Abstract
This Special Issue examines Kurdish experiences of homelessness and homemaking in contexts of forced migration and displacement. Conceptualizing home as both loss and reconstruction, it foregrounds the agency of displaced people who recreate spaces of belonging amid violence, surveillance, and exile. Addressing the debate between âforced migrationâ and âdisplacement,â the contributions emphasize the coexistence of coercion and agency. Home is approached as a site of power relations extending beyond the household to the neighborhood, city, and homeland, and as a process constituted through both homelessness and homemaking. Focusing on the Kurdish case, where displacement is both historical and ongoing, the Issue explores how enduring structural conditions shape forced migration. It aims to reveal the intersectional dimensions of homemaking, highlight displaced peopleâs agency in reestablishing belonging, and situate these practices historically, offering comparative insights into homemaking in post-displacement contexts globally.
This Special Issue explores the loss of home as a consequence of forced migration and displacement among Kurds and the struggles to remake home. Given homeâs foundational role as a spatial symbol of human subjectivity and agencyâdeeply tied to belonging and identityâit is unsurprising that those who lose their homes often begin rebuilding them immediately. We therefore conceptualize home as a dialectical process, composed of both homelessness and homemaking. In this framework, forced migration appears as a specific form of homelessness that is inherently linked to practices of emplacement and re-rooting. From both our personal experiences and scholarly work, we observe that displaced people often begin recreating spaces of belonging shortly after resettlement.
In this Issue, authors employ either âforced migrationâ or âdisplacement,â reflecting a debate in Kurdish studies since the 1990s in Turkey. The term âmigrationâ highlights migrant agency, while âforcedâ underscores coercion. First introduced by NGOâ¯s such as the Göç Der Association, which produced pioneering reports on the 1990s and 2015 waves of Kurdish displacement, âforced migrationâ soon transcended NGO discourse to acquire critical and transformative significance in academia.1 Emerging in Turkey in the early 2000s to describe the 1990s Kurdish displacement experience, it was applied mainly to internal displacement, though the qualifier âinternalâ was rarely used. The term also carries disciplinary weight, as sociologists and political scientists were its primary users. By contrast, âdisplacementâ directs attention to affect and in-betweenness. More flexible in English (e.g., âdisplacement-induced homemaking,â âdisplacement and emplacementâ), it resonates with phenomenological and conceptual openness, including exile and voluntary displacement.2 It also extends to âdisplacements without movement,â the focus of Ãmer Ãzcanâs contribution to this Issue, though most cases of forced migration involve actual movement. Our aim, therefore, is to examine homelessness and homemaking among the majority of forced migrants, while acknowledging the analytical richness of less common cases. Both terms are thus employed interchangeably, guided by the conceptual pairings in the contributions (e.g., âforced migration and homemakingâ; âhome induced by forced migrationâ; âdisplacement and emplacementâ).
The intertwined history of homelessness and homemaking is nearly as old as humanity itself. At the same time, feminist scholarsâparticularly socialist and existentialist feministsâhave long critiqued the common understanding of home as a site of care and safety, emphasizing that it often also involves gendered oppression and exploitation.3 As the embodiment of the heteronormative family, the home has also been identified as a central construct of the nation-state,4 a guardian of private property,5 and, particularly in the Global North, a nostalgic repository of idealized memory.6 While we share the critical perspectives of these thinkers along with postcolonial feminist philosophers such as bell hooks, Kimberlé Crenshaw, and Barbara Smith, we recognize the homeâs transformative and existential significance, particularly when examined through the lens of forced displacement.7
We consider home to be significant for three main reasons.
First, home must be understood as a site of power relations that exceed the household.8 It encompasses the household, the neighborhood, the city, and sometimes even the homeland.9 To fully grasp its meaning, one must consider daily social relations, belief systems, and structural conditions.10 In contexts of colonial domination, for instance, the household may become a space of cultural production when cultural practices in the public are repressed.11 For instance, in 2015â2016, there were intense armed clashes between organized Kurdish youth and Turkish forces in several towns and neighborhoods in Turkeyâs Kurdish regions that resulted in state violence against local populations under siege, mass destruction, and displacement. During this period, women in Sur (Diyarbakır) and Nusaybin (Mardin) cooked collectively in private homes, and residents sheltered together on the lower floors of apartment buildings in Nusaybin, demonstrating how private spaces can transform into spaces of public life. Second, home is constituted by both loss (homelessness) and reconstruction (homemaking). Each act of rebuilding reveals the profound agency people exercise in reshaping their lives and environments. And third, the dynamics at home are intimately connected to forced migration. For example, patriarchal violence within the household may influence womenâs decisions to migrate, highlighting how the experience of home shapes and is shaped by displacement.
We focus on the forced migration of the Kurdish population for three interrelated reasons. First, forced displacement is both a historical and contemporary reality for Kurds. Since 2010, large-scale displacements have occurred across the Kurdish regions (Syria, Iraq, Turkey), continuing a century-long experience of life under shifting sovereignties that have often used displacement as a strategy of repression, governance, and social engineering. Consequently, nearly every Kurd has either experienced or witnessed forced migrationâmany more than once.
Second, beyond its temporal persistence, forced migration is shaped by enduring structural conditions.12 Kurds have repeatedly been direct targets of displacement as a tool of assimilation by being removed from their sociocultural milieu.13 At other times, they have been caught in broader regional conflicts, such as the civil war in Syria, where Kurdish Yekîneyên Parastina Gel (Peopleâs Defense Units), and Yekîneyên Parastina Jin (Womenâs Defense Units) fought both for autonomy and against ISIS between 2013 and 2016. Scholars have variously framed the structural roots of Kurdish displacement through concepts such as neoliberal urban transformation and authoritarianism,14 racialized governance,15 and neoliberal political economy,16 while others situate it within contentious politics.17 The unresolved and often prolonged legal and political processes surrounding returnâsometimes spanning decadesâfurther underscore the deep-rooted structural nature of Kurdish displacement.18
Lastly, we approach forced migration similarly to how we approach home. By accepting displacement and emplacement as two aspects of forced migration and as a contingent condition and form of homelessness and homemaking, we connect displacement with the place of home to reveal the agency of forced migrants.
Drawing on the long history, ongoing continuity, and structural dimensions of Kurdish forced migration, this Issue foregrounds Kurdish homelessness and homemaking under political violence through an intersectional lens. We believe that the Kurdish Studies Journal is the right âhomeâ for these discussions. The Issue examines different kinds of displacement, from international forced migration to internal displacement to the loss of home as a place, either private or public, imbued with a particular sense of belonging and orientation in space and time. Experiences of displacement do not necessarily involve (forced) movement. People can lose their homes while staying in the same place, like in the case of Gever, whereâas Ãzcan shows in this Issueââdisplacement without dislocationâ takes place through surveillance, raids, and the everyday management of fear. Simultaneously, we hope that the Issue will be of particular interest for non-Kurdish studies readers due to the ethnographic, historical, and conceptual discussions on home and forced migration. It may offer valuable comparative insights for other homeless and homemaking populations in post-war conditions, as well as general insights relating to the historical and ontological significance of the home in human life. This Special Issue was inspired by the workshop âHomelessness and Homemaking in Post-Displacement Contexts in the MENA Regionâ, held in November 2023 at the Institute of Asian and African Studies, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. The workshop and ensuing discussions shaped our collective questions and thematic priorities.
In this Issue, we pursue three main aims. First, to reveal the intersectional dimensions of home induced by forced migration across geographies, historical periods, and Kurdish populations which are elaborated below. Second, we emphasize that displaced and homeless people are not passive victims, but active agents whose emplacement and homemaking practices begin immediately after or during their displacement. All contributions foreground this agency and its transformative power. Third, we frame forced migration and homemaking as historically embedded phenomena. Articles span from the late Ottoman period to the present. For instance, Kumru ToktamıÅ, in her contribution in this Issue, traces the shifting boundaries, sentiments, and ideas of home during the political transformations that the Ottoman Empire underwent in the early twentieth century. Similarly, Ãzcan shows how state violenceâmilitarization, surveillance, and counter-guerrilla operationsâhas transformed private homes in Gever into sites of fear, reflecting the continuity of repressive mechanisms in the Republic of Turkey.
Where displaced communities settleâwhether near their lost homes or in the places they chooseâaffects the character of ethnic tensions.19 For instance, Küçükkırca in this Issue shows that until the curfews in 2016, Kurdish was widely spoken in Nusaybin and a part of everyday life. Drastic decrease in the usage of Kurdish in public becomes an indication of the experience of displacement, rendering Kurdish, as an ethnic aspect of identity, a subject of fear. In a context of increased militarization, everyday violence, and forced intervention into public spaces, residents no longer feel at ease to use Kurdish in their everyday lives. Similarly, Katharina BriziÄ and Ilka Konopatschâs article addresses the effects of ISISâs massacres in 2014 in Sinjar, Iraq, on female Ãzîdî survivors and provides detailed insight into womenâs individuality and intimacy. The authors show how Ãzîdî women in exile in Germany regain language, voice, and agency, and how Kurmanji, the language of home, gradually becomes a home to collective remembrance. Furthermore, ÃaÄlayan in this Issue shows how international Kurdish forced migration to Berlin provides ground for the development of a non-territorial national identity within diasporic communities. Easing oppressive mechanisms as well as immigrant organizations in exile create new possibilities for belonging and the remaking of home, linked to the enjoyment of ethnic identity and the use of the Kurdish mother tongue.
Class plays a pivotal role in shaping displacement and post-displacement trajectories. While conflict affects all classes, its burden falls disproportionately on the lower class. In Nusaybin, for instance, displacement and the closure of the Turkish-Syrian border eliminated agriculture and border tradeâtwo key sources of livelihood. The destruction of neighborhoods also dismantled local economic solidarities rooted in neighborly relations. People displaced from Sur, Diyarbakır, in 2016 lost all their economic resources and networks, as well as access to close-by hospitals and schools, and had to move 30 kilometers away from the city center to TOKI buildings in the middle of a âdesertâ.20 Yörük and Sarıâs contribution to this Issue argues that that Kurdish displacement has effectuated a transformation from rural livelihoods to an urban informal employment among Kurds, which also triggered a transformation to the urban informal proletariat aligning with ethnic inequalities. Thus, Kurdish displacement has accelerated the informalization of the Turkish labor market as an unintended consequence. Class positionality is also an important parameter shaping experiences of international migration. ÃaÄlayanâs contribution to this Issue emphasizes that although migration journeys and stays in transit countries are shaped by socioeconomic backgrounds of migrants, their homemaking experiences depend on the quality and availability of socio-economic opportunities in the host countries. Such services, when gender-sensitive, available and robust, can transform displacement into opportunity.
Gender is a critical axis of both displacement and homemaking. Womenâs bodies and domestic spaces often become primary targets of violence during conflict.21 Women are also disproportionately exposed to sexual violence during cross-border migration and in refugee camps.22 Yet women are central to homemaking. They create homes through language and education and even love, as ToktamıÅâs contribution to this Issue makes clear.23 BriziÄ and Konopatsch point out that working on individuality and intimacy through therapeutic dance movement may help women to regain Kurmanji, the language of home. Küçükkırcaâs article on Nusaybin shows how gardens and tendûrs are primary places to make homes that are initiated and organized by women. Ãzcan highlights that under conditions of political violence and repression, women are the ones who exhibit strength and courage to continue dwelling and making home as a site of collective memory and defiance. ÃaÄlayanâs contribution underlines that international forced migration may change the traditional male breadwinner and female homemaker roles, as women adapt themselves better to their new environment due to their linguistic and social skills. The case studies presented in this issue show the intersectionality of forced migration, displacement, and home-making, where the relations and shifting dynamics of ethnicity, class, and gender crucially shape peopleâs experiences.
The intersectional positionality of researchers is also an important part of knowledge production and representation. This is why we recognize the importance of reflecting on our positionality. We come from different political, socio-cultural, and ethnic backgrounds, yet thanks to digital communication we have had a chance to work together closely for years now. Although geographically distant, we share âsimilarâ struggles in academia that have caused us to lose our (academic) homes at different times of our lives, which then transformed into multiple homemaking processes in various parts of the world. English is our second language; we are both responsible for care work in our families. Yet compared to many of our interlocutors, we hold relatively privileged educational backgrounds. While this Issue consists of scholarly articles, we have strived to maintain a reader-friendly tone and to foster collective knowledge production. In this process, the editors of the Kurdish Studies Journal have collaborated closely with us, taking on a significant role in providing detailed feedback, alongside the reviewers. The knowledge production process was thus shaped by the entire editorial team of KSJ, reviewers, authors, and ourselves. We have sought to maintain critical distance from our material in the spirit of academic rigor. At the same time, following the example of many displaced and migrant researchers, we did not hesitate to share our positionalities and personal histories with our interlocutors and team members. We believe in the value of collaborative production through shared experience and uphold the significance of both subjectivity and objectivity. In this sense, we argue that any understanding of the ârealâ emerges through the negotiation of subjective experiences and objective conditions.
This Special Issue consists of six contributions. İclal AyÅe Küçükkırcaâs article explores Kurdish womenâs agency through homemaking practices following the 2015â2016 urban clashes in Nusaybin (Mardin). She conceptualizes home as both private and public, arguing that their joint destruction constituted a dual loss. Based on displaced womenâs narratives, she shows how intersecting spacesâsuch as gardens and tendûrsâfunction as sites of agency and homemaking.
Handan ÃaÄlayanâs article, based on ethnographic research in Berlin (2020â2022), examines the post-2010 cross-border displacement experiences of Kurdish women. Adopting an intersectional lens, she highlights the challenges they faceâranging from trauma to discriminationâwhile foregrounding their agency. Despite adversity, Kurdish women actively rebuild their lives.
Katharina BriziÄ and Ilka Konopatsch examine the experiences of Ãzîdî women survivors of genocide, focusing on the Dance Movement Therapy of a German humanitarian programme. Challenging three dominant assumptionsâthat healing requires verbal expression, that female collectivity supersedes individuality, and that empowerment must be publicâthey highlight how therapeutic movement fosters individual and intimate pathways to recovery. The authors show how survivors gradually reclaim voice, agency, and Kurmanji as the language of home and collective remembrance.
Erdem Yörük and Enes Sarıâs article, the only quantitative contribution in this Issue, examines the intersection of class and forced migration. Analyzing the 1990s evacuation of over 3,000 Kurdish villages, they link displacement to neoliberal reforms that pushed Kurds into precarious, low-wage labor. They argue that displaced Kurds have been largely confined to the informal working class, illustrating how forced migration and neoliberalism jointly reproduce ethnic inequality in Turkey.
Kumru ToktamıÅâs article explores exile as a continuum of home through the life of Yashar Khanum, set during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire in the early twentieth century and the division of the Kurdish homeland. Drawing on Edward Saidâs notion of the âcontrapuntal,â ToktamıŠtraces Yashar Khanumâs gendered journey amid rebellion, displacement, and shifting territorialities. The narrative foregrounds intersectional dynamics of gender, class, and ethnicity, culminating in a homemaking actâdescribed as âhome as loveââin a cave shared with her mother and husband. The article offers a nuanced account of female subjectivity at the intersection of imperial decline and emerging nation-states.
Ãmer Ãzcan examines the notion of home in Gever as a continuum from the 1990s mass displacement and ongoing state violence, with attention to ethnicity, religion, and gender. Framing Turkish state-making as a sustained intrusion into domestic space, he foregrounds the Kurdish concept of mal (âhomeâ) as a site of social and material relations. Ãzcan shows how dwelling amid surveillance, displacement, and loss becomes an active process of political becoming.
All contributions in this Issue examine homemaking and emplacement among Kurds after displacement and homelessness. The first four articles foreground intersectionality in historical contexts, while the final two emphasize historical continuities without neglecting intersectional dimensions. Ethnicity is central across all contributions, and all but Yörük and Sarı also incorporate gender. Only ÃaÄlayan and Yörük and Sarı explicitly address class. Temporal foci differ. ToktamıŠtraces homemaking within a longer historical continuum; both Ãzcan and Yörük and Sarı engage with the violence of the 1990s and the displacement it triggered, ÃaÄlayan and BriziÄ and Konopatsch analyze post-2010 international forced migration, and Küçükkırca explores internal displacement within in Turkeyâs Kurdish region after 2015. Narratives range from transnational homemaking through love to displacement without movement.
We are aware that this Issue cannot provide a complete picture of forced migration and homemaking of the Kurdish people, but what we hope to convey is a picture of Kurdish forced migration and homemaking through a lens of intersectional, spatial experiences in a historical context. In this way, we hope that the Issue will open up new conceptual discussions in different contexts.
ÃzdoÄan and ErgüneÅ, 5233 Sayılı Yasa; Göç İzleme DerneÄi, SokaÄa Ãikma Yasakları; ÃaÄlayan, Ãzar, and DoÄan, Ne DeÄiÅti?
Beeckmans et al., Making Home(s) in Displacement.
De Beauvoir, The Second Sex; Ferguson, âThe unhappy marriage of patriarchy and capitalismâ; Hartmann, âThe unhappy marriage of Marxism and feminismâ.
Abu-Lughod, Remaking Women; Kandiyoti, âEmancipated but unliberated?â; Sirman, âKadınların milliyetiâ.
Engels, The Origin of the Family.
Bachelard, The Poetics of Space.
hooks, Yearning; Crenshaw, âDemarginalizing the intersectionâ; Smith, Home Girls.
Ahmed, Sara, et. al., Uprootings, 1â22; Beeckmans et al., Making Home(s) in Displacement; Gola, âHome displacementsâ.
Young, Intersecting Voices; Blunt, âCultural geographyâ; Alkan and Maksudyan, Urban Neighbourhood Formations; Mills, âBoundaries of the nationâ; Low, âHoming the cityâ; Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism.
Brun and Fabos, âMaking homes in limboâ.
hooks, Yearning.
Bezwan and Keles, âDisplacement, diaspora, and statelessnessâ.
BeÅikçi, Devletlerarası Sömürge Kürdistan.
TaÅ, âDisplacing resistance in Kurdish regionsâ.
Ay and Turker, âPost-conflict urban renewalâ.
Yadırgı, âTurkeyâs Kurdish question in the era of neoliberalismâ.
Bakan, âSocio-spatial dynamicsâ, 254.
Göç İzleme DerneÄi, SokaÄa Ãıkma Yasakları; Kurban and YeÄen, Adaletin Kıyısında.
Akesson, âWe may goâ; Harker, âSpacing Palestineâ; Jamal, â1967 bypassing 1948â.
Küçükkırca, âThinking Suriçiâ.
Enloe, Bananas, Beaches, and Bases; Protner, âReading and feeling genderâ.
Freedman, âSexual and gender-based violenceâ.
ÃaÄlayan, Ãzar, and DoÄan, Ne DeÄiÅti?
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