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Introduction
This paper will examine the philosophical background to the setting
up and growth of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), not from
the point of view of previous politically motivated studies which
have sought primarily to categorise the PKK and its leader, Abdullah
Ocalan, either as revolutionary fighters for national liberation
or as brainwashed terrorists, depending on the standpoint of the
commentator, but from the position that the enterprise undertaken
by Ocalan is primarily a humanistic, rather than a nationalistic
one.
To lay the basis for this examination, we will first compare and
contrast previous revolutions of both a bourgeois and 'socialist'
character. Ultimately not only the bourgeois, but also the 'socialist'
revolutions will be found wanting as, although they sought to,
and indeed did, change the social relations of production, the
individuals who composed the bodies or parties which carried out
those revolutions brought with them too much 'baggage' from the
societies they sought to supersede.
In this study, although we shall rely in part on Marxism and a
materialist view of history, we shall also draw on Plato and the
notion that human beings can 'perfect' themselves. We shall look
at the way in which Ocalan trains and develops his pupils in the
context of creating better men and women in order to make a better
revolution, a better movement and a better world for the future.
Also from Plato comes the notion of the 'philosopher-ruler', the
leader who is both thinker and doer. This paper will assert that
Abdullah Ocalan, President of the PKK, is a leader in this mould,
and will back up that assertion with extensive quotation from
interviews with Ocalan, some previously published, some specially
undertaken by the current author for the purpose of this dissertation.
Finally, taking as our basis the anthropological contention that
human life originated in Mesopotamia, that here was the 'cradle
of civilisation', we shall reflect on the PKK's attempts to begin
to undo the damage and degeneration which humankind has undergone
in the several millennia since that birth, and we will examine
its endeavours to recreate a humanity which, while educated and
experienced, preserves the innocence of childhood or of early
civilisation.
Formation of individuals' personality
Down the ages, to the present day the transformation of human
beings or of human nature has been a subject of continuing dispute
among philosophers and political theorists. They have been able
to argue as endlessly about the 'changeability' and 'immutability',
or 'perfectibility' and 'imperfectibility' of the true essence
of humankind, as they have about determination and free will.
There are persuasive theses in abundance on both sides, providing
a wealth of concrete examples and experiences. Likewise, continual
argument about the differentiation of men or the fundamental traits
which distinguish human beings from other species as rational
self-conscious beings, occupies a crucial place in the scope of
social sciences.
Every social matter, in a positive or negative sense - from the
most disturbing and complex international question to achievements
within a family can be, in the final analysis, related to the
mental and spiritual structures of individuals. Conversely, the
mental and spiritual formation of individuals is inextricably
linked to the material and moral structures of society. These
two 'opposite' diagnoses, despite their contradictory appearance
at first glance, constitute two fundamental parts of a combined
whole. The defects - and also the extraordinary acheivements -
in human personality and society are intimately related and interdependent.
In other words, the question of the personality of individuals
and the question of society are directly dependent on one another.
As frequently stated in excerpts concerning this subject, one
of the major conclusions of the materialist conception of history
is that man is both the producer and the product of society.
On the subject of human nature, one of the fundamental trends
in the field of philosophy, Idealism, suggests that man is a passionate
being whose major motivations are not within his control; that
it is man's appetites, aversions and passions which determine
human behaviour. It is these desires and passions which motivate
man to be self-regarding and which present the 'natural' basis
for all wars. The eventual conclusion of this school of thought
is, in short, that 'man is by nature self-regarding and can never
be otherwise'. Consequently, there are plenty of derivative conclusions
which are used to justify all the injustices and inequalities
of class-based societies and which contend to demonstrate the
inevitability and eternity of the existing, - or 'new' - world
order.
There are, of course, enough convincing reasons for being in favour
of the above-mentioned theory, which tends to suggest that this
world cannot be changed - apart from the transformation from primitive
brutality into technological brutality - because this is how mankind
was made. Furthermore, all written histories of hitherto existing
society (which Marx and Engels described as the 'history of class
struggle' at the beginning of the Communist
Manifesto of 1848) have produced extremely impressive and
persuasive fuel for proponents of this metaphysical approach to
human nature. Thus, these kinds of determined rational or imperfectibilist
conceptions of human nature, which reached such 'absolute' conclusions
as that 'man is by nature self-regarding and can never be otherwise'
or 'man is inherently unable to attain complete self-mastery',
may not be easily belittled. In particular such analysis has been
prevalent since the collapse of the 'communist regimes' of Eastern
Europe and the Soviet Union - the direct and indirect outcome
of the October Revolution of 1917.
At this stage it is useful to the development of my argument to
make a brief comparison between the October Revolution under the
leadership of the Bolsheviks and the bourgeois French Revolution.
The October Revolution and its predecessors
Some commentators see similarities between the French Revolution
of 1789 and the Russian Revolution of 1917. Whether such diagnoses
are deliberate or sentimental, the truth is that the only analogy
between the two is that both were the first proper examples of
a class seizing power.
However, it is vital to explain that the bases of these revolutions
are strictly different. Considering the recent 'explosions' in
the former 'socialist' states during the last few years, and their
earthquake-like effect, it is most important for political theorists
to discuss and specify what these vital differences are.
I am not suggesting that the angle which should be discussed is
the question of the abolition of private property in the means
of production or, in other words, changing the productive relations,
as repeatedly written about by Marx and proponents of Marxism.
In so saying, I do not intend to conclude that the relations of
production are not important, nor do I forget that the fundamental
factor, which has played a major role in motivating the changes
and developments which have shaped the history of humanity, is
the conflict between the productive forces (the material productive
forces of society and the social forces of production) and the
relations of production. Nor do I wish to ignore the fact that
the base (economic structure) determines the superstructural
institutions of society. But, admittedly, there are certain historical
periods and circumstances in which the superstructure might
dynamite the base, just as, on relevant occasions, the
effect could be the reverse, therefore causing a lot of pain to
mankind. That the effect is temporary and that we are unable to
turn back the clock of history, do not reduce this pain, because
such a period, which is, from my point of view, definitely a temporary
one, may be an instant in the history of mankind but a lifetime
for the individual.
Following the French Revolution there were other bourgeois revolutions
which had similar goals. Yet many feudal sovereignties realised
that the process was unstoppable and either adapted to the 'young'
capitalism or capitulated to the growing bourgeoisie before it
was too late. Within under 120 years capitalism had developed,
spread beyond national borders, gradually matured and also aged.
Namely it reached its 'ageing' stage, the stage of imperialism
as defined by Lenin, over more a less a century. Lenin defined
this stage of capitalism as 'dying capitalism', 'monopolist capitalism,'
and 'the highest stage of capitalism'. And it has been living
out this 'aged' period for the past 80-90 years.
One should not jump to the easy conclusion that Lenin was wrong
in labelling it 'dying capitalism'. Imperialism is basically
monopolistic capitalism, as well as the highest level of capitalism,
and it is intensely contradictory, inevitably engendering a tendency
to stagnate and decay. These truths remain valid. The changing
periods of societies do not exactly resemble those of human life.
Thus it will not motivate scientific reasoning towards reaching
scientific conclusions about the nature of human beings, but will
only benefit the privileged parasites who manipulate the whole
world to ignore the fact that if an ageing capitalism still has
its bright moments, the fundamental reason behind this is that
the 'communists' of socialist states continued to act according
to all sorts of instincts inherited from class societies.
When we look at the aftermath of the October Revolution, we see
that the first socialist state in the history of mankind had to
defend itself for 20 years against all the imperialist powers
and their intrigues, at the same time as consolidating its power.
Subsequently, in the Second World War, it pushed back the fascist
attack at the cost of the lives of millions of people. Thanks
to the prestige which communism gained through this victory and
with the assistance of public opinion, as well as the involvement
of the victorious Red Army, progressive parties and movements
gained the opportunity to come to power in several East European
states. This was the turning point for world socialism, which
entered the 'socialist camp' phase. The subsequent victories of
the Chinese, Cuban and Vietnamese revolutions strengthened socialism
world-wide, creating fears for imperialism. But when one looks
at the situation 40 years on - 70 years after Lenin's Communist
Party of the Soviet Union achieved revolution - the masses are
running away from communism with sentiments of primitive nationalism
and the peoples of socialism are slaughtering one another.
Republics chose to sever their links with the USSR and eventually
it was dissolved. And in some East European states the mass of
the people seem to be saying, 'Why on earth did you give us this
communism?' as statues of Lenin are pulled down by cranes one
after the other.
By effecting a move from the villages to the cities, from craftsmanship
to factory output, from agriculture to a national and later international
market, a widely spread trade network and farming mass production,
the aim of the French and other bourgeois revolutions was to intensify
and systematise exploitation. The bourgeoisie was chanting the
words 'liberty, equality', but in fact its goal was more exploitation,
more profit, and a more privileged life for itself at the expense
of the working class. In reality the bourgeoisie was lying, hypocritical
and selfish. It was inevitable, therefore, that it would create
a culture, a morality, a system of justice and an idea of jurisprudence
appropriate to its nature. The ground for such superstructural
values and institutions had already been prepared by preceding
systems of class societies because lying, cheating, hypocrisy
and selfishness were intrinsic qualities of those systems as well.
In those systems too, for instance, landlords told the peasants:
'If it were not for my land, where else would you work? Your livelihoods
come from me. I shall protect you.' All the capitalist had to
do was put this culture, which was based on falsehoods and deceit,
into his own words. For market purposes, nationalism was included.
In short, the cultural and moral foundations of bourgeois society
and all other previous class societies, lie in hypocrisy, corruption
and lies. The 'sacred duty' was to conceal the exploitation and
make injustice, discrimination and the privileged life-style of
the ruling class look fair. Naturally an appropriate idea of justice
and an appropriate judicial system were developed.
For example, in the laws of these societies, there does not appear
to be such a crime as lying and one cannot find a punishment
for it. I am no legal expert, but if such a law does technically
exist, it is still bound to be hypocritical, as such laws are
only ever enforced against the poor, and never against the ruling
class.
The claims of socialism and 'Eastern bloc' socialism
When we look at the October Revolution or at socialist revolutions
in general, we see an entirely different situation. The tasks
of the socialist revolution do not end with the transformation
of the productive relations. In particular, the socialist relations
of production are not simply about nationalisation or the appropriation
of the means of production by the proletarian state. In the case
of capitalism, the surplus value which is created by private ownership
of the means of production goes into the pockets of the bourgeoisie.
If, under socialism, the proletarian state does not systematically
redirect surplus value to society, to constructing a higher living
standard for the mass of the people, then changing whose hands
the means of production are in, moving from private to state ownership,
does not reflect a socialist mode of production. If such 'state-capitalist'
measures are considered to be socialist, then the state enterprises
of monopolist capitalist states could equally be considered as
socialist! This would be a ridiculous conclusion to reach.
The purpose of socialism is to eradicate exploitation and create
a classless society. Therefore, while a party which takes power
is constructing socialist relations of production, it must also
create a new culture. The October Revolution, as well as building
its relations of productions, also faced such a task; indeed this
was even harder to accomplish. What the October Revolution faced
was not simply a need to establish new relations of production
which would transform exploitation from one form to another. It
could not accomplish its aims by simply translating the cheating,
deceit, hypocrisy and selfishness of previous societies into its
own terminology. It had to create an entirely new terminology
and new institutions, particularly superstructural institutions.
And, of course, it could not achieve such a transformation by
speaking at meetings, schools, seminars, on TV and radio, or by
writing brilliant books on the subject. The masses could only
understand and adopt the new way, if the socialist mode
of production became their daily way of life. And, before even
this could be achieved, the masses had to witness the existence
of an entirely new culture and morality within the party and within
the lifestyle of its members. For this reason, a party of the
working class needs to start the construction of the new
way from inside the party, with its own members and basic
structure. And it cannot just decide to implement this once it
is in power; it is in the course of the struggle for power that
the new must be practised and tested. Otherwise, socialism
will never be able to re-emerge from the whirlpool it has found
itself sucked into.
I once had a conversation with a Polish youth, a worker - not
one of those bourgeois children who gathered all their belongings
and fled Poland, or a minister's son, educated at a private college;
this young man earned his living by carrying stuff around in a
green-grocer's shop. I said to him, 'Look, Solidarity is dragging
you towards capitalism and you will be in a worse position than
you are now.' His response was straightforward and unchallengeable:
'No, I was born and brought up with socialism. It is only beautiful
in the books.' I was in no position to convince him otherwise.
The masses will be attracted to the new by the practical
gains it will bring them. And when a labour movement takes power,
the labour force does not consist only of those who are fighting
for the aims of socialism. For this reason, a party of the proletariat
which strives to come to power must, above all, establish and
develop mechanisms which will create and improve an appropriate
culture and morality for the new society. If not, the very same
people will bring down the 'party of the working class', using
the slogans of capitalism and of the bourgeoisie. Then it will
not only be the lives and property of the degenerate bureaucrats
which will be lost.
Despite all the distinctive characteristics of these two revolutions
and despite all the gains which the Russian Bolshevik Revolution
brought about for the Soviet people, they are, in the final analysis,
actually quite similar. Because these two revolutions, while appearing
to be in sharp contrast, are basically executed by human beings
of the same spiritual structure. When A. Gog, director of the
national radio of the former Armenian Republic of the Soviet Union,
states regretfully, 'If I had not refused to attend higher education
at the school of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, I would
be a millionaire by now,' and when A Ocalan, the president of
the Kurdistan Workers' Party, convincingly asserts that Russia
wielded socialism in order to develop its own form of capitalism,
they were both expressing the essential similarity between the
French and Russian revolutions.
After the collapse of the 'socialist states' of the Soviet Union
and Eastern Europe, there are some remnants of 'socialist regimes'
in several parts of the world: China, Cuba, North Korea, Vietnam
etc. But there are no indications of a process geared towards
the renewal of humanisation; and I exclude here those efforts
at managing to subsist under the bombardment of capitalism's all-consuming
bestialisation, or to adapt to the New World Order by going their
own way or, yet again, efforts which are directed at wielding
socialism in order to extend the sovereignty of the new class
in its own form.
In brief, those states and communist parties which have survived
the disaster of 'Eastern Bloc socialism', are forced instead to
orientate themselves towards the 'irresistible' capitalism of
the New World Order, so that they may continue to survive further.
Regrettably, despite the intensification of such efforts - including
the changing of their full names - it seems that nothing
can reverse or stop or divert the weakening process of those ruling
powers.
Nevertheless, a party founded by a 'handful of bandits', who insist
on identifying themselves as socialist, achieved notable progress
in the years during which the Soviet Union was collapsing, and
continued to grow as a mass movement immediately after the total
collapse of 'socialism' in the early months of 1990. Moreover,
it is still continuing to grow in strength; so much so that it
has forcibly changed the Middle Eastern policies of the major
imperialist states and eventually compelled President Clinton
to brand it, 'the most dangerous terrorist organisation in the
world'. So, while the existing classic communist
parties are in their death throes under the ruins of 'Eastern
bloc socialism', such a party has managed to grow in strength
through the ruins of 'current socialism'; ruins which are even
more disturbing considering the pervasive culture and raw nationalist
tendencies among the Kurdish population.
What is the secret factor or factors in the equation? Is
it a basically nationalist motive which determine the result?
Nationalistic sentiment, national honour, national dignity? Or
is it an understandable reaction against the Turkish government's
primitive and savage policies on the Kurdish issue which continues
to strengthen the Kurdistan Workers Party and the Kurdish National
Liberation Movement which it leads? Of course, these and other
similarly undeniable factors have been part of its process of
development. However, these same factors are in evidence in the
development of the other groups and parties in the region, in
particular the long-standing major organisations of south Kurdistan
(northern Iraq), the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and Patriotic
Union of Kurdistan (PUK), which were offered a 'safe haven' by
the Western allies.
No, from my point of view, there must be another basic determining
factor which produces the results which it has in the Kurdistan
Workers party (PKK).
Existing Works on The Kurds and 'Apo'
Several books and many articles have been published about the
Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and its leader, Abdullah Ocalan
(Apo). These include a long interview, published in book form
and entitled Diriliin yks (The Story of Revival) by Turkish
political historian, Professor Yalcin Kk. Generally these books
tend to propagandise on one side or the other, a trap I am conscious
of attempting to avoid myself, particularly given my ethnic background.
I shall attempt to avoid such subjectivism by citing the relevant
interview extracts unedited.
'Humanisation Movement'
In a statistical survey carried out among PKK fighters, I came
across an interesting question and an even more interesting response
from a woman guerrilla: - As briefly as possible, how would you define the PKK?
- Humanisation movement.
She did not say 'Kurdish national independence movement' or 'Kurdistan
freedom movement' or 'movement of revival of the Kurdish nation',
as emphasised by Professor Y. Kk., who made it the title of his
book. The movement, of course, encompasses the targets of national
freedom and independence, but the inquirer here was after the
briefest possible response The respondent was asked to
express the most fundamental feature or most distinctive characteristic
of the organisation for which she is prepared to sacrifice her
life, in as few words as possible.
I do not believe that the answer 'humanisation movement' was simply
an impromptu, accidental response. Since immediately after the
collapse of 'Eastern Bloc socialism' the PKK's publications have
had a noticeable emphasis on questions of humanity. In a 1992
speech, A. Ocalan suggested that they will complete the October
Revolution, which was interrupted at the half-way stage: 'This
is our humanistic and international task'.
In the subsequent years it has become clear what he meant by the
incompleted half" of the October Revolution.
When I interviewed Abdullah Ocalan, I began by asking him:
- At its outset, your movement appeared to be an attempt to revitalise
the Kurdish nation, which had been 'buried in concrete' by the
young Turkish Republic, an attempt to smash that 'concrete' to
pieces. Later, however, particularly now in the 1990s, it has
acquired a more universal and humanistic dimension. Now you focus
on human nature, human personality and the spiritual structure
of human beings. What has caused this progression from national
identity to the quest for humanisation?
I have to confess that his answer surprised me:
- It would be very difficult for any ordinary social
scientist to comprehend me. I think that, despite all your efforts,
you are not going to be able to understand. In fact, my method
does not fit into the imagination of ordinary human beings. Only
I, so far, know how and who I am fighting. I have said, therefore,
that if any researcher or scientist from where you have come from
[implying the West] has sufficient self-confidence, they may attempt
to learn and understand. You have tried but I fear that you will
return with empty hands.
- I do not believe that my hands will be completely empty. I wanted
to know how or why you have redirected your emphasis from rediscovering
a buried national identity to the point of universal re-appropriation
of the human essence.
- These were only key words. You have to place
the key in the door and turn it in the relevant direction before
you can open the door and see inside the room. These words were
not the whole edifice. The subsequent developments are well worth
looking at.
- Yet, when we first met you spoke of a sort of contemporary
prophetical offensive.
- This is style, a figure
of speech
I express the truth through philosophical narration.
The answer I was expecting when I formulated the question regarding
the basic cause of the diversion from nationality to humanity
was that this was the prospect which confronted him when he 'opened
the door'. But what surprised me was that he did not seem to have
been diverted at all. His implication was that he was manoeuvring
into position in order to proceed in the direction originally
set, by wielding the national key words. It would certainly
be implausible to deny the national and democratic purposes of
the revolution for which he organised the party; however these
appear to be secondary aims, or even the means to an end.
The contentious point will be clarified in further lines of the
interview.
I tried to pull him towards my sphere of interest:
- On my way here the thought which was uppermost in my mind was
the prevailing propensity throughout the world for distancing
mankind from being a social being. In the hands of unchallenged
capitalism this situation becomes increasingly disturbing and
ugly for humanity. Accordingly, I tried to look at the situation
of 3,000 years ago and, in that light, to examine the approach
which you have to the subject of human problems. For example,
I looked at Plato, the pupil of Socrates
- Am I like him?
- In a sense, yes. You ask the question, 'How should man
live?' which forms the foundation of Plato's work. I do not know
whether you have read it or not
- I have not read it at all.
- I do not believe that it is a coincidence.
- I have not even read a single line of it. So you
say that 'it is similar'.
- Plato skirts around the edges of the question of 'how man ought
to live'. One of the fundamental suggestions which he makes for
ending the troubles of humanity is either transforming kings into
philosophers or letting philosophers become kings, namely making
the philosophers strong and powerful. [I tried to give a brief
interpretation of L Stevenson's conclusion, which he draws from
Plato, on the fundamental treatment for the problems of human
nature and 'how men ought to live' and of Plato's famous prescription,
which he quotes from Socrates in the Republic: 'Until philosophers
are kings, or the kings and princes of this world have the spirit
and power of philosophy, and political greatness and wisdom meet
in one, and those commoner natures which pursue either one to
the exclusion of the other are compelled to stand aside, cities
will never have rest from their evils - no, nor the human race,
as I believe, - and then only will this our State have a possibility
of life and behold the light of day
']
- But I do not only advocate and advise. I combine
the two halves of your equation in a way which is astonishing.
For a long while, philosophy has been intertwined with politics
and politics with philosophy. The ruler and the philosopher have
been united, but unfortunately there are few who understand this.
- It is on this subject that I would like to focus my attention.
In the course of my work I have tried to distinguish the details
of the philosopher's life-style. Exceptions aside, the end results
were always either madness, depression, retreat into one's own
space or becoming the target of the anger and aggression of ruling
powers or governments. So, finally, as you also remarked concerning
Marx, their endings were 'pathetic' and wretched. But, in your
case, as far as I understand, particularly after reaching this
point, you have, in this human history which seeks humanity and
beauty, sought a tactical philosophisation, bringing this to power,
making it strong and empowering those people who have gathered
the beautiful things together within their personalities. I believe
that you are in the process of becoming a philosopher-ruler and
that you live in a philosophical way.
-You say 'tactical philosophisation'. You evaluate
it as tactical philosophisation, or as the politicisation of the
philosopher, when the philosopher descends into actual life, in
my experience that is to say, when the philosopher acquires the
power to change things.
- If I were to give a concrete example, it is like moving from
the phase where Marx conducted an analytic examination, diagnosing
the source of questions, looking for the way to solutions, to
the phase where one moves to actually solving the questions
by becoming the ruling power, which is equivalent to bringing
Marx to power.
- Marx only says his words. Of course my situation
is quite different; saying something is the most basic element
in my case. Lenin speaks about the essential components of organisation
and it is also simple for me to speak about the elements of organisation.
They speak of class struggle and for me to speak of class struggle
is also quite basic. All of these things I have learned a long
time ago as ABC and put to one side. I have gone beyond this.
- There is a parallel point with Lenin which I detect: for example,
when you spoke about the collapse of 'real socialism', saying
that 'Lenin started the revolution with Politburo members who
he was deeply anxious about but, despite serious conflicts between
him and almost all of the other members of the Politburo, he was
obliged to execute the revolution with them, because there was
no other way out, and what this means is that even from the early
stages of the Bolshevik movement, the revolution was faced with
suffocation'. You also say frequently, when you refer to Stalin,
'I place the weight on the militants right to the ultimate , criticise
them intensively, but I never liquidate them'. Isn't there a parallel
here?
All right. Or, in other words, carry out the revolution
with problematic personalities of cadres, but Lenin is not as
profound as ourselves on this matter and perhaps did not accord
it as much weight. But on this point we are a real expert. Many
things which he did not take into account, we have put into practice.
Lenin is also limited, as far as solving internal problems within
the organisation goes, and he is even helpless. In these matters
he appears to be a sort of intellectual. But mine is a stormy
warfare. This is warfare to the marrow, to the very cells. It
would never have happened to Lenin, nor to Mao. We are much further
ahead. On the level of struggle and of the organisation, we have
definitely gone further. We are quite different from what is encompassed
by the framework of Leninism. Our situation cannot be explained
by the crude outlook of Lenin's organisation. There may be a similarity
but it is superseded.
- When we first met, I think I had a sense of what you are now
saying about supersession and I could feel the difference which
you are describing . There is a new arrival here, a friend from
Hinis. He has been a student of religious education. In the classroom
with his fellow travellers this friend was so excited it was as
though he had not read the writing in his hand. But when we arrived
together to see you, after your first words I realised that he
was comfortable around you, so I asked him what his first impressions
were. He replied, 'It feels very natural to be near the President.
I feel very much at ease'. Then, after a pause, while he searched
for the right words, he said, 'He is not like other people in
this world'. And I remembered something which you said about the
time when the PKK first emerged: 'When we first appeared, everybody,
whether on the left or right, looked down on us. They made such
remarks as, Did they come down from the sky into a basket
of rushes?" They resemble nobody." and Where
did they come from? Who are they like?" Of course, there
is something natural in this, whether their motives were good
or bad, whether we were friends or enemies, because when we first
appeared on the scene we too looked at ourselves and asked questions
of ourselves: Who are we? What are we? If we change our society,
according to what [model] will we transform it and what will things
be turned into? And, as a result of this questioning, we focused
attention on ourselves and, after a period of time, we became
different
' Naturally, at the outset, this differentiation
manifested itself , together with a combination of historical,
social, local, domestic and personal components, in the framework
of your individual characteristics. These gradually passed to
your fellow comrades, that 'handful of bandits'. It brought
the following analogy into my mind: think of the way in which
milk turns into yoghurt as the transformation of
societies, namely the transformation of a class-based society
into a classless society - a society without oppression, without
hypocrisy, without all sorts of wars and their horror, a society
with a just order, a humane order, an order which returns to the
true essence of human beings, - such a transformation from 'milk'
to 'yoghurt' would be a qualitative development and would require
the addition of a fermantative material. This fermantative
material is composed of qualitatively different molecules - if
we think of a human being as the 'molecules' or the 'cells' which
make up society - in other words, the molecules need to
be found to create the ferment; if not it somehow has to be made
out of molecules of the existing milk. Consequently, the need
for some molecules which will constitute the fermentative material
is certain - even if this is a very insignificant or minor ingredient,
it will still be necessary. Can we therefore say that the emergence
of the PKK, in this sense, and its current transformation, constitute
a similar process of the realisation of a ferment, a 'social ferment',
in opposition to the cumulative effects of thousands of years
of inheritance from all previous class-based societies?
Before quoting the answer to this question, I need to underline
some points. Firstly, in general Mr Ocalan made rapid responses
to my questions - indeed, he sometimes did not let me finish what
I was saying - but in response to the question above, he replied
with an unusual hesitation, which lasted nearly a minute. (It
was unusual in my experience but I have been told by one of his
regular listeners that he occasionally walks around in front of
hundreds of his pupils - or militants - saying nothing for a quarter
or half an hour in the silent classroom. Thus it was not altogether
unusual after all.) Secondly, if I am not mistaken, I discerned
that he sometimes refrains from some points of discussion, such
as not being drawn on the question of how men ought to live,
which I must confess I do not have any answers to. Whereas elsewhere
he has frequently referred to this question, even in defining
the movement by saying, 'Our revolution and the history of the
PKK as an arduous attempt to respond to the question of how
men ought to live" . He has even published a book of two
volumes in length entitled How men ought to live, consisting
of some 600 pages. However, he expressed interesting thoughts
on the subject in his replies without actually mentioning the
term itself.
Here is the answer to the above question, given after a short
period of hesitation:
- Now, in our case, we did not contemplate moulding
our humanity or personalities according to such principles of
civilisation, but according to natural principles. In other words,
this was not according to the rules for the development of a class
society, but according to very natural principles. What are these
natural principles? In some cases it was the principle of childhood
or of the earliest days of mankind. We did not lose sight of this.
It was part of my strategy for action.
- You say, 'I grow up without betraying the longings and utopias
of my childhood' or 'If a child does not betray his/her longings
and utopias, s/he will never be a bad adult'
- Yes, not betraying childhood, getting 'back' to
the principles of conduct from the earliest human societies, taking
these principles as fundamental guidelines and within that framework,
examining civilisation, class societies, politics and art, diligently
and with focus. This approach is at the same time very easy and
very difficult. It is difficult to become as pure as either the
first human being or as a child, but it is more basic. It is very
difficult for those who have been brought up according to the
principles of civilisation but it is also very attractive and
pleasant for those who are interested by the concept of human
naturalness. And, in this sense, we do have a philosophical approach
and effect.
For example, unlike you, I do not lose myself. If
we analyse you on this basis, who knows what state you are in.
Who knows to which principles of civilisation your personality
is moulded; of course you need to be analysed. You have become
the victim of certain principles and, consequently, you have great
difficulties. Take myself, for example, I am not like that. My
greatest advantage is that I have never yet buckled under and
become such a victim. I am very fastidious. I did not sell my
soul and part of what I am explaining is that one must not destroy
one's naturalness. But, in your case, and in the way you have
been brought up, you have long since submitted to the principles
of civilisation. These young people [implying the PKK militants]
are the same. This is the source of my extra-ordinariness. I have
protected myself carefully ever since childhood. There is a very
interesting story which someone wrote about this; a young girl
said: 'Every day we are becoming more and more like a society
which is prostituting itself, but it seems to me as if the
leadership is becoming more like a virgin'. It is true that
I can say to myself that I am like a virgin being - a virgin of
human naturalness. You, however, live according to the class society's
production mechanisms, goods and property - prostitution to the
last degree. But, myself in particular, I direct myself to live
overwhelmingly as a 'virgin' and am careful not to involve myself
in anything unclean. I derive my strength from avoiding everything
unclean, not getting mixed up in human dirty work. But you have
taken the lower role: that is the reasoning of an occupier; that
is an action, an idea of property, a habit in life, an inclination
If
we consider all these sorts of things as elements in leading people
astray, there are thousands of situations you live through every
day. The difference between us lies there. I define this as a
'purification movement'. Of course it requires a purification
process. My movement, therefore, is a movement which creates clean
human beings. And, as a matter of fact, whoever comes close to
us sees the PKK in this way. This is what is so interesting about
the PKK. Its emancipation lies in this.
In the course of an earlier conversation with some of his female
pupils and me, following an instant of hesitation, he suddenly
said, with hatred, 'There is something very perplexing. Despite
all my massive influence and power of action, still everybody
yes,
everybody, thinks that they can easily deceive me'. He did not
give any clues as to what he was referring to.
I looked for the answer in the 'live dialogue'.
- Why do you think people feel that they are still able to deceive
you so easily when your tactics are so extraordinary and when
there is such progress of tactical philosophisation?
- This is because of the Satanic force of civilisation
leading humankind astray. It is the other side to the deception
of civilisation's devilry. The devilish side of civilisation deceives
in such a way that everybody believes that they can deceive me.
The root of the devil is, in any case, a deception, an action
of robbery. But my own position is the exact opposite of this.
And, because of that there is an unbelievable amount of intrigue
inside the organisation. I understand the position that those
friends are in. Their code for living is treacherous and is considered
by those who take part in intrigue as fundamental. But there is
also resistance amongst us. The resistance action is very well
rooted against this intrigue. I am not a sleeping angel; like
the prophets of the time, I am involved in a great war. That is
to say, our action may be defined as acting prophetically, rather
than as a philosophical work. To put it differently, the other
side of this philosophical coin is that you act like the prophets.
I understand this better now. The greatest difficulty of the ages
- you call it a 3,000 year descent - if this is correct, then
it is necessary to answer in some senses like a prophet. Of course
I am not seeing myself in the same way in which people understand
a prophet. But it resembles a prophetical offensive in some respects.
In 1992 elections were held for Kurds in Great Britain and Europe,
in order to constitute the Kurdish National Assembly in Exile.
Some candidates were also elected in the strictest secrecy from
within the Kurdish region of Turkey. One of these was an official
imam in a borough of Diyarbakir, the major city of north Kurdistan,
who managed to join the final stage of the election held in a
town in Germany. I met him there and listened to him in solid
bewilderment for several minutes, while he explained how much
of a prophet 'Apo' was.
I told Apo himself about this while he was explaining how much
of a prophet he is! - I came across a religious person in Germany who thought this way about you.
- But of course. It is not enough just to interpret
us as a philosopher. Nor am I a religious devotee. I am working
with the special and prophet-like features of the times. You must
discuss this subject in depth. It is an important way of life.
We did not lose faith in humanity nor in life's beauty; more exactly,
even if you put the world before me I would not be interested
in these ways of life of yours. I do not appreciate it. Such thoughts
or tendencies as comfort, money; most of these things seem like
torture to me. What is more, a life-style in which all our friends
are influenced by comfort is only a life of reaction for me. What
I am searching for lies in the heavens. I am looking for something
more successful, richer, more attractive, bigger still. What you
are looking for is so impoverished. One feels sorry. I think to
myself: 'How are these paupers so condescending?' I hope that
you will set your sights on this richness and will strive for
the high and the virtuous. You will overcome that shallow life,
I hope. It is important to become the kind of person that I will
admire. The men of 'messiah' which you spoke about, that is the
emergence of the type of person who one can admire. Of course,
this is not something which can be acquired by violence or with
money. I explained this a little earlier; this is the kind of
particularity which is required for us to be interested..
Many indications - various anthropological researches and studies
in search of the origins of human civilisation, and some other
similar scientific inquiries into the subject - reveal, or at
least suggest, that the homeland of primitive humanisation is
more or less upper Mesopotamia. Andrew Collins, best-selling author
of The Black Alchemist and The Seventh Sword, printed
a 'chilling warning' as the final sentence on the back cover of
his latest book:
'Both Egypt's high civilisation and the Watchers
of Kurdistan have left as a legacy to humanity a chilling warning
that the world ignores at its peril.'
And, at the beginning of the book, he writes: 'This book is dedicated
to the People of Kurdistan, Keepers of the Cradle of Civilisation.'
I do not intend to intervene in the dispute between determinism
and free-will within the limited framework of this study;
however it seems to me that the philosophical and prophetical
face of today's Kurdish offensive has been brought about by the
dramatic degeneration of the human race in the homeland of human
civilisation - in 'The Cradle of Civilisation'. It may be an emergence
of rehumanisation 'from the ashes of angels', by the descendants
of the earliest human beings from its 'cradle', in response to
this seemingly endless decline of humanity.
'Jash: People like myself'
A Turkish journalist, Rafet Balli, has an experience to provide
a clue about the frontiers (if any) of descent or destruction
in the personality of a 'keeper of the cradle of civilisation'.
During the Gulf War he went to Northern Iraq to interview the
major Kurdish leaders for his book Krt Dosyas (The Kurdish
File). Before he reached the leaders he interviewed a peshmerga
commander who was responsible for a district near the Turkish
border. He used a Kurdish interpreter from northern Kurdistan
(the Turkish-occupied part) who was a village guard fighting
against the PKK guerrillas with the Turkish state forces. During
the interview the commander said, 'aggressors cannot stand out
against us because they are jash (traitors)'. And the village
guard tried to translate this sentence into Turkish. From here
on, I quote Balli himself:
'When our interpreter came to the sentence he hesitated
and stopped. Then he put all his effort into finding a relevant
word for 'jash'
In fact, I knew what the word meant
from my years at university
He was still arduously searching
for a Turkish word for 'jash'. Even my interference by saying,
OK, I understand" did not persuade him to give up.
After he had consumed all existing effort and language skills,
he eventually found the way out! Here is his verdict:
Jash. . Namely, people like myself."
Despite rapidly reconnecting all the fuses in my
nervous system, I could not prevent my whole body from shaking.
My God, neither a Catholic nor a traditional Leninist would venture
into such tyrannical self-criticism!
Do not get me wrong. My intention is not to call
some people traitor" or collaborator". I
am dealing with how these human beings see themselves.
The only remaining alternative from my point of view
was to be ashamed of myself. Because, at the end of the day, I
am a journalist in that region, where human beings have such deformed
and destroyed personalities.
What do you think? Does the subject need to be elaborated
on by psychologists?
The Kurdish Offensive and Mesopotamia
It seems to me that this particular social aspect of the region,
which fundamentally reveals the spiritual structure of the Kurdish
nation, is worth assiduous research and also needs to be taken
into consideration, in order to analyse and define this new Kurdish
offensive. Despite Mr Ocalan's hesitant reply in which he said,
'But I think that there is not much historical influence on me',
in the context of his whole answer he confirmed my argument, in
his own particular style. I asked him how he relates his movement
with the 'cradle of civilisation'.
- I do not think that it is a coincidence that you meet here in
Mesopotamia; that you have appeared on the scene in what is known
as the 'cradle of civilisation'. Can there be a reason for this,
or a connection?
- To be a Mesopotamian
or what is the influence
of the land of our birth? Above all, I have a characteristic which
is not to be easily separated from the land. If my birth place
is Mesopotamia, it is necessary to know what it means by not being
easily separated from Mesopotamia. In fact, I do not know how
close the links are between the reality of Mesopotamia and the
storms created by the problems contingent on such a break. But
I think there is not much historical influence on me. Because
history had ended in our social reality, when I began to act.
Perhaps for all of you there was something, but for myself there
is not. When it was my turn, history, society, philosophy, art
and manners had been finished, consumed. After that I became myself.
It is very interesting; perhaps for all of you there was something
but for me there was nothing to withstand. I am the person who
sprouted up from beyond the pale. How should one interpret this?
You must all know how to think about it. Even those ordinary villagers
looked on my situation as something painful: 'A child with no
hope
' 'My god, don't make anybody's child like him'. This
was how they described me. It was wounding for even the most simple
villager. Let us not fool ourselves that it has anything to do
with Mesopotamian civilisation. My situation is very ordinary
and basic. But, in terms of a logical approach - such as is called
a dialectic - a person who is so divorced from the values of civilisation:
social, political, historical and family values, is someone very
independent. In one sense it is someone very free. It seems that
this is my greatest good fortune. My poor father and my very peculiar
mother were essentially my good fortune. What seemed to be my
unfortunate childhood is, as I said, my greatest good fortune.
I still remember thinking: God, why did you make
my mother and father like that? Why did you pick me to be the
child of such wretched people? And that was really how it all
started.. The base where I enter in the process of strengthening
myself. If I had not been such a child I would certainly not be
the person I am now. If I had been the child of better parents,
I could not have made progress at a time like this. I could not
have grasped such great independence. My dear mother and father
seemed so unlucky that I said to myself, 'Let me take them by
the hand'.
At a very early age the ideology of patriarchy -
it is the most influential ideology for a child - even at that
time for me, it seemed an outmoded and meaningless position. I
was very independent, had an unbelievable degree of freedom. This
may be the most specific side of our work.
My father was utterly pathetic, unable to do anything,
and my mother was formidable - shouting, yelling without reason,
capable of every kind of behaviour. A family reality on the threshold
of dissolution. Family was dissolved in our family; it actually
stopped. So you see, that both my father's situation and the state
of my mother saved me at an early age from the ideology of the
family. This was a way out for me. From there on, my first friends,
first travels, first actions, were very significant. Such an opportunity
for a child is rare. It is impossible that it could be the same
for anyone else.
- Can we say then that this was the most dysfunctional family,
from a society which is dysfunctional to the very core?
- Both dysfunctional and pure or not very sullied.
It was the kind of family which would not be unfair to anyone
else, nor was it too negative. If a book was to be written on
the subject, this concept could be worked through thoroughly.
In other words, when striving to grasp freedom, this is something
significant here in my view. Side by side there exist helplessness,
poverty, misery, dissolution, innocence and purity. As I explained,
this guaranteed me freedom of action. I look at you and I see
with absolute certainty that you are your mother and father's
true sons and daughters. You lost from the beginning. From the
beginning you were emasculated. No trace of special courage has
remained. Later in life when they wanted to influence me according
to the traditions I had long since learned how to keep my distance
and had become a very different person. You have been made like
oxen hitched in fours to the plough; oxen of the existing social
order. No good comes from it.
It is clear that in response to my question on the relationship
between the humane side of the movement and the 'cradle
of civilisation', he focused on the family, the domestic base
from which he originated, or the narrower ground of the family
circle, in which the distinguishing features of his leadership
were planted. This may be the subject of another dispute or piece
of research but, despite close links with my question, in this
current work my concern is with the wider social and regional
base for such a humanistic movement, rather than the domestic
one. Ocalan put more emphasis on this side of the coin when he
replied to Y Kk's question about what kind of human being they
are pursuing, or the type of personality they are attempting to
mould. He suggests that Kurdistan is the weakest link in the chain,
in the sense of a disappearance of humane values.
'Kurdistan is the place where humanity itself fades
away in its most solid form. It is humankind's oldest cradle.
A magnificent victory for humanity may be gained in the place
where it has been most deconstructed". Such magnificence
will be in proportion to the descent. Namely, if in some place,
humanity descends so sharply and deeply, then the concomitant
rise of humanity will be as strong and splendid.'
There is another point in this answer which I wish to draw attention
to. Ocalan often makes comparisons between himself and his pupils
or himself and other ordinary human beings, those he calls 'emasculated'
people. He does this in a style which implies that he does not
consider himself constrained by the same rules of social conduct
as other people. In the narrations and dialogues he occasionally
uses boorish or strong words without the slightest hesitation
and in a manner which may easily be perceived as belittling. He
never refrains from being the cause of misunderstandings in such
cases.
What is the source of this? Does he actually belittle others or
is it a fully conscious style or a mere manifestation of the particularity
of his unrestrained personal nature? This may well be the subject
of another further dispute. I cannot give a firm or satisfactory
conclusion on the matter. But a considerable conclusion I did
draw from my observations during a recent visit to the Mahsum
Korkmaz Academy and from previous reading and experiences, is
that neither among the militants and sympathisers, nor among the
people in general, is there any negative reaction. On the contrary,
they all seem to appreciate his peculiar style. I asked one of
Ocalan's ordinary 'emasculated' pupils what he thought. Despite
his 'emasculation', his comments were philosophical: 'Leadership
does not target our personal honour or dignity, but the muddy
footprints" of the descent of millennia in the obscure corners
of our spiritual world'.
'Leadership' performs in similar style in his published speeches,
regarding the evaluation of Kurdish people. He has an interesting
answer to the questions posed by Dou Perincek, Turkish politician
and journalist, such as, 'Don't you like Kurds a little more than
other people?'
'No! I like human beings without any distinction.
On the contrary, the slave Kurd cannot be appreciated. As long
as Kurds are not free you should feel loathing for them. What
does an oppressed Kurd have that is worth loving? No-one likes
subservient Kurds but one may only curse at them. In point of
fact, our offensive is the struggle to create a beautiful humanity
which may deserve love
'
Yet Ocalan told Professor Kk that he had undertaken the struggle
for the freedom of Kurdish people, not because he is a Kurd but
because he is a socialist
Despite Ocalan's frequent subordination of ethnicity and his occasional
humiliation of Kurdish people, and even despite intensive propaganda
both from the state-controlled media and other Kurdish political
and cultural organisations, in which these very positions are
used against him, the party became a mass movement in the subsequent
years (1991 onwards). In the 1991 and 1995 elections the PKK-backed
legal parties: the People's Labour Party (HEP) and the People's
Democracy Party (HADEP) polled the largest number of votes respectively
in the Kurdish territories under Turkish rule, despite all the
cunning stratagems and coercive methods employed in those elections.
'I have never held a gun in my life,' Mr Ocalan has told various
local and foreign journalists. The corollary
to this is that all he needs to do is speak, write and teach.
While I was there, for almost three weeks, I witnessed him teaching
five or six times a week. Each lesson, referred to as an analysis,
takes at least three hours. Each one is diligently recorded
by video cameras and immediately edited, printed and distributed.
His radio dialogues with guerrilla commanders in the provinces
and the mountains are treated in the same way. A book of 'analyses',
four to five hundred pages in length, has been issued every month
since 1983. Discovering this led me to conclude that what he actually
does is not writing, but only talking and more talking. Although
I was familiar with his occasional statements along the lines
'I execute the revolution by my power of language', I was not
previously aware that all the books of 'analyses', over a period
of 13 years, are composed entirely of contemporaneous speeches
and dialogues from the classroom and the radio.
I wanted to know to what extent he thought he could actually impose
or transform human personality and how far he was convinced of
the efficiency of his task. In view of my latest information,
I constructed a question on the subject of the conventional and
never-ending dispute regarding human nature.
- There are two rival parties in the sphere of philosophy, which
goes back through several thousand years of human history. One
party, in essence, suggests that man is by nature self-regarding
and can never be otherwise; s/he always puts him/herself first
and organises all aspects of life according to instincts or motives.
The other school of thought maintains that the human mind is originally
a blank sheet and all knowledge is the product of subsequent experience.
Consequently, a human being has a chance of changing his or her
own nature. For example, Plato tends to say that the perfect man
can be formed by the force of knowledge and education. Within
this context there is a claim regarding the spiritual structure
of human beings, which divides it into three centres (the threefold
division of the soul): Reason, Appetite and Spirit. The first
group assert here that man is a passionate being whose major motivations
are beyond control and that reason is the slave of passion. Whereas,
according to the second group, human beings are essentially rational
and aware of this themselves; consequently they have the ability
to restrain their instincts and passions. In view of such philosophical
approaches to human nature, I think that there are some considerable
points to be made in terms of the life of the PKK. What do you
say?
- I feel sorry about this subject as well. I have
striven hard not to be in conflict with human nature, not to let
it take the wrong path
Whether it is my instincts or my conscious
judgement, I leave them absolutely unrestrained. It could be said
that they are in contention with one another. I think that the
one which is more correct will not yield to domination over one
another. If a good balance is kept between the two, you can make
enormous strides forward, or you can become a genius; or a politician,
a soldier, an artist. My particularity in this subject is, I think,
on the one hand, constant deploying of reason, on the other
hand never putting aside any religious, juridical, even philosophical
moral values as much. I deploy a principle such as 'let human
beings be unrestrainedly natural', but at the same time I am an
absolute obedient servant of some rules and regulations. I keep
an extremely sensitive balance on the horns of the dilemma
One
must not belittle instincts. They are vital and life is under
a strict influence of instincts. But, of course, without the principle,
if you say, everything has to be according to instincts",
your lifestyle will be bestial. Likewise if you say everything
according to dogmas" you will become a hermit. I am trying
to define an existing distorted state of human beings in which
both principle and instinct have been led astray.
I am still striving to analyse it.
Some Concrete Reflections
In connection with the above question, I mentioned some considerable
points in the life of the PKK. He, however, did not say anything
on the subject. This point is crucial, however, because of the
concrete end-results of almost two decades of such extemporaneous
philosophising.
There are actually many examples which are worthy of elaboration.
From the outset of the formation of the group, to today's mass
movement and throughout the development of the party, many events
have occurred which may attract philosophical interest. These
events deserve a separate study, but I shall mention here just
a few, in which we will find elements concerning our subject.
Of these events, the most recent is most spectacular and deserves
to be mentioned first. A 24-year-old female guerrilla named Zeynep
Knac carried out a 'suicide attack' on a Turkish army unit in
the city centre of Dersim (Tunceli - a Kurdish province of Turkey)
on 29 June 1996. With a large amount of explosives tied around
herself, she penetrated a group of soldiers who were preparing
to sing the Turkish national anthem. It was reported on TV and
radio that the largest piece of her body which remained afterwards
was a piece of her heel. More than ten soldiers died. She recorded
three messages (To 'Leadership', to the Kurdistan Women Freedom
Fighters and to the Patriotic People of Kurdistan) prior to the
attack. She was educated, a graduate of the Social Science Faculty
of Inonu University at Malatya. The messages included theoretical
and philosophical passages:
In the message to 'Leadership' she attempts to define the leader
of the future: 'A leader is a person who represents the desired
transformation towards the true essence of human nature and manifests
the symptoms of such a humankind appropriate for the humanity
of the future via his or her own everyday life-style.' Another
peculiar point about her spiritual state, particularly in view
of her significant sentences, which can only be the result of
a materialist conception of history, is her evaluation of herself
as a 'martyr' while she is still alive. She speaks on behalf of
martyrs: 'We Kurdish martyrs
'
The final sentence of the message to 'Leadership' is as follows:
'I wished to be the owner of a significant life and now I am undertaking
this operation because of my love of life and my love of human
beings.'
In the message to 'Women Freedom Fighters', after discussing the
question of women in comparison to the status of women in the
former 'real socialist' countries, she describes her feelings:
'I am filled with indescribably beautiful emotions, because of
reaching this decision which will, I believe, represent women's
demand for freedom. It gives me great courage and morale and I
consider myself very lucky to have the opportunity to perform
such an honourable task.'
And, in the third letter, after a brief account of the history
of humanity from a materialist perspective, she declares what
it is she is sacrificing her life for:
'I will launch myself at the enemy with the morale
and strength I have received from my people and I will endeavour
to be an expression of my people's demand for freedom. I shout
to the whole world: Hear me, open your eyes!" We are
the children of a people which has had its country taken away
and been scattered to the four corners of the world. We want to
live in freedom in our own land like human beings. Blood, tears
and tyranny must no longer be the destiny of our people. We long
for peace, fraternity, love, humanity, nature and life more than
anyone. We do not want to cause war, to die or to kill. But there
is no other way of gaining our freedom. It is the imperialist
powers and their lackey, the Turkish state, which are responsible
for the war. To remain silent is to commit the greatest crime.
If you see the blood flowing in front of your eyes and still remain
silent, then you are the most guilty.'
In the course of a dialogue with a Turkish commander, one of the
founding members of the Party (and also one of several founder-members
who were Turkish) Kemal Pir, who went on hunger-strike in Diyarbakir
prison on 14 July 1982 and eventually died on the 56th
day, made a statement which later became famous and which is philosophically
significant. The commander tried to persuade him to abandon his
hunger-strike, saying: 'Why don't you give it up? Don't you love
life, Kemal?' Kemal replies: 'I love life so much I am prepared
to die for it'.
Four prisoners (F. Kurtay, E. Anyk, M. Zengin and N. Oner) who
were accused of being members of the PKK, set fire to themselves
and died hand-in-hand at Diyarbakir prison on 17 May 1982. The
title of their joint letter is 'To all humanity'.
A Kurdish girl, Zekiye Alkan, who was a final year medical student,
set herself on fire and burned to death on the city wall of Diyarbakir
on 21 March 1990. (This day, 21 March, is the Kurdish national
festival of Newroz. It has been observed for 2,600 years and is
mainly celebrated by lighting fires on the hillsides. The festival
is banned by the Turkish state.) Zekiye wrote a letter which stated
that she was reacting to the ban and that 'the best fire of Newroz
can be that of the human body'.
Another young girl, Rahsan Demirel, burned herself to death in
Izmir (Turkey's third largest city), on Newroz 1992 and on Newroz
1994 two Kurdish girls set fire to themselves and died in Mannheim,
Germany, all leaving similar messages prior to the incidents.
Many more similar actions and operations have taken place since
the military coup of 1980 and up to the present day. It seems
that such activity, by both guerrilla and civilian supporters
of the PKK, will continue for some time. As I said earlier, it
deserves research in itself. However, the fundamental conclusion
which may be drawn from these end-results is that if these are
not incidental or coincidental then the argument has to be focused
on the dispute by seeking a scientific answer to the question
of 'to what extent are these developments the result of the Turkish
state's primitively conservative and brutal policy towards the
Kurds or of the attempt at rehumanisation in the cradle
of civilisation" '?
In pursuit of such an answer there is, I believe, another point
worth mentioning. There are some distinct manners of conduct and
speaking and also a distinct way of life within the PKK as an
organisation. For example, party cadres, and even sympathisers
who occasionally act on behalf of the party, never drink alcohol
and never cross their legs in public. As a result they are, on
the one hand, accused of being religious reactionaries by the
rest of the parties and political movements in Turkey and Kurdistan
- those which consider themselves as Marxist-Leninist - and, on
the other hand, accused of being the most orthodox Marxist-Leninist
organisation in the world! Yet, militants of the party or people
who join the activities of the organisation professionally do
not get married and if they are already a married couple, they
cease to live as one. I do not know if this is dictated by a rule
or regulation laid down in constitutional documents but there
are detailed accounts of the context, particularly with regard
to questions regarding women and the family by the 'leadership'
in the 'analyses', which ultimately conclude that it is the existing
style of family life and the ways of marriage and even love, (which
are seen as the appropriation of woman - and also of man -) which
are the most destructive property relationships in society; more
destructive than private property in the means of production.
I witnessed Ocalan's approach to this question when I first met
him. While I was telling him about Morgan's conclusion about the
formation of the idea of property in the human brain, he suddenly
interrupted and pointed at my wedding ring, saying, 'Your have
already become a mere piece of property and yet you still talk
about the idea of property'.
In conclusion
Part of Lewis Morgan's conclusion to Ancient Society was
as follows:
'
A mere property career is not the final destiny
of mankind, if progress is to be the law of nature as it has been
in the past. The time which has passed away since civilisation
began is but a fragment of the past duration of men's existence
and but a fragment of the ages yet to come. The dissolution of
society bids fair to become the termination of a career of which
property is the end and aim; because such a career contains the
elements of self-destruction. Democracy in government, brotherhood
in society, equality in rights and privileges, and universal education,
foreshadow the next higher plane of society to which experience,
intelligence and knowledge are steadily tending. It will be
a revival, in a higher form of the liberty, equality and fraternity
of the ancient gentes. [current author's emphasis]'
Marx's basic thesis about the history of humanity was that social
progress is determined by the conflict between the social forces
of production and the relations of production. At a certain
stage of development, the material productive forces of society
come into conflict with the existing relations of production or
- and this merely expresses the same thing in legal terms - with
the property relations within the framework in which they have
hitherto operated. From forms of development of the productive
forces, these relations turn into their fetters. Then begins an
era of social revolution. The changes in the economic foundation
lead sooner or later to the transformation of the whole immense
superstructure." Consequently, the moral
values of a society are a superstructural formation which is determined
by the base of society and therefore have an economic foundation.
If we consider that human nature and human personality are actually
manifestations of moral values which have been formed and accumulated
and inherited from generation to generation, and if what is necessary
to build a classless society, a society without exploitation -
the 'revival in a higher form of the liberty, equality and fraternity
of the ancient gentes' is virtuous human naturalness, then who
will be able to construct such a society? It has been demonstrated
by the experience of 'current socialism' that such a society cannot
be developed by existing personalities - those who are the product
of class societies with a distorted spiritual equilibrium between
the three parts of the soul: Reason, Appetite and Passions. This,
from my point of view, will be the question which humanity has
to answer in the future; the question for the 'fragment of the
ages yet to come.'
Productive forces, (the material productive forces and the social
forces of production) hitherto, found the way for itself to further
progress through the transformation of class societies from one
to another by the renewal or replacement of classes. The Soviet
Union under the leadership of Gorbachev attempted to crate a 'new'
sort of socialism-like class system, within the framework of state
property prior to its demise. But this failed and collapsed loudly.
Existing relations of production in the uni-polar world of
monopoly capitalism have long been 'turned into their [of the
productive forces] fetters'. Thus, 'If progress is to be the law
of the future as it has been of the past', the productive forces
must somehow make a pathway to further progress; but this in any
case will necessitate a rehumanisation.
One of the fundamental conclusions of Marx's materialist conception
of history is that all elements of superstructural formations,
including human personality and spiritual structure can only be
a reflection of the material base (the relations
of production). But Plato believed that the perfect state is one
which is ruled by perfect individuals and that perfect individuals
could be produced by acquiring moral and intellectual knowledge
by means of an elaborate system of education. And Abdullah Ocalan,
in a sense, is implementing Plato's plan, without having 'read
a word of him':
'The slogan of socialism was: First build socialism
and then we change human beings". This must be superseded
by: First produce the human beings who are going to build
the socialism". If you want to build a really socialist society,
you must first mould the personalities who can build socialism
in their own little nucleus. If there are no such people then
who will build socialism? Socialism can only be built by socialists
and the person who appreciates the socialist programme cannot
be considered as a socialist. This is a historical truth.'
It could be said that Plato and Ocalan's positions are the exact
opposite to Marx and contradict the materialist conception of
history or, in other words, that there is an obvious contradiction
between them and Marx. But it may also be said that a frightening
tendency towards social bestialisation and technological
brutality will be sufficient material base, not for
ordinary human beings, but for a unit of 'philosopher-rulers'
or 'social catalysts' in appropriate parts of the world.
The clues which I have tried to pick up and present in this limited
work lead me to conclude that the Kurdish offensive is a modest
attempt to produce such 'philosopher-rulers' or 'molecules of
social ferment', rather than a movement for national liberation;
that it is, within its little nucleus an attempt to achieve rehumanisation
in the 'cradle of civilisation'.
'How far it can go' and 'what it can achieve' are questions for
the future but what is certain is that redressing the process
of millennia is not a task that the 'keepers of the cradle of
civilisation' will be able to accomplish on their own. Ali Kemal Ozcan
September 1996 |
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