Exhibition
Visa pour l'image 2012 : Julien Goldstein

Mount Qandil, Iraq. August 2007. Area controlled by PKK guerilleros. Mountains near the Turkish-Iraqi border. © Julien Goldstein

Mount Qandil, Iraq. August 2007. Area controlled by PKK guerilleros. Diyar, 22, came from Iran to join the guerrilla. © Julien Goldstein

Suleymaniye, Iraq. March 2008. The former building of the security of Saddam Hussein, destroyed in 1991 by the inhabitants where tanks and army trucks of Saddam are exposed. © Julien Goldstein

Amara, Turkey. April 2009. Celebration of the 60 years of Abdullah Ocalan. Turkish special forces trying to disperse the demonstrators with tear gas. Many people are seriously injured by projectiles thrown by anti-riot tanks. © Julien Goldstein

Halabja, Iraq. March 2008. Commemoration of the 20 years of the chemical bombardment of the city by Saddam Hussein's aviation. If 5 000 people died on march 16th 1988, tens of thousands have been injured or contaminated. The cemetery of martyrs where 1086 slabs are erected to symbolize the deaths of 1988. © Julien Goldstein

Erbil, Iraq. In March 2008. The checkpoint on the road to the airport is run by the KDP peshmergas, the Kurdish Democratic Party of Massoud Barzani. © Julien Goldstein

Erbil, Iraq. March 2008. Safener Kanab, president of the Iraqi Kurdistan football federation in his office. © Julien Goldstein

Diyarbakir, Turkey. March 2010. The new district Metropol is booming. © Julien Goldstein

Diyarbakir, Turkey. November 2008. Souk district, in front of the mosque. Each year from September to November, the poorest families receive free bags of coal for heating during the winter. © Julien Goldstein

Van, Turkey. November 2008. A billiard room, one of the few distractions for young Kurdish in south eastern towns. © Julien Goldstein

Sirnak, Turkey. November 2008. A school in a village near Sirnak. All young Kurds learn in Turkish school and sing twice a week the anthem of Ataturk (founder of the Turkish Republic in 1923), whose portrait is present in every classroom and a bust placed in schoolyards. © Julien Goldstein

Dogubayazit, Turkey. November 2008. The Ishak Pasa Palace, Kurdish prince under the Ottoman Empire (late eighteenth century). The city of 70 000 inhabitants runs at the foot of the mountain. © Julien Goldstein

Mount Qandil, Iraq. August 2007. Area controlled by PKK guerilleros. In a clandestine camp at night, the Peshmergas entertain themselves watching TV picked up by satellite. © Julien Goldstein

Diyarbakir, Turkey. March 2009. Vote in a classroom, at the municipal elections of March 29th. In many places, international observers noted violations of the rules of the democratic vote. © Julien Goldstein

Batman, Turkey. March 2008. The festival of Newroz (spring festival) march the 22nd. Symbolizing the Kurdish identity, thousands of families gathered in the center of the city. This is an opportunity for political speeches in which Kurdish leaders in Turkey remind the claims of the Kurdish people. © Julien Goldstein
Mount Qandil, Iraq. August 2007. Area controlled by PKK guerilleros. Mountains near the Turkish-Iraqi border. © Julien Goldstein
Kurdistan : People with No Rights, but Anger
Julien Goldstein / Reportage by Getty Images
The Kurdish people who, for more than two thousand years, have been living in the lands of Anatolia and Persia, have their own unique history. Their land exists: it is Kurdistan, extending from the Anatolian plateau and plains to the Zagros mountains, but the borders of this vast land have never been recognized by any State. The ancient language of Kurdish, with Indo-European roots, is related to Persian and quite distinct from Arabic and Turkish, and has developed, creating several dialects, despite harsh persecution of communities speaking the language. The civilization passed down from the ancient Kurds has produced a thriving culture which, at different times, has been influenced by Persian, Arabic and Ottoman civilizations, and has combined the religions of Zoroastrianism and Islam; but it has always remained the culture of a repressed “ethnic minority.” There is a land, a language and a culture, yet today, in the early 21st century, the 40 million Kurds of the Middle East now form the largest population of stateless persons in the world.
With the journalist, Olivier Piot, we traveled the lands of Kurdistan on a quest to understand this paradox of history. We explored Kurdish towns and villages in Syria, Iraq and Turkey, and encountered Kurds from Iran now living in exile. Over a total of twelve trips, we observed lifestyles, listened to hopes and dreams, and heard of the frustration and suffering of these “forgotten people.” Everywhere we went, the Kurds we met conveyed the same feeling: the sense of belonging to a population that has been “sacrificed” by history. While they are certainly not the only victims of this kind, the history of the Kurds over the centuries, ranging from the great Persian and Ottoman empires to the birth of modern nations, has been a relentless series of human dramas and political deadlocks.
In the 20th century in particular, when this region of the world was weakened a number of times and saw its geopolitical map redrawn, the Kurds have never managed to gain recognition of their land and rights. Almost one century after the promise made by the Allied powers in 1920 to establish a “Great Kurdistan” in the Middle East, a promise never kept, the Kurds are still struggling to achieve this goal. With the exception of Iraq with a Kurdish autonomous region in the north of the country since 1992, this is an ongoing struggle of an entire people, fighting for their rights – the right to their identity and the right to democracy.
Special thanks to the Fondation Lagardère and Géo France.
Julien Goldstein
Julien Goldstein was born in 1979. After starting as an assistant at Magnum, working with chief editor, Ayperi Ecer, amongst others, he decided to pursue a career as a photojournalist. Drawing on his Romanian origins he explored its history and it's transition from a socialist republic to a democratic state. He then went on to explore former Soviet Republics such as Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, and the self-proclaimed Republic of Transnistria, a report later exhibited in Visa pour l’image in 2003.
Being particularly interested in Turkey and in the geopolitical issues related to the Kurdish people, he completed a five-year project entitled 'Kurdistan, The Anger Of A People Without Rights', for which he was awarded a Lagardere Foundation grant in December 2009. A book of this work was released in January 2012.
His photographs are regularly published in the French and international press, including: Geo France, National Geographic France, Le Monde, Le Monde Magazine, Courrier International, The New York Times, Newsweek, The Herald Tribune, D della Repubblica, Spiegel.
He regularly works with the International Federation of Red Cross, and his corporate clients include Air France, Renault, and Alsthom among others.
He is represented by Reportage by Getty Images.
Kurdistan : People with No Rights, but Anger - Julien Goldstein
From september 1st to september 21st
Hôtel Pams
Rue Émile Zola
66000 Perpignan - France
Links
http://www.visapourlimage.com/exhibition/5367.do
http://www.juliengoldstein.com/#/home
http://www.gettyimages.fr/
http://www.juliengoldstein.com
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