
One, possibly mythological, female fighter has drawn particular attention. Dubbed the ‘Angel of Kobani, she is beautiful and blonde-haired, is reputed to have killed a hundred ISIS fighters and has come to epitomize the media’s portrayal of the Kurdish women involved in the war. Underneath the ‘“bad-ass babes” stereotype, however, the real stories of Kurdish women represent a much wider, though perhaps less glamorous, revolution – one in which they are seizing a new, leading role in society and attempting to shrug off the patriarchal attitudes that pervades the region.
In Turkey, Kurdish nationalist parties have introduced a unique leadership model that goes well beyond the kind of quota systems imposed with varying degrees of success in parts of South Asia, but that often meet with derision, when proposed in Western countries. “Whenever there is an election now, there must be a male and female head of every organization, whether it’s a municipality, union, association or charity,” explains Figen Aras of the Democratic Free Women’s

Kurdish female fighters of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPJ) are seen in training at a military camp in Malikiya, Hassaka province December 9, 2013. REUTERS
Since the municipal elections in March, all local authorities controlled by the Kurdish nationalists are headed by co-mayors: a man and a woman. However, because this system is not recognized by the Turkish government, it has thus far been implemented on a de facto basis. “We find the co-presidential system very effective at distributing power. It’s not top down with one person telling everyone else what to do. In this case we have the initiative, we have a direct say in what the leaders decide,” says Aras.
Necla Köroğlu of the Women’s Academy, a school set up to train women in the region’s capital, Diyarbakir, believes that the new system could have a great effect on the status of women in the region: “Having women in these positions is already paying off. We’ve seen women growing in confidence, feeling able to demand the things that they should be able to demand, and policies implemented to protect women’s rights,” she says.

“This is not something that has been handed to us. It is something that women have struggled for over many decades through political involvement,” says Köroğlu. We managed to get a 30% quota, then a 40% quota, and now we have the balanced system we see today.” However, the women are keen to stress that the task facing them is not simple. There is no doubt that Kurdish regions are still dominated by patriarchy, tribal traditions, and, particularly away from the cities, there are major hurdles to overcome. One of the key issues is the practice in some rural areas of marrying off child brides, explains student activist Dipak Ahmed. “After primary school, at the age of around 13 or 14 years old, girls are married off, often too many older men who will pay the girl’s family large sums,” Ahmed says. “This is a massive problem, and something that we are trying to fight. We are making people aware of the problem through extensive education programs that go out into the regions. We also have programs to get women involved in work so that there is less of a need for their family to take this kind of action.”
A Syrian Kurdish woman carries her belongings after crossing into Turkey near the southeastern town of Suruc in Sanliurfa province September 22, 2014. MURAD SEZER/REUTERS
For the child brides that do manage to flee their husbands, local municipalities have set up women’s shelters that provide

It is not just in villages with traditional values that women face barriers. There are also cases of those within the nationalist movement attempting to block progress. “Of course there are instances where a woman is elected as a co-president or co-mayor, but is denied real power – is just a figurehead. This is something that has to be fought, and with the pressure the women’s movement can exert, we don’t believe that this is a major problem, and will be something that will drop away,” says Aras.

Ahmed says the fight is distinct from the immediate struggle for freedom over how to dress or to move around at will: “That’s fine, but this is not true freedom. The freedom we want is the freedom that real power brings.”
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