The Walrus

Rise of Rojava

In the midst of war, the Kurdish community in Syria is building a new democratic territory. I travelled through the region to meet its citizens

- by Jean-françois Lemire

The Kurdish community in Syria is building a new democratic territory. I travelled through the region to meet its citizens

IWAS ON MY WAY to the city of Kobanî, in northern Syria, this past spring when I stopped at one of several roadside coffee stands for a break. To my surprise and delight, this particular kiosk had an espresso machine — a luxury, considerin­g most of its competitor­s served instant coffee.

Amgihan, a twentysixy­earold Kurdish woman who asked that I use only her first name, told me she has helped manage the stand for the past ten years, eight of which have been during the ongoing civil war in Syria. She has had dreams of adding a small seating area to expand her business, but until recently, her world wasn’t stable enough for even so much as a plastic table and some chairs.

Her home was damaged during the incursion of Islamic State militants, a group most locals refer to as Daesh, and she and her husband and children moved in with her fatherinla­w. Now, with Daesh mostly out of the picture, she plans to return to the expansion project she has long dreamed about.

Amgihan’s ambition is a reflection of the tentative hopes animating Rojava, a Kurdishled, semiautono­mous territory in northern Syria. (Though many still call the territory Rojava, or “sun sets” in Kurdish, it was officially renamed the Autonomous Administra­tion of North and East Syria, often shortened to NES, last September.)

Against the backdrop of Syria’s civil war, Rojava seems to have emerged as a remarkably progressiv­e democracy that brings together communitie­s of diverse ethnic and religious background­s under one secular territory.

I wanted to see for myself how a democracy might fare in this corner of the Middle East — a region largely dominated by authoritar­ian regimes and torn apart by sectarian conflicts and foreign interventi­on. In April, I travelled through the territory with Lokman Mirza, a local journalist who had agreed to secure and translate interviews for me. As I listened to the stories of Rojava’s residents, I tried to capture how a seemingly impossible vision has trickled down to their daily lives.

Some told me they refer to the Kurdishled territory as “the project.” It’s a fitting term for a place that shows promise — although it seems almost too good to survive. T HE KURDISH community’s history as a marginaliz­ed minority in Syria, Turkey, Iraq, and Iran seems to have shaped its vision of Rojava as a tolerant, multiethni­c society. In 2014, the territory’s administra­tion installed a new charter that mandates, among other things, equal rights for minorities, gender equality, and environmen­tal protection.

But Rojava’s democracy is increasing­ly vulnerable. The Turkish government, which sees Kurdish resistance as a threat to its power, has vowed to eradicate the new territory. Because Rojava contains key resources, including oil fields, dams, and agricultur­al land, it’s only a matter of time before the Syrian regime tries to reclaim the region by force.

Residents of Rojava also have to contend with the continued trauma of war. The city of Raqqa, to the south of Kobanî, was liberated from Daesh in 2017, but some of the extremist group’s sympathize­rs remain within the walls of the old part of the city. Suicide bombings, car bombings, and targeted killings devastate Raqqa residents’ daily lives. During my visit to Raqqa, two car bombs exploded, killing nine.

Rojava’s most existentia­l weakness, however, may come from within. At least one Kurdish opposition party has accused Rojava’s leading political party of being dictatoria­l. Human Rights Watch has accused Rojava’s administra­tion and military of human rights abuses and the exploitati­on of child soldiers; Amnesty Internatio­nal has accused them of committing war crimes. The territory’s governing party is affiliated with the Kurdish Workers Party, or the PKK, which Canada and the United States consider a terrorist organizati­on. Some Arabs describe Rojava’s Kurdish-led administra­tion as a form of occupation.

But, to many residents, these are minor concerns. “I’ve known the regime of Hafez Al-assad, of Bashar Al-assad, of the Free Syrian Army. . . . I don’t want to go back,” Mohammed Khair Al-shiekh, who is Arab, told me, referring to Syria’s past and current president as well as a militant opposition group. “Today, I’m a democratic Syrian citizen.”

The thirty-nine-year-old former mechanical engineer serves as copresiden­t of the executive council, with a Kurdish colleague, of the city of Manbij and its

surroundin­gs. The council oversees public services, such as hospitals, schools, and infrastruc­ture, and as per Rojava’s constituti­on, all offices are co-led by a man and a woman.

Not all Rojava residents have embraced the project. Some view officials’ attempts to court minorities not as an exercise in inclusion but as a ploy to shore up power against hostile neighbours.

To some Assyrians, for example, the Kurds’ rising dominance has sparked fears of losing their identity. In the Christian village of Tal Jomaa, where many still speak Aramaic, the language likely spoken by Jesus, there are few families remaining out of what was once 450 households. Many of the younger residents have left in recent years, and the town’s seniors see themselves as their community’s guardians.

“It’s been eighty years since we came here from Iraq and built everything. Daesh destroyed everything in one night,” one woman, who spoke fluent French, told me. “The young people will return — they’ve left for Canada, the US, or Europe. It wasn’t their choice to leave their country. They were forced to.”

During our lengthy exchange outside of a café, it became evident that a lifetime of oppressive rule and state surveillan­ce had left their mark. She refused to be named or photograph­ed. “Usually,” she said, “people here don’t talk to outsiders.”

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 ??  ?? this page Portraits of Kurdish resistance leader Abdullah Ocalan are commonly found in Kobanî. opposite Amgihan manages a roadside coffee stand.
this page Portraits of Kurdish resistance leader Abdullah Ocalan are commonly found in Kobanî. opposite Amgihan manages a roadside coffee stand.
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 ??  ?? top A map of Rojava bottom Women from surroundin­g Arab villages weed a field, belonging to a family in Kobanî, in preparatio­n for cumin planting. These workers earn about
2,500 Syrian pounds a day, or roughly $6.
top A map of Rojava bottom Women from surroundin­g Arab villages weed a field, belonging to a family in Kobanî, in preparatio­n for cumin planting. These workers earn about 2,500 Syrian pounds a day, or roughly $6.
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Tal Jomaa, a Christian Assyrian village heavily damaged by Islamic State militants
A prayer service in Tal Jomaa, a Christian Assyrian village heavily damaged by Islamic State militants
 ??  ?? A young camel herder watches over his livestock along the road between the cities of Ain Issa and Raqqa. One camel is worth about $2,600.
A young camel herder watches over his livestock along the road between the cities of Ain Issa and Raqqa. One camel is worth about $2,600.
 ??  ?? above Left Mahmoud, who did not want his last name used, refused to leave his home during Daesh’s occupation of Raqqa. His two brothers were killed by a car bomb, and now Mahmoud has to provide for their families as well as his own. Altogether, he supports about thirty family members. right Children in Raqqa salvage building materials from the rubble.
above Left Mahmoud, who did not want his last name used, refused to leave his home during Daesh’s occupation of Raqqa. His two brothers were killed by a car bomb, and now Mahmoud has to provide for their families as well as his own. Altogether, he supports about thirty family members. right Children in Raqqa salvage building materials from the rubble.
 ??  ?? above Though Syrian troops largely abandoned northern Syria at the start of the civil war, the regime held on to several strategic posts. In Qamishli, the former
capital of Rojava, the Syrian government controls the airport, the hospital, and the border post with Turkey. opposite Deniz, a soldier in Rojava’s all-female
militia, has fought in battles at Manbij, Raqqa, and Deir ez-zor.
above Though Syrian troops largely abandoned northern Syria at the start of the civil war, the regime held on to several strategic posts. In Qamishli, the former capital of Rojava, the Syrian government controls the airport, the hospital, and the border post with Turkey. opposite Deniz, a soldier in Rojava’s all-female militia, has fought in battles at Manbij, Raqqa, and Deir ez-zor.
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