Art and resistance in the heart of KurdistanOn October 25, World Art Day is celebrated - a day dedicated to the power and beauty of creationBut in Rojhelat, Eastern Kurdistan, art gained a deeper meaning: it became part of the struggle for freedom, dignity, and survival.
Komala was not just a political movement or an armed force - it was also a cultural garden, where art, music and poetry grew side by side with the struggle. In this garden, voices were born that transformed pain into song and oppression into art.
The names of these heroes live on: Naser Rezazî, Najme Gholamî, Kalî Atashî, Abu Bakr Lagzî, Fariborz Fakhari, Jamal Muftî, Kawê Shex, Abê Flût, Khalid Chkol - and many more from all four parts of Kurdistan, who with their music and voices united a people in hope
Kalî Atashî made an indelible impression with her revolutionary songs, especially during the women's struggle "Jin, Jiyan, Azadî". Her voice became a fire in the hearts of the oppressed and an echo of courage in every valley and city.
And like masters Ali Zandî and Taher Khalilî, who until their last breaths sang about freedom, love and revolution, today's artists like Sanan Mohamadî and Aram Bokani continue to carry on the tradition - in demonstrations, in parties, in the mountains, in exile.
Even the visual art has its place in this fight. Painters like Rahman Shafa'î, who, despite losing his hand and arm during Saddam's fascist regime, never stopped creating. His paintings, filled with life and color, became testimony to a people who refuse to give up.
Artists such as Rezgar Ali Panah, Galerî Salar and Mansur Alavi have in their works painted the soul of Kurdistan - the struggle, love, and hope.
For these men and women, art was not just a profession—it was a weapon, a language, a way to survive. They showed that the voice of the revolution is not only sounds through rifles and slogans, but also through singing, painting, and the rhythm of music.
Komala became a movement that united politics, culture and the heart of the people.
That's why today we remember Sulêman Bolurî, who - like the Chilean singer Victor Jara - was murdered by the Islamic regime in the streets of Sablagh, but whose voice never silenced.
Bekr Lagzî, an artist and veteran from Komala, can be seen standing among his people in Rojhelat Kurdistan - a symbol of the artist's role in the struggle, between villages, soil and blood.
May their voices keep echoing
and may their art live forever in Kurdistan's free tomorrow