Editorial: PM Press

ISBN: 9781629639444

256 págs.

Año: 2022

Format: Rústica

Idioma: English

Their Blood Got Mixed

Revolutionary Rojava and the War on ISIS

In the summer of 2012 the Kurdish people of northern Syria set out to create a multiethnic society in the Middle East. Persecuted for much of the 20th century, they dared to try to overcome social fragmentation by affirming social solidarity among all the region’s ethnic and religious peoples. As Syria plunged into civil war, the Kurds and their Arab and Assyrian allies established a self-governing polity that was not only multiethnic but democratic. And women were not only permitted but encouraged to participate in all social roles alongside men, including political and military roles.

To implement these goals, Rojava wanted to live in peace with its neighbors. Instead, it soon faced invasion by ISIS, a force that was in every way its opposite. ISIS attacked its neighbors in Iraq and Syria, imposing theocratic, tyrannical, femicidal rule on them. Those who might have resisted fled in terror. But when ISIS attacked the mostly Kurdish city of Kobane and overran much of it, the YPG and YPJ, or people’s militias, declined to flee. Instead they resisted, and several countries, seeing their valiant resistance, formed an international coalition to assist them militarily. While the YPG and YPJ fought on the ground, the coalition coordinated airstrikes with them. They liberated village after village and in March 2019 captured ISIS’s last territory in Syria.

Around that time, two UK-based filmmakers invited the author to spend a month in Rojava making a film. She accepted, and arrived to explore the society and interview people. During that month, she explored how the revolution had progressed and especially the effects of the war on the society. She found that the war had reinforced social solidarity and welded together the multiethnic, gender-liberated society. As one man in Kobane told her, “Our blood got mixed.”

27,95

En estoc

En estoc

Comparteix!
 
Janet Biehl (Cincinnati, 1953) Anarquista norteamericana, se ha convertido en las últimas décadas en uno de los referentes imprescindibles para el conocimiento del municipalismo libertario. Estrecha colaboradora de Murray Bookchin desde mediados de la década de 1970, juntos elaboraron, entre los años 1987 y 2000, la revista Left Green Perspectives. En los últimos años ha estudiado la experiencia del confederalismo democrático en el Kurdistán. Además de Las políticas de la ecología social (Virus, 2018), Janet Biehl ha publicado junto con Peter Staudenmaier Ecofascism: Lessons from the German Experience (1996), coordinó The Murray Bookchin Reader (1997) y ha escrito la biografía Ecología o catástrofe. La vida de Murray Bookchin (Virus, 2017).  
Llegir més
 

Their Blood Got Mixed

Revolutionary Rojava and the War on ISIS

27,95

En estoc

En estoc

In the summer of 2012 the Kurdish people of northern Syria set out to create a multiethnic society in the Middle East. Persecuted for much of the 20th century, they dared to try to overcome social fragmentation by affirming social solidarity among all the region’s ethnic and religious peoples. As Syria plunged into civil war, the Kurds and their Arab and Assyrian allies established a self-governing polity that was not only multiethnic but democratic. And women were not only permitted but encouraged to participate in all social roles alongside men, including political and military roles.

To implement these goals, Rojava wanted to live in peace with its neighbors. Instead, it soon faced invasion by ISIS, a force that was in every way its opposite. ISIS attacked its neighbors in Iraq and Syria, imposing theocratic, tyrannical, femicidal rule on them. Those who might have resisted fled in terror. But when ISIS attacked the mostly Kurdish city of Kobane and overran much of it, the YPG and YPJ, or people’s militias, declined to flee. Instead they resisted, and several countries, seeing their valiant resistance, formed an international coalition to assist them militarily. While the YPG and YPJ fought on the ground, the coalition coordinated airstrikes with them. They liberated village after village and in March 2019 captured ISIS’s last territory in Syria.

Around that time, two UK-based filmmakers invited the author to spend a month in Rojava making a film. She accepted, and arrived to explore the society and interview people. During that month, she explored how the revolution had progressed and especially the effects of the war on the society. She found that the war had reinforced social solidarity and welded together the multiethnic, gender-liberated society. As one man in Kobane told her, “Our blood got mixed.”

Comparteix!
Janet Biehl (Cincinnati, 1953) Anarquista norteamericana, se ha convertido en las últimas décadas en uno de los referentes imprescindibles para el conocimiento del municipalismo libertario. Estrecha colaboradora de Murray Bookchin desde mediados de la década de 1970, juntos elaboraron, entre los años 1987 y 2000, la revista Left Green Perspectives. En los últimos años ha estudiado la experiencia del confederalismo democrático en el Kurdistán. Además de Las políticas de la ecología social (Virus, 2018), Janet Biehl ha publicado junto con Peter Staudenmaier Ecofascism: Lessons from the German Experience (1996), coordinó The Murray Bookchin Reader (1997) y ha escrito la biografía Ecología o catástrofe. La vida de Murray Bookchin (Virus, 2017).  
Llegir més