The world can learn from the Rojava revolution

July 5, 2022
Issue 
'Green Braids' movement in North-East Syria
A participant in the 'Green Braids' (Kezien Kesk) movement in North East Syria. Photo: kedistan.net

鈥淚f you tremble with indignation at every injustice then you are a comrade of mine,鈥 the revolutionary Ernesto Che Guevara famously said, and this is a good reason why people around the world need to show solidarity with the Kurdish freedom struggle. But what is less discussed is the real interest that we have in the pioneering role of that struggle.

Let鈥檚 reflect on the great achievements of the Rojava revolution in north and east Syria in the face of great adversity: the unification of communities deliberately divided on the basis of religion and ethnicity by dictatorial states and the Islamic fundamentalist terrorist movements alike; the liberation and empowerment of women in the face of the reactionary rollbacks imposed by the latter; the embryonic attempts to reorganise the economy on a cooperative and ecologically sustainable basis; and the establishment of inclusive grassroots democracy based on the democratic confederalist ideas developed by long-imprisoned Kurdish leader Abdullah 脰calan.

As the Kurdish revolutionaries readily admit, their struggle to refashion society is not an easy process but one that involves both experimentation and perseverance. There are steps forward and steps back, but only to try and move forward once again.

鈥淭he revolution is made through human beings, but individuals must forge their revolutionary spirit day by day,鈥 Che also said.

Revolutions by their nature involve both radical transformations of social and economic structures, but also, inevitably, the transformation of individual consciousness, behaviour and habits.

鈥淭he people are the way they are because they are in the midst of a revolution,鈥 Che explained to international volunteer work brigades many decades ago.

Changing society and ourselves

Through their actions, people are forging different social relations and a different understanding of themselves and the world 鈥 thus becoming different individuals, creating a different 鈥渉uman nature鈥 in the course of revolutionary struggle.

And so it is today in the Rojava revolution. Anyone who understands the need to radically change the way we live, and the grossly inequitable and exploitative way society is now predominantly organised, has a real interest in learning from this precious revolution.

But to do that requires a struggle to break the barriers to the information flow about the Rojava revolution to the rest of the world.

North and east Syria (NES) is largely isolated by economic embargoes and the closure of borders by hostile neighbouring states. Therefore, one of the first challenges for international solidarity is to break through these barriers of isolation.

The people of the world can learn from the experiences of the 60 or so autonomous women鈥檚 cooperatives now operating in NES. About half of the agricultural land is now farmed by women鈥檚 cooperatives, according to a by Firat News Agency journalist B锚r卯tan Sarya.

The women in these cooperatives are cultivating the land, building irrigation systems聽and so on. The other women鈥檚 cooperatives produce canned goods, run bakeries, raise livestock or operate in the service sector.

Dicle Amed, a member of the coordination of the Women鈥檚 Economy Committee of Kongra Star, explained in the report: 鈥淎s a women鈥檚 movement, we are struggling to democratise the system in general, the relations between men and women in the system and in society. It is about bringing the relations between the sexes back to the basis of freedom and equality.

鈥淗owever, and more importantly, we have the ideological approach of building an independent women鈥檚 system. Just as Kongra Star as a system organises itself autonomously and independently, all sectors should also be structured autonomously. This is what is really relevant to us as a women鈥檚 Economy Committee.

鈥淥ur ideological and organisational orientation aims at securing ourselves without relying too much on the general system, thus organising ourselves and guaranteeing our freedom in this way. We are trying to bring out women鈥檚 skills, to employ women聽and to make them once again a productive force independent of the outside.鈥

This effort is radically transformative as it takes place against the backdrop of the Bashar al Assad regime鈥檚 exclusion of women from economic life.

It took years to make an impact among women, Dicle explained: 鈥淎 job that should be done in one year can sometimes take three or four years.

鈥淏oth teaching and learning are organised by women聽and the structure of this process is completely autonomous. One has to start from a structure in Rojava in which women were completely enclosed in their homes and used as labourers for domestic work.

鈥淚n this sense, the integration of women into economic life is a revolution. It is a real but invisible revolution. Before the revolution, women were not involved in economic life; at most, only a certain number of women worked in agriculture at low wages. With the revolution, tens of thousands of women began to work in economic life both in the public sector, in the service sector, in agriculture, and in the industrial sector.鈥

Ecology

This is just one example of the rich experiences the world can learn from the Rojava revolution. We could also learn from the pioneering efforts of the 鈥淕reen Braids鈥 movement, Kesiy锚n Kesk, which is trying to re-green NES.

鈥淩egional policies have damaged our environment and our ecological system,鈥 , a spokesperson and co-founder of this movement of young volunteers that was formed in October 2020. 鈥淎t least five rivers in Rojava now run dry. The regime never bothered about ecology. It wanted to turn the region into a supply of wheat with no consideration for the inhabitants.鈥

鈥淭wenty-five years ago, there were rivers, a greater variety of plants. Now the Autonomous Administration is in charge, we have the opportunity of repairing our environment,鈥 he explained in this must-read article in .

鈥淲e must accept the fact it is in poor condition and that we must change this state of affairs. There are only 1.5% of green spaces in Rojava, while international recommendations are for 10% to 12%.

鈥淭he lack of a green cover means we suffer from the heat, the pollution and illnesses, that and much more. In Syria, 80% of the cancer patients come from the north and northeast. After we heard that, we decided we had to do something as members of the civilian society.

"Since the Autonomous Administration and local authorities couldn鈥檛 handle it because of lack of funds, we decided to take on the project. We want all of our society to join in, by spreading the culture of tree plantings, something people don鈥檛 care about at the moment.鈥

This movement has mobilised young women and men to collect donated seeds and do tree planting and the results are already noticeable.

It has now spread beyond Qamishlo, where it was founded, to Heseke and Darbasiyeh. Other similar projects also exist in north and east Syria, notably the one at the Internationalist Commune, .

People's power

Another area we can learn from is the development of grassroots democracy at the local level.

In a March 29 article in , B锚r卯van Omer, the deputy co-chair of the ecological and municipal Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES), described some of the progress and challenges of overcoming centralised state structures by building a system of ecological and communal autonomous local administration.

鈥淟ocal self-government is a grassroots democratic model for representing all identities according to their needs,鈥 she explained, however the transformation from a life characterised by dictatorship to an organisation characterised by participation and self-determination was a rocky process.

The ecological local self-government has 11,000 members and deals with the services in 142 local governments in AANES.

The scheme of the system was clear, but there were question marks about how it should be implemented, she explained.

鈥淲e struggled because people expected answers from us about how they should participate in this administration, how they would be represented and how they could communicate with us. It is slowly trying to achieve this system and establish it as a culture.鈥

The system of local administration has developed since 2012, but she admitted they still have a long way to go.

鈥淲e are still struggling to even meet our daily needs. It was not as easy to implement our system as we wished. One of the simplest examples is this: a tree is planted, a few days later it is uprooted or damaged. We have not yet created sufficient awareness and sufficient education among the population. Of course, compared to the past, the mechanisms of population education and protection have improved, but this is not enough.鈥

Such frankness is to be applauded, after all one of the biggest challenges in any revolution is the rebuilding of new systems of popular, grassroots democracy. History has taught us that if revolutions fail to do this they can be rolled back and defeated.

These are just some of the exciting developments and experiments in the Rojava revolution that the world can learn from. But it should be enough to convince those who not only tremble with indignation at oppression but also dream of the new world we need to build together, to commit to building solidarity with this revolution.

[Abridged from .]

You need 91自拍论坛, and we need you!

91自拍论坛 is funded by contributions from readers and supporters. Help us reach our funding target.

Make a One-off Donation or choose from one of our Monthly Donation options.

Become a supporter to get the digital edition for $5 per month or the print edition for $10 per month. One-time payment options are available.

You can also call 1800 634 206 to make a donation or to become a supporter. Thank you.