Letter from Rojava: 'A revolution is not a final destination'

December 19, 2016
Issue 
Poster reads: Join your local commune, defend the confederal system. Photo via Red Pepper.

The Kurdish people are an oppressed nationality without a state, whose homeland is currently divided between five countries in the Middle East. Despite this, the left-wing Kurdish movement in Syria’s north is not fighting for a separate nation state. Rather, it is seeking to unite all ethnic groups and religions to fight for an autonomous, participatory democracy as part of a profound social movement that puts women’s liberation at its heart.

Below, Peter Loo, a direct participant in the process, describes its aims and challenges. It is reprinted from Red Pepper.

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In 2012, the Democratic Union Party (PYD), a Syrian-based Kurdish political party connected to the left-wing Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) based in Turkey, took advantage of the spiralling chaos of the Syrian civil war to eject regime forces from large parts of Northern Syria (Rojava – which means “West Kurdistan” in Kurdish) and lead a social revolution.

Despite being in open conflict with ISIS and Turkish-backed Syrian rebels, and under embargo from Turkey and the Kurdish Regional Government of Iraq, the PYD is leading the struggle for an ambitious series of social changes through the Movement for a Democratic Society (TEV-DEM), an alliance of political and civil society groups.

These objectives are based on the “New Paradigm” of the PKK and its leader, Abdullah Ocalan. Jailed for life in Turkey, Ocalan has led his party away from classical Marxism-Leninism to a set of politics with an emphasis on democratic confederalism (a decentralisation of political power with an emphasis on smaller-scale assemblies), a women’s revolution, and the importance of ecology.

Social revolution

These three elements are the official central planks of the social revolution in Rojava.

Organised in three non-continuous cantons in Rojava, with ISIS and Turkish-backed forces separating two of them, the revolution has seen huge leaps forward in terms of women’s liberation and the spreading of the confederal model into non-Kurdish majority areas and communities.

In the face of decades of under-development and the current embargo, tentative steps have also been made to develop a more social economy through the encouragement of workers co-operatives, the development of trade unions and the socialisation of what little industry (primarily oil) that exists.

However, it should be noted that at this stage in the revolution a change in economic system is not the primary focus. Contrary to what some may believe, we are still using money here and private property still exists.

A revolution is not a final destination, but another step in building a society beyond capitalism, a step which, once taken, changes the responsibilities and challenges facing revolutionaries.

Problems

Having overcome the regime and achieved control of a large part of the north of Syria, the cantons are facing two sets of problems.

The first are security problems; the cantons need to be physically united and solutions to the currently hostile forces in Syria, Iraq and Turkey must be found. Simultaneously the revolution needs to be developed and deepened.

Like all revolutions, this one does not enjoy universal support. While large land owners and business owners are never likely to support the revolution, the members of the non-Kurdish communities in the region are slowly becoming more supportive of what is happening.

The revolution has its roots in the Kurdish liberation movement, but it aims to provide a political blueprint for all the communities in Northern Syria. Since the revolution, wider and more inclusive political structures are being built here and plans are being made for the long term.

While the confederal model, with its layers of people’s assemblies and democratic structures, is not yet as widespread as some in the West would think, the neighbourhood assemblies which make up its lowest level, are spreading. Being only a few years old the confederal system is looking towards the 11 years of progress that have been achieved north of the border in Bakur (Turkish-occupied North Kurdistan).

A large amount of emphasis is being placed on education as a tool to develop the people’s understanding and support for the revolution. The revolution initially began from within the Kurdish community, but building support across the other communities that exist in the region — such as Arabs, Syriacs, Chechens and Armenians — is a political priority.

Working with these different communities, some unsure or even critical of the revolution, to build support for the revolution is hard work and takes time.

Commune-building campaign

As part of my work, I am helping TEV-DEM here in Qamishlo organising around this issue. A campaign has been launched under the slogan “join your local commune, support the confederal system”.

It is focused at the lowest levels of the confederal system, the neighbourhood communes and the mala gel (people’s houses) — the assemblies and commissions that operate here feed ideas and delegates up the political system, and serve as community centres offering education and civic services.

These structures are not yet as widespread as they could be and many people only use them when they have personal problems they need solving. We are running seminars and public events about the importance of the confederal model, as well as visiting different community centres and speaking with people on the street and in their homes.

As we criss-cross the city to flyer or attend meetings, navigating a checkerboard of differing checkpoints along the way, we encounter varying levels of support for the communes and the revolution in general, often along ethnic lines.

The Christian Syriac community here, for example, is divided into two: one half supporting the revolution the other half the regime. The division in the Syriac neighbourhood is clear — two security forces and two sets of competing murals and flags.

As I spend more time here, the regime neighbourhoods are becoming easier to spot, they are (or were pre-revolution) mainly the more upper-class neighbourhoods with nicer housing and shops that even now are always full of things to buy.

The lack of many basic necessities across the revolutionary areas of Rojava is a stumbling block for many people in supporting the revolution. Oil and bread are fairly abundant owing to the regime’s historic “development” policies for the region, there is a lack of other basic necessities due to the embargo.

Without a material improvement in people’s lives, many people will not view the revolution as a successful one. A major task for the international solidarity movement must be to pressure Turkey and the Kurdish Regional Government to repeal their embargo.

Women’s movement

The women’s revolution that is well underway also has deep roots and did not spring out of nowhere. The PKK made women’s liberation a central plank of their politics in the 1990s. The Yekitiya Star (Star Union) in Rojava, the predecessor to Kongreya Star, had been organising women in the face of regime repression since 2005.

Beyond the huge participation of women in the YPJ and security forces, the women’s movement is achieving great things in civil society. As well as achieving legislative change — for example passing laws banning forced marriages and legalising abortion — at the grassroots level a whole series of women’s centres, educational programs, organising groups, and newspapers and radio stations have been created.

The revolution is being institutionalised through requirements for a parity of speakers and a minimum 40% representation of women in all structures. Kongreya Star estimates that women’s participation rates in the commune system ranges from 50 to 70%.

When seen in the context of the deeply conservative society upon which this revolution is being built, one in which a strictly gendered separation of social roles and violence against women were common, these developments are even more impressive.

To fundamentally change this society an emphasis is being placed on education to empower women. Kongreya Star run weekly education sessions for their members for example, and re-education programs exist for men who show consistent problematic behaviour.

Obviously the Rojava revolution has not emerged fully formed in spontaneous response to the horror of the Syrian conflict. It builds on the experiences and practices of other parts of the Kurdish liberation movement.

For more than 40 years its leading organisation, the PKK, has resisted huge amounts of state violence to develop from a small Marxist-Leninist guerilla force into a huge hybrid movement whose extensive civic organisations are tangibly woven into the daily lives of hundreds of thousands of people.

The PYD and its allies were busy in the years before the revolution began, spreading their ideas and building the assemblies and self-defence forces which would be needed later on.

Now the Assad regime has been evicted, the organisations here are still taking a long term view: building the institutions and infrastructure needed to further develop the revolution, and placing faith in education and diplomacy to communicate this political vision across the different communities.

Organisers in the West might be tempted to project their dreams of a perfect, spontaneous revolution onto Rojava, but this is not the case. The revolution here is being built slowly upon long term planning, structures and education.

Peter Loo is a member of Plan C currently working in Qamishlo with TEV-DEM. His latest report for Plan C can be found here.

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