman Sebrî (Apo): Analyse Bio-bibliographique
24-08-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
Quelles Frontières Pour Le Moyen-Orient ? - II
24-08-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Statistiques
Articles 519,060
Images 106,703
Livres 19,299
Fichiers associés 97,343
Video 1,392
Bibliothèque
L'Arménie dans le folklore ...
Bibliothèque
Documents du VIème Congres ...
Bibliothèque
Les Kurdes d'Irak
Bibliothèque
L' Homme Debout
Bibliothèque
Documents du VIIème Congres...
DREAMS WITHIN DEFEATS: THE KURDISH QUEST FOR MEANING
Groupe: Articles | Articles langue: English
Share
Facebook0
Twitter0
Telegram0
LinkedIn0
WhatsApp0
Viber0
SMS0
Facebook Messenger0
E-Mail0
Copy Link0
Classement point
Excellente
Très bon
Moyenne
Mauvais
Mauvais
Ajouter à mes collections
Donnez votre avis sur ce produit!
Histoire des Articles
Metadata
RSS
Recherche dans Google pour les images liées à l'élément sélectionné!
Recherche dans Google pour l'élément sélectionné!
کوردیی ناوەڕاست0
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû0
عربي0
فارسی0
Türkçe0
עברית0
Deutsch0
Español0
Française0
Italiano0
Nederlands0
Svenska0
Ελληνική0
Azərbaycanca0
Fins0
Norsk0
Pусский0
Հայերեն0
中国的0
日本人0

A boy sits atop the coffins during the 2022 funeral for the Gweiran Prison ...

A boy sits atop the coffins during the 2022 funeral for the Gweiran Prison ...
By Matt Broomfield
Many of us are familiar with the dictum, attributed to Antonio Gramsci, that socialists should be possessed by “pessimism of the intellect, optimism of the will.” In its original context, a prison letter written to an anarchist comrade whom he accuses of simplistically claiming petty victories, the militant Italian intellectual goes on to opine how: “My own state of mind synthesizes these two feelings and transcends them; Since I never build up illusions, I am seldom disappointed. I’ve always been armed with unlimited patience – not a passive, inert kind, but a patience allied with perseverance.”

As this typically dialectic ‘synthesis’ suggests, Gramsci is not drawing a simple contrast or suggesting that communists should continue organizing toward revolution in blind ignorance of reality. Rather, it is his very pessimism which equips him for the long struggle ahead. In the same way, the Kurdish freedom movement has found ways to incorporate defeats, setbacks, and losses into its mythology, ideology and praxis. Rather than ignoring or writing off defeats, the movement’s representatives, too, synthesize them into a bold account of all they stand to gain, underwritten by an admittedly pessimistic analysis of the material circumstances in which they are currently forced to operate.

Incumbent President Erdoğan’s likely victory in the upcoming run-off election is far from the greatest blow the Kurdish movement has faced in its long history. Nonetheless, organizers and observers on the campaign trail report a bitter mood the day after the first round of votes. Beset by sweeping arrests, a ban on their main legal political party, and an extraordinarily hostile media environment leaving them at the mercy of other candidates’ virulently nationalistic rhetoric, the pro-Kurdish bloc still maintained its position as the third-largest force in Parliament, but failed to make hoped-for gains. More pressingly, Erdoğan’s sole serious challenger Kemal Kiliçdaroğlu was unable to defeat the President outright despite the support of the Kurdish bloc, leaving both candidates appealing to the hard-right ahead of the May 28th run-off election and Erdoğan the all-but-certain victor.

On the one hand, those on the campaign trail in Northern Kurdistan (southeast Turkey) report the election is understood as part of a “life-or-death struggle”, describing “despair and heartbreak” as the results filtered in and Erdoğan garnered more votes than the polls had predicted. On the other, the result is described as “not that surprising”, with Kurdish political organizers planning victory parties and simultaneously laying contingency plans. Of course, the Kurdish movement is well accustomed to recognizing the limitations of institutional politics, even as they struggle for representation and participation within these institutions. But the same apparent contradiction is present in the Kurdish response to even more serious losses.

When responding to Turkish military operations against Kurdish-led attempts to establish democratic autonomy within and outside Turkey’s borders, the movement deliberately articulates the crises it faces in existential terms. In part, this is an effective strategy for organizing a guerrilla-style “people’s war” against a technologically-superior opponent. Representatives of the Kurdish-led Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES) use heightened rhetoric to describe the unsystematic ethnic cleansing which has seen the Kurdish population in Afrin (Efrîn) driven down from 97% to under a third, as Turkey installs primarily Arab and Turkmen militias in their place along the Turkish border, and incarcerates, harasses, and brutalizes the remaining Kurdish population.

Regional political leaders describe what is happening in Afrin as a ‘şerê hebûn û nebûnê’, (war of existence [or] non-existence), or sometimes more simply as ‘genocide’. If one believes that the region has not witnessed a sufficient enough number of systematic killings of Kurds to typically mark a genocide – then perhaps a term like ‘ethnic cleansing’ would suffice. However, this does not mean the conflict is not experienced by its Kurdish victims in an existential fashion, as a struggle not just for land or the right to governance, but over a political idea and way of life inextricably bound up in a particular ethnic identity.

Living in Afrin is not necessarily a death sentence for a Kurd: some corrupt collaborators, plus the elderly and indigent, endure. On the contrary, it is anyone suspected of defending their rights by working with the AANES or their military wings in the YPG (People’s Protection Units), YPJ (Women’s Protection Units), or SDF (Syrian Democratic Forces) – whether Kurd, Arab, or Yazidi – who can expect to be disappeared into one of the region’s black sites. The Kurdish movement is quite right to state that Turkey is not only opposed to Kurdish self-determination, but to the broader political program of federalism being trialled on its southern border. The movement must appeal to this all-or-nothing sense to justify its prophetic belief in its own destiny as the answer to totalizing state violence, and the correspondingly total sacrifices it demands of its loyalists.

But this approach, which enables extraordinary acts of valor, comes with an additional cost. If people are told that a war is for their very existence, and that war is then lost, the question arises of how they can possibly endure the defeat? On the campaign trail, as during the Turkish military operations against the AANES, it is easier to experience heady sensations of camaraderie, courageous defiance, and noble sacrifice. But there comes a day afterward, when the war is lost, and yet the looked-for bombs are yet to fall on one’s own bunker or home, and the infighting and recriminations resume. This dynamic, all-or-nothing energy may be maintained through a battle, a week, a year: but it must subside at one point, to be replaced by a curiously hollow sensation.

The victory has not come – in a guerrilla war pitting F-16 fighter jets against AK-47s, or an electoral process in Turkey scarcely worthy of the name, it never really could – but nor has the oblivion of total defeat. The Kurds must, therefore, find ways to endure.

Arriving in Rojava in the weeks following the Turkish invasion and occupation of Afrin, I was immediately struck by the gap between the sense of existential defeat I had anticipated and the reality of continued, frantic organizing – not only on the military front, but across diverse economic, political and cultural fields. Likewise, following the subsequent occupation of Serê Kaniyê and Girê Sipî, Western journalists poured through the border, fearing an Assad regime takeover, pausing only to publish weepy op-eds heralding the death of the revolution. In reality, nothing changed on the ground in terms of the AANES’ political and security control of the northern Syria interior. And again, despite the “heartbreak” in Turkey, there is no sense the likely electoral loss should be marked by a loss of hope: “Maybe we weren’t too pragmatic or score-oriented. And we suffered a quantitative loss. But we have done our part for the development of democracy in Turkey. There is still hope and a second chance for regime change.”

As in Gramsci’s ‘synthesis’, this ability to experience qualitative hope despite quantitative defeat is marked less by cognitive dissonance than negative capability – the ability to maintain mental contradictions, accept “uncertainties, mysteries and doubts”, and thus finding truths which exceed mere reason. The Kurdish movement’s ideologues, too, valorize the ability to think and operate politically through and beyond ‘contradictions’ – a word which recurs on almost every page of the imprisoned Kurdish leader Abdullah Öcalan’s writings.

In this aspect, Öcalan’s analysis of world history and the movement’s understanding of its own political history both recall the work of the mad, brilliant Marxist intellectual Ernst Bloch. Writing as a Jewish exile in the shadow of World War II, Bloch argues that Marxism is possessed of both ‘warm’ and ‘cold’ streams, with Marx not only instituting the science of historical materialism and thus demonstrating the logical inevitability of communism, but also releasing a current of utopian hope. Marx’s task is the ‘unmasking of ideologies and disenchantment of metaphysical illusion’ on the one hand, and yet unleashing a ‘liberating intention and… strong appeal to the debased, enslaved, abandoned, belittled, human being’ on the other – instigating what may, paradoxically, be defined as the new metaphysical ideology par excellence. The warm river flows into the cold and vice versa, cool dialectics instigating the white heat of revolution.

The Kurdish movement similarly speaks of ‘two rivers’ running through history, with the hidden and potent current of a repressed and democratic civil society increasingly submerged beneath the tidal bore of state power. As with Bloch’s teleology, this account remains ambiguous and open to interpretation – are we cherry-picking brief moments of hope from a history of continuous defeat and repression, or recognizing the subtler Marxist dialectic of progress through, rather than in despite of, these defeats? While Rojava is sometimes represented in isolated terms as the anarchist Paris Commune, or an unexpected and fleeting irruption of hope, as suggested above the project deserves the seriousness of critiques which contextualize it as a complex long-term terrain of ‘contradictions’, between minorities and chauvinist nation-states, women and patriarchal elders, and impoverished villages and centralized economies.

Albeit his account is the most radically transformative, Bloch was just one of several writers – Albert Camus, Theodor Adorno, Gabriel Marcel – who, writing in the aftermath of World War II, were nonetheless able to derive various calls for political action through pessimistic material analyses. What Bloch has in common with the Kurdish movement’s own approach is his ability to recognize the extraordinary liberatory potential in dialectic analyses of politics and history. Even as the movement describes its trials in existential, all-or-nothing terms, it is equipping itself for the transcendence of these trials.

This process finds its fullest expression in the secular martyr culture of the movement’s militant wing. In contradistinction to the martyr culture among Islamist groups, there is a strict opposition to the active pursuit of martyrdom, and the Kurdish movement does not tactically deploy suicide bombers in combat. But when that terminal point is reached, and a fighter falls in battle or sacrifices themselves to save their comrades, they are immediately placed among a pantheon of heroes, released from the process of navigating personal or political contradictions, while being celebrated and memorialized not for their death, but for their life and struggle. The Kurdish freedom movement does not deny these deaths any more than its defeats.

Rather, Rojava and the Zagros Mountains of Kurdistan are filled with memorial gardens decorated by the red, green, and yellow-liveried martyr posters, representing not the macabre, but the ability to find an inextricable expression of life in the very moment of death.

Another, less utopian Jewish intellectual, Walter Benjamin, called for the ‘political organization of pessimism’. In language which recalls Gramsci’s critique, he condemns the ‘unprincipled, dilettantish optimism’ of social democracy, recognizing the liberatory potential of surrealism as critiquing and undoing the concept of a linear process, but arguing this transformative, mercurial quality must be brought into line with an organized, “Communist answer”. If the Kurdish movement were to be plainly optimistic, it would suggest that all has been well until now, or that the current modes of political participation in Turkey and beyond will suffice for victory. Rather, it is their radical critique and liquidation which is expected and looked-for, in full knowledge of what the pursuit of this end has cost until now. A movement which identifies life in the moment of death is quite capable of ‘synthesizing’ admitted defeat at the ballot-box, barricade, or front-line into its own dynamic, organized, militant patience.

Author
Matt Broomfield
Matt Broomfield is a UK freelance journalist focused on the Kurdish issue, and co-founder of the Rojava Information Centre.[1]
Cet article a été écrit en (English) langue, cliquez sur l'icône pour ouvrir l'élément dans la langue originale!
This item has been written in (English) language, click on icon to open the item in the original language!
Cet article a été lu fois 645
HashTag
Sources
[1] | English | nlka.net 22-05-2023
Les éléments liés: 8
Groupe: Articles
Articles langue: English
Publication date: 22-05-2023 (1 Année)
Dialect: Anglais
Province: Ouest Kurdistan
Villes: Qameeshly
Technical Metadata
Point qualité: 97%
97%
Ajouté par ( هەژار کامەلا ) sur 23-05-2023
Cet article a été examiné et publié par ( زریان سەرچناری ) sur 27-05-2023
Cet article a récemment mis à jour par ( هەژار کامەلا ) sur: 26-05-2023
URL
Cet article selon Kurdipedia de Normes n'est pas encore finalisé!
Cet article a été lu fois 645
Attached files - Version
Sorte Version Nom de l'éditeur
Fichier de photos 1.0.1127 KB 23-05-2023 هەژار کامەلاهـ.ک.
Kurdipedia est des plus importantes sources d'information kurde!
Bibliothèque
Kurdistan ou Arménie: tyrans ou martyrs
Bibliothèque
Libérer la vie : la révolution de la femme
Biographie
Hamit Bozarslan
Articles
Province de Bitlis (1908-1915)
Bibliothèque
Qui suis-je, kurde ou français(e)
Articles
Les Kurdes et la construction d’une contre-mémoire du génocide arménien
Bibliothèque
L'AUGMENTATION DU TAUX DE SUICIDE CHEZ LES FEMMES KURDES
Articles
Insurrection urbaine dans l’espace kurde et Écologie sociale
Articles
La Question kurde au Moyen-Orient: entre dynamiques régionales et reprises en main nationales
Articles
Les Kurdes en Irak : une communauté linguistique qui protège son identité nationale
Bibliothèque
Réception de la littérature européenne dans les romans d'Orhan Pamuk

Actual
Bibliothèque
L\'Arménie dans le folklore Kurde
17-02-2014
هاوڕێ باخەوان
L\'Arménie dans le folklore Kurde
Bibliothèque
Documents du VIème Congres du PDK-I
28-01-2014
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Documents du VIème Congres du PDK-I
Bibliothèque
Les Kurdes d\'Irak
11-04-2014
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Les Kurdes d\'Irak
Bibliothèque
L\' Homme Debout
14-10-2016
هاوڕێ باخەوان
L\' Homme Debout
Bibliothèque
Documents du VIIème Congres du PDK-I
31-08-2017
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Documents du VIIème Congres du PDK-I
Nouvel élément
Bibliothèque
Kurdistan ou Arménie: tyrans ou martyrs
09-09-2023
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biographie
Auguste de Jaba
29-06-2023
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
Réception de la littérature européenne dans les romans d\'Orhan Pamuk
02-12-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
Qui suis-je, kurde ou français(e)
02-12-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
L\'AUGMENTATION DU TAUX DE SUICIDE CHEZ LES FEMMES KURDES
02-12-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
Libérer la vie : la révolution de la femme
20-10-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
Temps et espaces de la violence interne: revisiter les conflits kurdes en Turquie à l\'échelle locale
07-09-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
La révolution kurde. Le PKK et la fabrique d\'une utopie
05-09-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
Osman Sebrî (Apo): Analyse Bio-bibliographique
24-08-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Bibliothèque
Quelles Frontières Pour Le Moyen-Orient ? - II
24-08-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Statistiques
Articles 519,060
Images 106,703
Livres 19,299
Fichiers associés 97,343
Video 1,392
Kurdipedia est des plus importantes sources d'information kurde!
Bibliothèque
Kurdistan ou Arménie: tyrans ou martyrs
Bibliothèque
Libérer la vie : la révolution de la femme
Biographie
Hamit Bozarslan
Articles
Province de Bitlis (1908-1915)
Bibliothèque
Qui suis-je, kurde ou français(e)
Articles
Les Kurdes et la construction d’une contre-mémoire du génocide arménien
Bibliothèque
L'AUGMENTATION DU TAUX DE SUICIDE CHEZ LES FEMMES KURDES
Articles
Insurrection urbaine dans l’espace kurde et Écologie sociale
Articles
La Question kurde au Moyen-Orient: entre dynamiques régionales et reprises en main nationales
Articles
Les Kurdes en Irak : une communauté linguistique qui protège son identité nationale
Bibliothèque
Réception de la littérature européenne dans les romans d'Orhan Pamuk

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2024) version: 15.5
| Contactez | CSS3 | HTML5

| Page temps de génération: 0.969 seconde(s)!