First Kurdish Sci-Fi Collection is Rooted in the Past

From the "Beyond" exhibition, Zehra Dogan, "Kurdistan 2," acrylic, felt pen, gold paper on map, 114x150cm, 2020 (courtesy of the artist and Prometeo Gallery, Milan).

28 NOVEMBER 2023 • By Matthew Broomfield
A book described as the first anthology of Kurdish science fiction ever collected and published in the UK offers a space for new expressions and new possibilities in the ongoing struggle for self-determination.

 

Kurdistan + 100: Stories from a Future State
Edited by Orsola Casagrande & Mustafa Gundogdu
Comma Press 2023
ISBN 9781912697366

 

Matt Broomfield

 

An author writes a science fiction story, in which members of her long-oppressed nation are trapped alive under a bombed-out mountain, form a microcosmic society, emerge in 2046 to lead a new liberatory political movement and achieve a brief flourishing of autonomy, only to be driven back under the mountain and slaughtered by fresh air-strikes. As a result of penning this and other, similar stories and poems, the writer is found guilty of terror offenses. When she tries to flee her country, the neighboring state refuses her entry and drives her back into the clutches of the authoritarian regime, which then cites the fact she attempted to flee as further proof of her guilt.

Kurdistan +100 is published by Comma Press.

This extraordinary sequence of events is no meta-fictional exploration of censorship in a future dystopia, but the reality faced by Kurdish author Meral Şimşek. In their introduction to Kurdistan + 100 – Stories from a Future State, described as the first anthology of Kurdish science fiction ever collected and published in the UK, editors Orsola Casagrande and Mustafa Gündoğdu note that Turkish prosecutors are even citing the “utopian country” described Şimşek’s contribution as evidence of actual plans laid out by Kurdish militants.

This is despite the fact that Şimşek is careful to present the antagonizing power in her story as an un-named “Country X.” While the allegory is clear enough, prosecutors’ immediate assumption that Turkey is the country being referenced itself confirms the extent of nationalist paranoia under President Erdoğan’s brutal regime. Similarly, the way the editors represent Şimşek’s vision of all-too-brief, rapidly-quashed autonomy as a “utopia” suggests how severely repressed Kurdish dreams of independence remain.

Several contributors to the collection have been convicted and incarcerated for speaking out in support of Kurdish rights and identity, including leading Turkish Kurdish politician and author Selahattin Demirtaş, currently serving a 183-year sentence for peacefully advocating for his peoples’ rights. The collection as a whole is ultimately less speculative than it is burdened by the weight of historic violence and repression against the Kurdish people. Even when they emerge from their mountain retreat into futurity, Şimşek’s heroes live in traditional “wooden houses” since they are “nervous about living at altitude,” and “feel suffocated” by the “enormous skyscrapers” they behold. It’s a striking metaphor for the extent to which, for the Kurdish people, even an imagined future remains haunted by the past.

 

A fragmented resistance

Throughout the 20th century, Kurds have sought to imagine all manner of political alternatives to their current plight. Since the Middle East was divided up by imperial powers following WWI, the territory of Kurdistan remains divided between four states which have all consistently repressed the Kurdish identity: Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey. Different efforts at establishing a better future for the Kurds have been inspired by very different ideas. In Iraq, the international reaction to Saddam Hussein’s genocide of the Kurds ultimately created space for the establishment of a Kurdish-nationalist devolved region, which itself stands accused of repressive, crony-capitalist rule by oil-rich elite Kurdish families. In neighboring Syrian Kurdistan, since 2011 the “Rojava revolution” has seen Kurds, Arabs and minorities attempt to implement a unique form of federal, direct-democratic, women-led governance, but the region remains internationally unrecognized, impoverished, and at the mercy of repeated Turkish assaults.

Contributors to Kurdistan +100 were asked to imagine what Kurdistan might look like in 2046, a century on from another landmark attempt at autonomy: the 1946 Republic of Mahabad, in Iranian Kurdistan. The Soviet-backed Republic survived less than a year, with the USSR offering little genuine protection before pulling out from the region under Western pressure, sealing the Kurds’ fate as forces controlled by Iran’s imperial Pahlavi dynasty retook control, burned Kurdish books, and executed Kurdish leader Qazi Mohammed and his allies.

The Republic is well-known among Kurds as a heroic if doomed early effort in self-determination, but it is less commonly discussed in international settings, including those sympathetic to the Kurds. Even in Kurdish circles, Rojhilat (Iranian Kurdistan) tends to get the least airtime of those four divided regions. 2022’s major women-led uprisings in Iran, following the death of Kurdish woman Jina Mahsa Amini at the hands of Iran’s morality police, brought unprecedented global attention to the brutality endured by Iran’s Kurds from 1946 onward, but Jina’s Kurdish identity and the extent to which the protests were inspired by the Kurdish movement and the revolutionary principles embodied in the slogan “Jin, Jiyan, Azadi” (“Women, Life, Freedom”) were often downplayed or ignored.

By basing their project around Mahabad, therefore, the editors make an important political choice. “The legacy of the Republic of Mahabad is still vivid in Kurdish cultural memory, not just for being the Kurds’ first modern experiment with self-rule, but also for the values it defended (equality, cultural tolerance, fraternity with the other peoples of the region and recognition of the Kurdish language),” they write in their introduction. Moreover, this decision makes it clear that the Kurdish national struggle did not emerge from nothing with the outbreak of war in Iraq and Syria, an increasingly-prominent role played by Kurdish forces in ISIS’ defeat, but has taken diverse, though interlinked, forms throughout history.

More broadly, the fragmented nature of the Kurdish national movement, which has taken Islamist and nakedly capitalist forms in some eras and regions while taking progressive, socialist and avowedly anti-capitalist form elsewhere, lends itself to exploration in the shape of a short story anthology. Here, contributors from all four regions of Kurdistan write in English, Turkish, as well as both Kurmanji and Sorani Kurdish. The history of Kurdish resistance is itself a patchwork of linked but distinct projects and ideologies, rather than a straightforward bildungsroman culminating in the neat conclusion of a nation-state.

 

Simple dys/utopias

Some individual contributions to the collection take a straightforward approach to speculative fiction, with the future serving as direct allegory for, or extension of, the present. Nariman Evdike’s “The Letter,” for example, is hardly sci-fi at all, rather expressing a simple, fundamental desire for an “independent state” and the protection of Kurdish and minority rights just like that being trialed in Evdike’s native Rojava today. Conversely, in “Friends Beyond the Mountains, Ava Homa essentially retells the fall of Mahabad in a future setting — suggesting, perhaps, the “eternal return” of human suffering which Nietzsche once described as an endlessly tumbling hour-glass through which lives wash like grains of sand.

A contribution like Jîl Şwanî’s “The Wishing Star” is typical in heightening adverse circumstances already suffered by Kurds (water scarcity, isolation from the outside world, police repression) to dystopic levels. The grim, hardscrabble existence Şwanî envisages is familiar enough in its debt to other scorched-earth post-apocalyptic visions, and remarkable only in the sense that it reminds the Western reader that what might seem like sci-fi dystopia is close to lived reality elsewhere.

This does not necessarily mean, though, that the authors imagine crude dystopias or utopias, any more than the Kurds’ present reality is wholly defined by hope or despair alone. Contributors like Şimşek and Qadir Agid, in “The Last Hope,” are readily able to imagine future Kurdish infighting and betrayal despite apparent political gains. Şwanî’s story is redeemed by its knowing conclusion — after the journalist-protagonist escapes from the desertified wasteland of a post-apocalyptic Kurdish police-state hinterland and brings an account of the region’s devastation to the outside world, the story ends on a note of clear-eyed skepticism. “In the end, nothing changed,” laments the disillusioned journalist, having learned a lesson about the limits of advocacy and awareness-raising. Here, as elsewhere, normative, liberal narratives of progress are questioned by Kurdish authors who know their limitations full well.

Likewise, in Homa’s tale, an initially naive-seeming vision of a Kurdish utopia powered by progressive, Kurdish-programmed algorithms is ultimately undone in a reversal to very 20th-century forms of violence. To a people suffering under reactionary rule, straightforward development underwritten by supposedly-emancipatory technology isn’t an option: “the world beyond may have been technologically and scientifically progressing, but here, in my world, any breath could be my last.”

Towards the end of the book, suggestions for more radical forms of emancipation start to emerge. In “Cleaners of the World, Hüseyin Karabey starts with the rather absurd premise of a Greta Thunberg stand-in and her Kurdish classmate traveling to the guerilla-filled mountains of Kurdistan to start a globalized, decentralized “Eco-Marxist” movement, a kind of Fridays-for-Future meets Kurdistan-Workers’-Party-on-Steroids. Karabey’s story is more a glorious mess of ideas than an effective sci-fi yarn, culminating in the take-down of the global fossil-fuel industry by a swarm of nanobots. (Thanks, Greta!)

Here, the implication is that the Kurds will need more radical solutions than mere progress and reform if they are to regain control of their future. Paradoxically, it’s this outré tale which may come closest to a realistic vision of the future, as Kurdish experiments in decentralized, community-based rule take on increasingly global relevance in an era of climate catastrophe, state collapse and resource competition. Likewise, Ömer Dilsoz closes his “Rises Like Water” with the radical implication that the Kurds’ very statelessness may, paradoxically, enable their liberation. In Dilsoz’s story, a Kurd is charged by NASA with passing through a wormhole into another world since they have no state government to defend them: by analogy, it might just be the fact that the Kurds are denied access to the nation-state form which ultimately leaves them open to more radical, world-altering alternatives.

Conversely, Muhammed Erbey’s “The Story Must Continue, wherein the lost mayor of an independent Kurdish city flees to the mountains and is found hiding out in a shack with an “ordinary poor woman” who is revealed to be “extraordinary,” is marked by a political sense that liberation is found in the past, in the revitalization of long-severed bonds with the earth and the mountains, and the restoration of women’s lost, violently-suppressed knowledge. 

 

Backward to the future

But this collection is not really about the future at all. In Agid’s “The Last Hope,” Qazi Muhammad, who led the Mahabad revolution, reappears in reincarnated form, “both dead and alive,” to judge the achievements of a heterotopic future Kurdish state. A zombified Kurdish martyr, whose body bears the scars of all the violence done to the Kurds from the vanquishing of Mahabad to the bloody war against ISIS to the equally grim fate of refugees in the Aegean, appears shambling at his own graveside. The past violently intrudes into all of these stories, laying claim to the future, preventing evolution and progression.

The stories here which stick longest in the memory are those in which memory itself is understood as an ambiguous, intoxicating quality. In Sema Kaygusuz’s “Waiting for the Leopard,” a contribution which more than any other evades direct political allegory to approach universal, existential concerns, the protagonist must choose between living with a “vacuous” avatar or a real, dangerous, damaged, living Kurdish woman, resurrected from the time of the Mahabad uprising. He is initially wary of speaking to his resurrected companion, since “every memory that might awaken meant a narrative, and every narrative meant a historical event.” But ultimately, he chooses the painful path of memory and recollection, thereby transforming from the passive “warden” of a vanished past to its active hunter — only for the resurrected past, his “chimeric sibling,” to turn upon him in the end. Even in its last sentence, Kaygusuz’s story is haunting, ambiguous, profound.

Like the hope left behind to humankind after Pandora opened her box, memory is at once our greatest blessing and our greatest curse. Hope stretches forward, memory backward, each therefore bringing with it the possibility of failure and defeat. Yet as humans, we must reckon with this reality. Perhaps, as in Jahangir Mahmoudveysi’s “Snuffed-out Candle, we will end up trapped in our own “dirty, twisted book,” unable to escape into a more hopeful future. Perhaps, as in Şimşek’s story, we will end up back where we started from buried back beneath the mountain, with no way forward, and no way out of the past.  

Regardless, as these authors know full well, and Kurdish political figurehead Abdullah Öcalan has powerfully argued, our present crisis is determined by our history. Before we can begin to speculate on what a truly alternative future might look like, we must first find ways to reckon with the past. Kurdistan +100 is a landmark step along the way.

 

Matthew Broomfield

Matthew Broomfield Matthew Broomfield is a British freelance journalist, critic, translator, and poet, focused on the Kurdish issue. He has reported from Kurdistan for VICE, the Independent, and the New Statesman, along with critical essays for Unherd, Salvage, and the National Interest,... Read more

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31 JULY 2023 • By Matthew Broomfield
Can the Kurdish Women’s Movement Transform the Middle East?
Film Reviews

A Deaf Boy’s Quest to Find His Voice in a Hearing World

24 JULY 2023 • By Nazli Tarzi
A Deaf Boy’s Quest to Find His Voice in a Hearing World
Book Reviews

Literature Takes Courage: on Ahmet Altan’s Lady Life

24 JULY 2023 • By Kaya Genç
Literature Takes Courage: on Ahmet Altan’s <em>Lady Life</em>
Interviews

Musical Artists at Work: Naïssam Jalal, Fazil Say & Azu Tiwaline

17 JULY 2023 • By Jordan Elgrably
Musical Artists at Work: Naïssam Jalal, Fazil Say & Azu Tiwaline
Book Reviews

Why Isn’t Ghaith Abdul-Ahad a Household Name?

10 JULY 2023 • By Iason Athanasiadis
Why Isn’t Ghaith Abdul-Ahad a Household Name?
Fiction

Arrival in the Dark—fiction from Alireza Iranmehr

2 JULY 2023 • By Alireza Iranmehr, Salar Abdoh
Arrival in the Dark—fiction from Alireza Iranmehr
Fiction

“Here, Freedom”—fiction from Danial Haghighi

2 JULY 2023 • By Danial Haghighi, Salar Abdoh
“Here, Freedom”—fiction from Danial Haghighi
Essays

Zahhāk: An Etiology of Evil

2 JULY 2023 • By Omid Arabian
Zahhāk: An Etiology of Evil
Fiction

“The Long Walk of the Martyr”—fiction from Salar Abdoh

2 JULY 2023 • By Salar Abdoh
“The Long Walk of the Martyr”—fiction from Salar Abdoh
Featured Artist

Artist at Work: Syrian Filmmaker Afraa Batous

26 JUNE 2023 • By Dima Hamdan
Artist at Work: Syrian Filmmaker Afraa Batous
Art & Photography

The Ghost of Gezi Park—Turkey 10 Years On

19 JUNE 2023 • By Arie Amaya-Akkermans
The Ghost of Gezi Park—Turkey 10 Years On
Art & Photography

Deniz Goran’s New Novel Contrasts Art and the Gezi Park Protests

19 JUNE 2023 • By Arie Amaya-Akkermans
Deniz Goran’s New Novel Contrasts Art and the Gezi Park Protests
Book Reviews

Niki, Prize-Winning Greek Novel, Captures the Country’s Civil War

12 JUNE 2023 • By Nektaria Anastasiadou
<em>Niki</em>, Prize-Winning Greek Novel, Captures the Country’s Civil War
Book Reviews

Wounded Tigris: A River Journey Through the Cradle of Civilisation

12 JUNE 2023 • By Nazli Tarzi
<em>Wounded Tigris: A River Journey Through the Cradle of Civilisation</em>
Editorial

EARTH: Our Only Home

4 JUNE 2023 • By Jordan Elgrably
EARTH: Our Only Home
Essays

Turkey’s Earthquake as a Generational Disaster

4 JUNE 2023 • By Sanem Su Avci
Turkey’s Earthquake as a Generational Disaster
Poetry Markaz

Zara Houshmand, Moon and Sun

4 JUNE 2023 • By Zara Houshmand
Zara Houshmand, <em>Moon and Sun</em>
Islam

From Pawns to Global Powers: Middle East Nations Strike Back

29 MAY 2023 • By Chas Freeman, Jr.
From Pawns to Global Powers: Middle East Nations Strike Back
Book Reviews

The Yellow Birds Author Returns With Iraq War/Noir Mystery

29 MAY 2023 • By Hamilton Cain
<em>The Yellow Birds</em> Author Returns With Iraq War/Noir Mystery
Music

Artist At Work: Maya Youssef Finds Home in the Qanun

22 MAY 2023 • By Rana Asfour
Artist At Work: Maya Youssef Finds Home in the Qanun
Film

The Refugees by the Lake, a Greek Migrant Story

8 MAY 2023 • By Iason Athanasiadis
The Refugees by the Lake, a Greek Migrant Story
Photography

Iran on the Move—Photos by Peyman Hooshmandzadeh

1 MAY 2023 • By Peyman Hooshmandzadeh, Malu Halasa
Iran on the Move—Photos by Peyman Hooshmandzadeh
Book Reviews

Hard Work: Kurdish Kolbars or Porters Risk Everything

1 MAY 2023 • By Clive Bell
Hard Work: Kurdish <em>Kolbars</em> or Porters Risk Everything
Essays

Beautiful Ghosts, or We’ll Always Have Istanbul

27 MARCH 2023 • By Alicia Kismet Eler
Beautiful Ghosts, or We’ll Always Have Istanbul
Film

Hanging Gardens and the New Iraqi Cinema Scene

27 MARCH 2023 • By Laura Silvia Battaglia
<em>Hanging Gardens</em> and the New Iraqi Cinema Scene
Centerpiece

Broken Home: Britain in the Time of Migration

5 MARCH 2023 • By Malu Halasa
Broken Home: Britain in the Time of Migration
Fiction

“Counter Strike”—a story by MK HARB

5 MARCH 2023 • By MK Harb
“Counter Strike”—a story by MK HARB
Cities

For Those Who Dwell in Tents, Home is Temporal—Or Is It?

5 MARCH 2023 • By Arie Amaya-Akkermans
For Those Who Dwell in Tents, Home is Temporal—Or Is It?
Cities

The Odyssey That Forged a Stronger Athenian

5 MARCH 2023 • By Iason Athanasiadis
The Odyssey That Forged a Stronger Athenian
Columns

Letter From Turkey—Solidarity, Grief, Anger and Fear

27 FEBRUARY 2023 • By Jennifer Hattam
Letter From Turkey—Solidarity, Grief, Anger and Fear
Columns

Letter From Turkey—Antioch is Finished

20 FEBRUARY 2023 • By Arie Amaya-Akkermans
Letter From Turkey—Antioch is Finished
Book Reviews

White Torture Prison Interviews Condemn Solitary Confinement

13 FEBRUARY 2023 • By Kamin Mohammadi
<em>White Torture</em> Prison Interviews Condemn Solitary Confinement
Columns

Tiba al-Ali: A Death Foretold on Social Media

5 FEBRUARY 2023 • By Malu Halasa
Tiba al-Ali: A Death Foretold on Social Media
Featured excerpt

Fiction: Inaam Kachachi’s The Dispersal, or Tashari

5 FEBRUARY 2023 • By Inaam Kachachi
Fiction: Inaam Kachachi’s <em>The Dispersal</em>, or <em>Tashari</em>
Art

Lahib Jaddo—An Iraqi Artist in the Diaspora

5 FEBRUARY 2023 • By Mischa Geracoulis
Lahib Jaddo—An Iraqi Artist in the Diaspora
Interviews

Hardi Kurda: Archiving the Sounds of Northern Iraq

5 FEBRUARY 2023 • By Melissa Chemam
Hardi Kurda: Archiving the Sounds of Northern Iraq
Interviews

Zahra Ali, Pioneer of Feminist Studies on Iraq

5 FEBRUARY 2023 • By Nada Ghosn
Zahra Ali, Pioneer of Feminist Studies on Iraq
Book Reviews

 The Watermelon Boys on Iraq, War, Colonization and Familial Love

5 FEBRUARY 2023 • By Rachel Campbell
<em> The Watermelon Boys</em> on Iraq, War, Colonization and Familial Love
Columns

Letters From Tehran: Braving Tehran’s Roundabout, Maidan Valiasr

30 JANUARY 2023 • By TMR
Letters From Tehran: Braving Tehran’s Roundabout, Maidan Valiasr
Book Reviews

Editor’s Picks: Magical Realism in Iranian Lit

30 JANUARY 2023 • By Rana Asfour
Editor’s Picks: Magical Realism in Iranian Lit
Featured article

Don’t Be a Stooge for the Regime—Iranians Reject State-Controlled Media!

15 DECEMBER 2022 • By Malu Halasa
Don’t Be a Stooge for the Regime—Iranians Reject State-Controlled Media!
Columns

Siri Hustvedt & Ahdaf Souief Write Letters to Imprisoned Writer Narges Mohammadi

15 DECEMBER 2022 • By TMR
Siri Hustvedt & Ahdaf Souief Write Letters to Imprisoned Writer Narges Mohammadi
Film

The Swimmers and the Mardini Sisters: a True Liberation Tale

15 DECEMBER 2022 • By Rana Haddad
<em>The Swimmers</em> and the Mardini Sisters: a True Liberation Tale
Music

Revolutionary Hit Parade: 12+1 Protest Songs from Iran

15 DECEMBER 2022 • By Malu Halasa
Revolutionary Hit Parade: 12+1 Protest Songs from Iran
Film

Imprisoned Director Jafar Panahi’s No Bears

15 DECEMBER 2022 • By Clive Bell
Imprisoned Director Jafar Panahi’s <em>No Bears</em>
Art

Art World Picks: Albraehe, Kerem Yavuz, Zeghidour, Amer & Tatah

12 DECEMBER 2022 • By TMR
Art

Museums in Exile—MO.CO’s show for Chile, Sarajevo & Palestine

12 DECEMBER 2022 • By Jordan Elgrably
Museums in Exile—MO.CO’s show for Chile, Sarajevo & Palestine
Opinion

Historic Game on the Horizon: US Faces Iran Once More

28 NOVEMBER 2022 • By Mireille Rebeiz
Film

You Resemble Me Deconstructs a Muslim Life That Ends Radically

21 NOVEMBER 2022 • By Jordan Elgrably
<em>You Resemble Me</em> Deconstructs a Muslim Life That Ends Radically
Opinion

Fragile Freedom, Fragile States in the Muslim World

24 OCTOBER 2022 • By I. Rida Mahmood
Fragile Freedom, Fragile States in the Muslim World
Opinion

Letter From Tehran: On the Pain of Others, Once Again

24 OCTOBER 2022 • By Sara Mokhavat
Letter From Tehran: On the Pain of Others, Once Again
Poetry

The Heroine Forugh Farrokhzad—”Only Voice Remains”

15 OCTOBER 2022 • By Sholeh Wolpé
The Heroine Forugh Farrokhzad—”Only Voice Remains”
Art

#MahsaAmini—Art by Rachid Bouhamidi, Los Angeles

15 OCTOBER 2022 • By Rachid Bouhamidi
#MahsaAmini—Art by Rachid Bouhamidi, Los Angeles
Art & Photography

Homage to Mahsa Jhina Amini & the Women-Led Call for Freedom

15 OCTOBER 2022 • By TMR
Homage to Mahsa Jhina Amini & the Women-Led Call for Freedom
Art

Defiance—an essay from Sara Mokhavat

15 OCTOBER 2022 • By Sara Mokhavat, Salar Abdoh
Defiance—an essay from Sara Mokhavat
Essays

Nawal El-Saadawi, a Heroine in Prison

15 OCTOBER 2022 • By Ibrahim Fawzy
Nawal El-Saadawi, a Heroine in Prison
Book Reviews

A London Murder Mystery Leads to Jihadis and Syria

3 OCTOBER 2022 • By Ghazi Gheblawi
A London Murder Mystery Leads to Jihadis and Syria
Art & Photography

Kader Attia, Berlin Biennale’s Curator

15 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Melissa Chemam
Kader Attia, Berlin Biennale’s Curator
Film

Ziad Kalthoum: Trajectory of a Syrian Filmmaker

15 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Viola Shafik
Ziad Kalthoum: Trajectory of a Syrian Filmmaker
Film

The Mystery of Tycoon Michel Baida in Old Arab Berlin

15 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Irit Neidhardt
The Mystery of Tycoon Michel Baida in Old Arab Berlin
Art & Photography

Shirin Mohammad: Portrait of an Artist Between Berlin & Tehran

15 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Noushin Afzali
Shirin Mohammad: Portrait of an Artist Between Berlin & Tehran
Book Reviews

After Nine Years in Detention, an Iraqi is Finally Granted Asylum

22 AUGUST 2022 • By Rana Asfour
After Nine Years in Detention, an Iraqi is Finally Granted Asylum
Film

Two Syrian Brothers Find Themselves in “We Are From There”

22 AUGUST 2022 • By Angélique Crux
Two Syrian Brothers Find Themselves in “We Are From There”
Columns

Salman Rushdie, Aziz Nesin and our Lingering Fatwas

22 AUGUST 2022 • By Sahand Sahebdivani
Salman Rushdie, Aziz Nesin and our Lingering Fatwas
Opinion

Attack on Salman Rushdie is Shocking Tip of the Iceberg

15 AUGUST 2022 • By Jordan Elgrably
Attack on Salman Rushdie is Shocking Tip of the Iceberg
Book Reviews

Questionable Thinking on the Syrian Revolution

1 AUGUST 2022 • By Fouad Mami
Questionable Thinking on the Syrian Revolution
Art

Abundant Middle Eastern Talent at the ’22 Avignon Theatre Fest

18 JULY 2022 • By Nada Ghosn
Abundant Middle Eastern Talent at the ’22 Avignon Theatre Fest
Editorial

Editorial: Is the World Driving Us Mad?

15 JULY 2022 • By TMR
Editorial: Is the World Driving Us Mad?
Centerpiece

Big Laleh, Little Laleh—memoir by Shokouh Moghimi

15 JULY 2022 • By Shokouh Moghimi, Salar Abdoh
Big Laleh, Little Laleh—memoir by Shokouh Moghimi
Book Reviews

Leaving One’s Country in Mai Al-Nakib’s “An Unlasting Home”

27 JUNE 2022 • By Rana Asfour
Leaving One’s Country in Mai Al-Nakib’s “An Unlasting Home”
Columns

World Refugee Day — What We Owe Each Other

20 JUNE 2022 • By Jordan Elgrably
World Refugee Day — What We Owe Each Other
Fiction

Mai Al-Nakib: “Naaseha’s Counsel”

15 JUNE 2022 • By Mai Al-Nakib
Mai Al-Nakib: “Naaseha’s Counsel”
Fiction

Nektaria Anastasiadou: “Gold in Taksim Square”

15 JUNE 2022 • By Nektaria Anastasiadou
Nektaria Anastasiadou: “Gold in Taksim Square”
Featured excerpt

Hawra Al-Nadawi: “Tuesday and the Green Movement”

15 JUNE 2022 • By Hawra Al-Nadawi, Alice Guthrie
Hawra Al-Nadawi: “Tuesday and the Green Movement”
Film Reviews

2022 Webby Honoree Documents Queer Turkish Icon

23 MAY 2022 • By Ilker Hepkaner
2022 Webby Honoree Documents Queer Turkish Icon
Book Reviews

Fragmented Love in Alison Glick’s “The Other End of the Sea”

16 MAY 2022 • By Nora Lester Murad
Fragmented Love in Alison Glick’s “The Other End of the Sea”
Interviews

Conversations on Food and Race with Andy Shallal

15 APRIL 2022 • By Jordan Elgrably
Conversations on Food and Race with Andy Shallal
Book Reviews

Abū Ḥamza’s Bread

15 APRIL 2022 • By Philip Grant
Abū Ḥamza’s Bread
Columns

Not Just Any Rice: Persian Kateh over Chelo

15 APRIL 2022 • By Maryam Mortaz, A.J. Naddaff
Not Just Any Rice: Persian Kateh over Chelo
Columns

Libyan, Palestinian and Syrian Family Dinners in London

15 APRIL 2022 • By Layla Maghribi
Libyan, Palestinian and Syrian Family Dinners in London
Book Reviews

Mohamed Metwalli’s “A Song by the Aegean Sea” Reviewed

28 MARCH 2022 • By Sherine Elbanhawy
Mohamed Metwalli’s “A Song by the Aegean Sea” Reviewed
Art

Artist Hayv Kahraman’s “Gut Feelings” Exhibition Reviewed

28 MARCH 2022 • By Melissa Chemam
Artist Hayv Kahraman’s “Gut Feelings” Exhibition Reviewed
Essays

Mariupol, Ukraine and the Crime of Hospital Bombing

17 MARCH 2022 • By Neve Gordon, Nicola Perugini
Mariupol, Ukraine and the Crime of Hospital Bombing
Poetry

Three Poems of Love and Desire by Nouri Al-Jarrah

15 MARCH 2022 • By Nouri Al-Jarrah
Three Poems of Love and Desire by Nouri Al-Jarrah
Art

Fiction: “Skin Calluses” by Khalil Younes

15 MARCH 2022 • By Khalil Younes
Fiction: “Skin Calluses” by Khalil Younes
Latest Reviews

Three Love Poems by Rumi, Translated by Haleh Liza Gafori

15 MARCH 2022 • By Haleh Liza Gafori
Three Love Poems by Rumi, Translated by Haleh Liza Gafori
Art & Photography

On “True Love Leaves No Traces”

15 MARCH 2022 • By Arie Amaya-Akkermans
On “True Love Leaves No Traces”
Opinion

Ukraine War Reminds Refugees Some Are More Equal Than Others

7 MARCH 2022 • By Anna Lekas Miller
Ukraine War Reminds Refugees Some Are More Equal Than Others
Book Reviews

Nadia Murad Speaks on Behalf of Women Heroes of War

7 MARCH 2022 • By Maryam Zar
Nadia Murad Speaks on Behalf of Women Heroes of War
Columns

“There’s Nothing Worse Than War”

24 FEBRUARY 2022 • By Jordan Elgrably
“There’s Nothing Worse Than War”
Art

(G)Hosting the Past: On Michael Rakowitz’s “Reapparitions”

7 FEBRUARY 2022 • By Arie Amaya-Akkermans
(G)Hosting the Past: On Michael Rakowitz’s “Reapparitions”
Editorial

Refuge, or the Inherent Dignity of Every Human Being

15 JANUARY 2022 • By Jordan Elgrably
Refuge, or the Inherent Dignity of Every Human Being
Art & Photography

Children in Search of Refuge: a Photographic Essay

15 JANUARY 2022 • By Iason Athanasiadis
Children in Search of Refuge: a Photographic Essay
Columns

Getting to the Other Side: a Kurdish Migrant Story

15 JANUARY 2022 • By Iason Athanasiadis
Getting to the Other Side: a Kurdish Migrant Story
Film Reviews

“Europa,” Iraq’s Entry in the 94th annual Oscars, Frames Epic Refugee Struggle

15 JANUARY 2022 • By Thomas Dallal
“Europa,” Iraq’s Entry in the 94th annual Oscars, Frames Epic Refugee Struggle
Art & Photography

Refugees of Afghanistan in Iran: a Photo Essay by Peyman Hooshmandzadeh

15 JANUARY 2022 • By Peyman Hooshmandzadeh, Salar Abdoh
Refugees of Afghanistan in Iran: a Photo Essay by Peyman Hooshmandzadeh
Book Reviews

Meditations on The Ungrateful Refugee

15 JANUARY 2022 • By Rana Asfour
Meditations on <em>The Ungrateful Refugee</em>
Fiction

Fiction: Refugees in Serbia, an excerpt from “Silence is a Sense” by Layla AlAmmar

15 JANUARY 2022 • By Layla AlAmmar
Fiction: Refugees in Serbia, an excerpt from “Silence is a Sense” by Layla AlAmmar
Book Reviews

Temptations of the Imagination: how Jana Elhassan and Samar Yazbek transmogrify the world

10 JANUARY 2022 • By Rana Asfour
Temptations of the Imagination: how Jana Elhassan and Samar Yazbek transmogrify the world
Columns

An Arab and a Jew Walk into a Bar…

15 DECEMBER 2021 • By Hadani Ditmars
An Arab and a Jew Walk into a Bar…
Interviews

The Fabulous Omid Djalili on Good Times and the World

15 DECEMBER 2021 • By Jordan Elgrably
The Fabulous Omid Djalili on Good Times and the World
Fiction

Three Levantine Tales

15 DECEMBER 2021 • By Nouha Homad
Three Levantine Tales
Essays

Syria Through British Eyes

29 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Rana Haddad
Syria Through British Eyes
Columns

Burning Forests, Burning Nations

15 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Hadani Ditmars
Burning Forests, Burning Nations
Book Reviews

The Vanishing: Are Arab Christians an Endangered Minority?

15 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Hadani Ditmars
The Vanishing: Are Arab Christians an Endangered Minority?
Essays

A Street in Marrakesh Revisited

8 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Deborah Kapchan
A Street in Marrakesh Revisited
Columns

Day of the Imprisoned Writer — November 15, 2021

8 NOVEMBER 2021 • By TMR
Day of the Imprisoned Writer — November 15, 2021
Columns

Refugees Detained in Thessonaliki’s Diavata Camp Await Asylum

1 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Iason Athanasiadis
Refugees Detained in Thessonaliki’s Diavata Camp Await Asylum
Art

Guantánamo—The World’s Most Infamous Prison

15 OCTOBER 2021 • By Sarah Mirk
<em>Guantánamo</em>—The World’s Most Infamous Prison
Interviews

Interview With Prisoner X, Accused by the Bashar Al-Assad Regime of Terrorism

15 OCTOBER 2021 • By Jordan Elgrably
Interview With Prisoner X, Accused by the Bashar Al-Assad Regime of Terrorism
Columns

Kurdish Poet and Writer Meral Şimşek Merits Her Freedom

4 OCTOBER 2021 • By Jordan Elgrably
Kurdish Poet and Writer Meral Şimşek Merits Her Freedom
Art & Photography

Displaced: From Beirut to Los Angeles to Beirut

15 SEPTEMBER 2021 • By Ara Oshagan
Displaced: From Beirut to Los Angeles to Beirut
Art & Photography

Hasteem, We Are Here: The Collective for Black Iranians

15 SEPTEMBER 2021 • By Maryam Sophia Jahanbin
Hasteem, We Are Here: The Collective for Black Iranians
Essays

Why Resistance Is Foundational to Kurdish Literature

15 SEPTEMBER 2021 • By Ava Homa
Why Resistance Is Foundational to Kurdish Literature
Featured excerpt

The Harrowing Life of Kurdish Freedom Activist Kobra Banehi

15 SEPTEMBER 2021 • By Kobra Banehi, Jordan Elgrably
The Harrowing Life of Kurdish Freedom Activist Kobra Banehi
Latest Reviews

The Limits of Empathy in Rabih Alameddine’s Refugee Saga

15 SEPTEMBER 2021 • By Dima Alzayat
The Limits of Empathy in Rabih Alameddine’s Refugee Saga
Columns

Afghanistan Falls to the Taliban

16 AUGUST 2021 • By Hadani Ditmars
Afghanistan Falls to the Taliban
Latest Reviews

Women Comic Artists, from Afghanistan to Morocco

15 AUGUST 2021 • By Sherine Hamdy
Women Comic Artists, from Afghanistan to Morocco
Latest Reviews

An Anthropologist Tells of 1970s Upheaval in “Turkish Kaleidoscope”

15 AUGUST 2021 • By Jenny White
An Anthropologist Tells of 1970s Upheaval in “Turkish Kaleidoscope”
Weekly

World Picks: August 2021

12 AUGUST 2021 • By Lawrence Joffe
World Picks: August 2021
Weekly

Summer of ‘21 Reading—Notes from the Editors

25 JULY 2021 • By TMR
Summer of ‘21 Reading—Notes from the Editors
Weekly

The Unfinished Presidency of Jimmy Carter

4 JULY 2021 • By Maryam Zar
The Unfinished Presidency of Jimmy Carter
Book Reviews

ISIS and the Absurdity of War in the Age of Twitter

4 JULY 2021 • By Jessica Proett
ISIS and the Absurdity of War in the Age of Twitter
Weekly

World Picks: July 2021

3 JULY 2021 • By TMR
World Picks: July 2021
Essays

Syria’s Ruling Elite— A Master Class in Wasta

14 JUNE 2021 • By Lawrence Joffe
Syria’s Ruling Elite— A Master Class in Wasta
Weekly

The Maps of Our Destruction: Two Novels on Syria

30 MAY 2021 • By Rana Asfour
The Maps of Our Destruction: Two Novels on Syria
Art

The Murals of “Education is Not a Crime”

14 MAY 2021 • By Saleem Vaillancourt
The Murals of “Education is Not a Crime”
Essays

We Are All at the Border Now

14 MAY 2021 • By Todd Miller
We Are All at the Border Now
Essays

From Damascus to Birmingham, a Selected Glossary

14 MAY 2021 • By Frances Zaid
From Damascus to Birmingham, a Selected Glossary
Fiction

A Home Across the Azure Sea

14 MAY 2021 • By Aida Y. Haddad
A Home Across the Azure Sea
Weekly

Beirut Brings a Fragmented Family Together in “The Arsonists’ City”

9 MAY 2021 • By Rana Asfour
TMR 7 • Truth?

The Crash, Covid-19 and Other Iranian Stories

14 MARCH 2021 • By Malu Halasa
The Crash, Covid-19 and Other Iranian Stories
TMR 7 • Truth?

Truth or Dare? Reinterpreting Al-Harīrī’s Arab Rogue

14 MARCH 2021 • By Farah Abdessamad
Truth or Dare? Reinterpreting Al-Harīrī’s Arab Rogue
TMR 7 • Truth?

Poetry Against the State

14 MARCH 2021 • By Gil Anidjar
Poetry Against the State
Columns

The Truth About Iraq: Memory, Trauma and the End of an Era

14 MARCH 2021 • By Hadani Ditmars
The Truth About Iraq: Memory, Trauma and the End of an Era
Columns

Memory and the Assassination of Lokman Slim

14 MARCH 2021 • By Claire Launchbury
Memory and the Assassination of Lokman Slim
Poetry

The Freedom You Want

14 MARCH 2021 • By Mohja Kahf
The Freedom You Want
Interviews

The Hidden World of Istanbul’s Rums

21 FEBRUARY 2021 • By Rana Haddad
The Hidden World of Istanbul’s Rums
TMR 6 • Revolutions

The Revolution Sees its Shadow 10 Years Later

14 FEBRUARY 2021 • By Mischa Geracoulis
The Revolution Sees its Shadow 10 Years Later
TMR 6 • Revolutions

Ten Years of Hope and Blood

14 FEBRUARY 2021 • By Robert Solé
Ten Years of Hope and Blood
TMR 5 • Water

Watch Water Films & Donate to Water Organizations

16 JANUARY 2021 • By TMR
Watch Water Films & Donate to Water Organizations
TMR 5 • Water

Iraq and the Arab World on the Edge of the Abyss

14 JANUARY 2021 • By Osama Esber
Iraq and the Arab World on the Edge of the Abyss
Columns

On American Democracy and Empire, a Corrective

14 JANUARY 2021 • By I. Rida Mahmood
On American Democracy and Empire, a Corrective
Film Reviews

Muhammad Malas, Syria’s Auteur, is the subject of a Film Biography

10 JANUARY 2021 • By Rana Asfour
Muhammad Malas, Syria’s Auteur, is the subject of a Film Biography
Weekly

Academics, Signatories, and Putschists

20 DECEMBER 2020 • By Selim Temo
Academics, Signatories, and Putschists
TMR 4 • Small & Indie Presses

Hassan Blasim’s “God 99”

14 DECEMBER 2020 • By Hassan Blasim
Hassan Blasim’s “God 99”
TMR 4 • Small & Indie Presses

Trembling Landscapes: Between Reality and Fiction: Eleven Artists from the Middle East*

14 DECEMBER 2020 • By Nat Muller
Trembling Landscapes: Between Reality and Fiction: Eleven Artists from the Middle East*
TMR 4 • Small & Indie Presses

Freedom is femininity: Faraj Bayrakdar

14 DECEMBER 2020 • By Faraj Bayrakdar
Freedom is femininity: Faraj Bayrakdar
Weekly

Kuwait’s Alanoud Alsharekh, Feminist Groundbreaker

6 DECEMBER 2020 • By Nada Ghosn
Kuwait’s Alanoud Alsharekh, Feminist Groundbreaker
Weekly

Breathing in a Plague

27 NOVEMBER 2020 • By TMR
Breathing in a Plague
World Picks

World Art, Music & Zoom Beat the Pandemic Blues

28 SEPTEMBER 2020 • By Malu Halasa
World Art, Music & Zoom Beat the Pandemic Blues
World Picks

Interlink Proposes 4 New Arab Novels

22 SEPTEMBER 2020 • By TMR
Interlink Proposes 4 New Arab Novels

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