“You haven’t been to Rojava yet? Let Janet Biehl’s graphic novel help you take your first step to the land of revolutionary hope, to North-East Syria, by providing a fascinating glimpse and thrilling insight into the most significant revolution of the 21st century. History is usually written by powerful elites and rulers, but Janet Biehl invites us to a new viewpoint. Their Blood Got Mixed is a creative contribution to a historiography from the perspective of those who actually made it.”
—Havin Guneser, she is one of the spokespersons of the International Initiative “Freedom for Abdullah Öcalan—Peace in Kurdistan” and author of The Art of Freedom
“In this graphic novel, Janet Biehl brings to life the revolutionary experience in the North-East of Syria, also known as Rojava. Biehl deftly combines a deep understanding of the democratic-confederal principles underpinning the revolution with an artistic eye capable of capturing the humanity of ordinary people, in an extraordinary situation, making history. This book is a most impressive achievement. It communicates a complex and dramatic story about the history and workings of the radical-democratic experiment in Rojava in a clear and compelling fashion. Its combination of historical narrative with political theory and graphic art will make it appealing to a very broad audience, not only of academics and political activists, but to the public more generally.”
—Dr. Thomas Jeffrey Miley, lecturer in political sociology at Cambridge University and co-editor of Your Freedom and Mine: Abdullah Öcalan and the Kurdish Question in Erdogan’s Turkey
“A spirited portrayal of the everyday life of a revolution at its most basic levels of societal organization and political mobilization. Janet Biehl beautifully shows the interactions, face-to-face negotiations, and debates between the people who come from different ethnic backgrounds in citizens’ councils in neighborhoods and villages. Despite the trauma of war, Biehl shows that these people insist on building a new life and an alternative society to make a break from histories of injustice that have torn apart the people from each other.”
—Sardar Saadi is director of The Rojava Institute of Social Sciences (RISS) at the University of Rojava
“Janet Biehl is one of our most important interlocutors for understanding the radical experiment in democracy that since 2012 has taken place in northeastern Syria. Their Blood Got Mixed breaks down an incredibly complex conflict-turned-social-revolution into a simple—but not simplistic—narrative, introducing readers to the men and women (especially women) who have sacrificed everything, including their lives, to simultaneously defeat ISIS and create a new society. Part history lesson, part reportorial journey, part sociology, this graphic novel explores what makes the revolution in Rojava tick.”
—Wes Enzinna, contributing editor at Harper’s
“How to capture history as it is in the making? Janet Biehl’s art is a powerful testimony of the dedication, the friendships, dreams, and sacrifices that animate one of the most radical moments in world freedom history. This book is a timely aesthetic company our imagination needs in times of planetary dangers. It is a concrete form of solidarity.”
—Dilar Dirik, the Joyce Pearce Junior Research Fellow at Lady Margaret Hall, University of Oxford, and author of The Kurdish Women’s Movement: History, Theory, Practice
“I vividly recall how confused I was when I visited Northeast Syria for the first time to write about the democratic experiment. What both inspired and frustrated me, was that I hardly found anybody who had the time to sit down with me and explain. ‘What was it like?,’ my editor asked me when I returned. ‘They are all running around making a revolution,’ I said in awe and despair. A revolution it is. It’s hard to explain to outsiders because it is different than anything we know. That is why Their Blood Got Mixed touches me: it explains the revolution so clearly, so profoundly, with so much humour also, that it strengthens my hope. The more people know and understand what’s happening in Northeast-Syria, the better protected the revolution is. Their Blood Got Mixed makes a real contribution.
—Fréderike Geerdink, independent journalist and author of The Boys are Dead and This Fire Never Dies: One Year with the PKK
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