Sema Kaygusuz: Every Fire You Tend review – an education in grief
A celebration of, and lament to, the Alevi Kurds massacred in Dersim 1937-38
In March 1937, the government of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk instigated what it called a “disciplinary campaign” against the Zaza-speaking Alevi Kurds in the Dersim region of eastern Turkey. What followed was a bloody, coordinated assault that resulted in thousands of civilian deaths and forcible deportations. The episode has “weighed on Turkey’s official history ever since” and supplies the context to Sema Kaygusuz’s Every Fire You Tend, translated into English by Nicholas Glastonbury.
Holiday review - harrowing Danish drama about misogyny
A drug lord's new girlfriend makes the mistake of befriending another man
The English-language drama Holiday, Danish filmmaker Isabella Eklöf’s feature debut, is an anthropological study of the corrosive effects of absolute male power and calcified misogyny.
DVD/Blu-ray: The Wild Pear Tree
Melancholy restraint from Turkish master Nuri Bilge Ceylan resounds
Turkish director Nuri Bilge Ceylan has been a Cannes regular for almost two decades now, and one of the festival’s more frequent prize-winners: over his career he has come away with two Grand Prix (for 2003’s Distant and 2011’s Once Upon a Time in Anatolia), the Best Director award in 200
CD: Gaye Su Aykol - Istiklarli Hayal Hakikattir
Surf-guitar blends with Turkish tradition
When, as an artist, you live under the power of a quasi-dictatorship, you choose to stay rather than go into exile, and you want to avoid being thrown into prison, one of the best strategies for opposition is poetry. Turkish rock diva Gaye Su Akyol hasn’t chosen the confrontational path of Pussy Riot, but works instead a rich vein of musical surrealism that questions the power of Erdoğan in a language that the leader and his entourage wouldn’t understand.
Classical CDs Weekly: Berlioz, Shostakovich, Turnage, La Maîtrise de Toulouse
Bleak Soviet symphonies, exciting orchestral playing from Istanbul plus Slavic choral delights from Toulouse
Shostakovich: Symphonies 4 &11 Boston Symphony Orchestra/Andris Nelsons (DG)
Guy Stagg, The Crossway review – a gripping pilgrimage through faith and doubt
This beautifully written quest for healing and meaning offers no facile uplift
On new year’s day in 2013, Guy Stagg set out to walk alone from Canterbury to Jerusalem. He planned this journey, which would take ten months, cross 11 countries and cover 5500km, in the wake of severe depression, a suicide attempt and the powerful urge “to leave oneself behind”. Although he trekked from shrine to shrine, monastery to monastery, cathedral to cathedral, along the ancient routes of Christian pilgrimage, Stagg did not at the start – nor at the end – share the faith of the footsore wanderers who had trudged these paths before him.
Bruno Maçães: The Dawn of Eurasia review - middle of nowhere
Tediously written tract from the centre right makes some mildly interesting points
Part travelogue and part broad analysis of the current and future challenges facing the EU, the premise of Bruno Maçães’s new book The Dawn of Eurasia is to “use travel to provide an injection of reality of political, economic and historical analyses.”
Orhan Pamuk: Istanbul, Memories and the City review – a masterpiece upgraded
With its treasury of old photos doubled, this classic memoir still beguiles
Along with Balzac’s Paris and Dickens’s London, Orhan Pamuk’s Istanbul now ranks as one of the most illustrious author-trademarked cities in literary history. Yet, as Turkey’s Nobel laureate told me during a Southbank Centre interview last month, he never set out to appropriate his home town as a sort of personal brand: it was simply the beloved backdrop of his childhood and youth.
Fahrelnissa Zeid, Tate Modern review - rediscovering a forgotten genius
How a major 20th century painter was erased from history
I can’t pretend to like the work of Fahrelnissa Zeid, but she was clearly an exceptional woman and deserves to be honoured with a retrospective. She led a privileged life that spanned most of the 20th century; born in Istanbul in 1901 into a prominent Ottoman family, many of whom were involved in the arts, she died in 1991.