
Image: âNever Again Fascismâ
A Cypriot KSN Organiser Reflects on the 20th July 1974 Invasion
Yesterday I spoke at the #RiseUp4Revolution rally to celebrate and defend the women- and youth-led revolution taking place across Kurdistan, especially in North-East Syria/Rojava. This revolution is building a new democratic society beyond the state, based on principles of peopleâs self-determination, gender liberation, social ecology and a cooperative economy. The revolution in Kurdistan is the 21st centuryâs most profound attempt to build another world, developing the global heritage of socialist and libertarian politics into a unique paradigm for collective liberation in a communal free life.
I was proud as always to speak as a solidarity activist with the Kurdistan Freedom Movement which is building this revolution, but I was also proud to speak as a Cypriot. Today is the 46th anniversary of the Turkish stateâs invasion, occupation and ethnic cleansing of our islandâs northern 37%, including the economic heartlands in Kyrenia, Famagusta and the plains of the Mesaoria, as well as Rizokarpasso/Dipkarpaz in the far north where my family is from. The usual thing we say today is âI donât forgetâ, in Greek ΎΔΜ ΟΔÏΜÏ, in Turkish unutmuyorum. But the question is what donât we forget?
Of course we donât forget the Turkish stateâs occupation and ethnic cleansing, brutally violent in the initial invasion, and slow and painful against remaining enclaves in the following years. Now only Rizokarpasso has Greek families, about 350 out of a population of some 2,200, the majority Kurds following the occupation, with the remainder made up of newcomers from the Pontos (historically Greek-speaking until 1923 with lots of words in the dialect) and Turkish Cypriots present before the invasion alongside post-74 refugees from the south.
But remembering is meaningless if itâs only limited to the Turkish state and its crimes. We insult the memory of the dead, especially the 1,500 still missing, if we donât also remember the Greek and Greek Cypriot fascists who attempted a coup five days before, and opened the door to Turkish state intervention. We do no justice to the more than 200,000 refugees from all Cyprusâ communities if we donât recall that our people had been violently separated into enclaves for ten years already because of murderous Greek and Turkish nationalism. Remembering is meaningless if we donât recall that it was British imperialism, under the administration of both Conservatives and Labour, which introduced a repressive, anti-democratic colonial regime especially after 1931, stated after 1945 that Cyprus could never be independent because of imperial interests, resurrected the Turkish stateâs claims in the 50s to offset Greek nationalism, and enforced superficial âindependenceâ in 1960 â at the price of âBritish sovereign base areasâ which constitute 3% of Cyprusâ entire territory, and the right of the Greek and Turkish states to intervene as âguarantorsâ. Likewise we only play into Turkish and Greek nationalismâs hands if we donât remember the US-NATO imperialism which took over from the British, refused to allow the UK to leave its bases in the late 60s, first floated partition with the old colonisers in 1964, and in the figures of Henry Kissinger and the CIA tacitly approved the Turkish stateâs conquest of the exact proposed area in order to end President Makariosâ non-aligned policies in the Cold War.
Maybe most importantly, itâs meaningless to ânever forgetâ if we donât remember who it was who stood against all of this: the workers and peasantsâ movement, led by the communist party AKEL, and made up of Cypriots from all communities who struggled for peace, democracy and socialism in the face of fascist violence. This experience is summed up in the person of peasant, communist and priest Papalazaros who died this month, and lost one son to Greek fascists in â73, and another to the Turkish army in â74. Only the revolutionary Left showed an alternative to Cyprusâ perfect storm of imperialism, nationalism and anti-communism.
So it feels like fate that the Rojava Revolution began on the 19th of July, 37 years and 364 days after the Turkish stateâs invasion of Cyprus. This was its first conflict beyond Turkish borders since the new republicâs founding at the end of the Greek-Turkish war in 1923, a moment also capped by genocidal actions on both sides, and a massive forced ethnic cleansing of Muslims from Greece and Orthodox Christians from Turkey. Of course the Turkish state consistently exercised extreme violence within its borders across those five âpeacefulâ decades, particularly against Kurds, Alevis and Leftists.
Since 1974 weâve seen the two forms of genocidal colonialism represented by the Turkish stateâs occupation and ethnic cleansing in Cyprus on the one hand, and brutal assimilationism in North Kurdistan/South-East Turkey on the other, come together in its genocidal and imperialist actions in Syria and northern Iraq. But since 2012 weâve also seen the answer to Cyprusâ ongoing occupation and partition, again led by the revolutionary Left, but this time embodied in the Kurdistan Freedom Movement: a world beyond the nation-states that have destroyed this region and shattered our common lives for the last two centuries, and yet also beyond the capitalism and imperialism that have brutalised the globe for the last five hundred years, and yet also beyond the patriarchal state which has violently dominated people of all genders for the five millennia â and with an answer to the extinction we all face under the threat of climate change.
So when we say âI donât forgetâ, it must also be a conscious promise: a promise that remembering means fighting, in the knowledge not only of what we struggle against, but also, and more so, what we rise up for â a free life for all Cypriots, all people of the Middle East, and everyone, everywhere.
Nik Matheou, London Kurdistan Solidarity
Source: Kurdishsolidaritynetwork.wordpress.com









