At its heart, the Kurdistan freedom movement is a secular, socialist mass movement that attracts people from different regions, ethnicities, religions, and class backgrounds. The presence of youth, women, religious minorities, and the poor across the different sites is particularly noticeable. A large number of professional revolutionaries (cadres), civilian organizers, and casual sympathizers survived forced migration, state violence, and some sort of trauma. Often, entire families are mobilized, which makes this a highly intergenerational struggle. At its core, it is led by a decades-old, revolutionary party with devoted, militant cadres. It is one of the last remaining guerrilla movements claiming to fight against capitalism. It organizes, in a highly structured way, myriads of cultural, social, political, and military institutions to realize the ideas it articulates in volumes of regular publications. Although the movement has transformed itself ideologically and organizationally, many of its ways are characterized by a partisan mode of organizing familiar from twentieth century socialist and anti-colonial movements: the central role of leadership and ideology and an unapologetic attitude towards political violence (‘self-defence’), to name a few. The movement’s ideology and corresponding political practice offer the main ground for its claims to legitimacy. Instead of speaking in the abstract on behalf of ‘the people’, the movement is able to refer to thousands of grassroots self-organized revolutionary structures that it helped build over years and across territories to represent collective and organized political will. On one hand, its globally oriented political vision appeals to the new era of planetary justice struggles beyond nationalism or the nation-state; on the other hand, its focus on ideology and ground-up organizing among largely lower-class communities are very much in the fashion of old revolutionary movements.
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The Kurdish women’s liberation movement defines revolution not as a disruptive single ‘day in the calendar’, but as a long-term struggle to dismantle all forms of domination in society, to therefore enable liberated social relations. The revolution is framed as being about democratizing everyday relations of life, between groups inside society, between societies, and between human societies and nature. In the movement’s literature, forceful criticisms are directed towards the authoritarian character of historical socialist projects. Criticizing older socialist schools’ fascination with modernity and the state, the movement claims to lead ‘a paradigmatic struggle against capitalist modernity’, i.e. the ideological, cultural, and social project that dominates and colonizes contemporary human imagination. Instead of aspiring to establish new, power-centric regimes, revolutionary institutions and perspectives should create conditions to restore moral-political reflexes that society lost to state, capitalism, and patriarchy. Organization is key to this. Protest and resistance are seen as insufficient to break the systematic wars waged against women, peoples, and nature. Formless, erratic rebellion, as well as critique that is not backed by organizational capacity, are both seen as expressions of defeatism. Instead of becoming secondary ‘wings’ of the larger struggles, those who are the most oppressed must become the radicalizing force that pulls the rest along. Because the 5,000-year-old domination of women is seen as the oldest and most profound form of oppression, and intrinsically linked to the institutionalization of all other injustices in human society, the movement views women’s liberation not only as an end in itself, but also as a central method to society’s liberation as a whole. The active invigoration of women, their history, agency, politics, and interests, has been upheld as a revolutionary ideal especially following the movement’s paradigm shift in the early twenty-first century: the respectability of women ought not to rely on their role as mothers or fighters as may have been the case in earlier stages of the struggle. Rather, women, the original owners of economy and organizers of society, must be valued per se, by virtue of hosting within themselves the possibility to be the creators of ‘free life’. In other words, the internal colony’s own objectified internal colony must become the main subject of the revolution; they are the most radical revolutionaries within the revolution. Practically, women and all oppressed sections in society must organize autonomously in all spheres of life and break free from oppressive social expectations. The movement also claims to be a struggle for men’s liberation from the violent templates imposed on all of society under patriarchy. ‘Killing dominant masculinity’ is regarded as a strategic objective in the movement’s works, as manifested in its activities in education, culture, and media. Spread over a long period, and across different sites and spaces, the privileging of women’s liberation on the agenda also functions as a rehabilitating antidote to destigmatize men’s relationship to emotionality, empathy, and care.