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  • ANKARA: 'We Do Not Want To Ideologize Our Traumas'

    'WE DO NOT WANT TO IDEOLOGIZE OUR TRAUMAS'

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Nov 25 2009
    Turkey

    Four young men from the southeastern city of Hakkari formed the first
    Kurdish metal band and named it Ferec. The band is a global pioneer.

    They recently released their debut album 'Helîkoptêr' in their native
    tongue to mark their coming. Daily News spoke to their frontman Reh
    Fuat on music and beyond

    The Kurdish word "ferec" means, "the last shining star in the sky
    at dawn; the eve of light after darkness," according to Reh Fuat,
    vocalist for the Kurdish metal band of the same name.

    "We believe that we have reached the end of the darkness we had to
    live through, too," said Fuat at the beginning of our discussion about
    the first metal album in Kurdish, titled "Helîkoptêr" (Helicopter).

    Ferec was founded by four musicians who split from a folk band that
    played at weddings and bars.

    Another thing that Reh Fuat, guitarist Kaya Baratarna, bassist
    AfirîÅ~_ and drummer Zêde have in common is they all started playing
    music with the "baglama," a traditional folk instrument of Anatolia.

    While the quartet was in search of new horizons in terms of music,
    they found a mix tape that introduced them to the world of heavy
    metal. "We knew that [metal] was what we wanted to do but we did
    not know what it was before that tape," said Fuat. Unfortunately,
    they lost that tape since and the identity of the band or artist who
    sparked the flame for Ferec remains unknown.

    The band has gone down in history as the first band to release a metal
    album in Kurdish but they are also the only one in existence as well,
    according to Fuat. "There was Koma Wetan, a band from Armenia, which
    was not playing metal, but hard rock. We can say they influenced us.

    However, there are no bands playing this style in Kurdish except us."

    The people of Hakkari must have found it odd that they were playing
    heavy metal. "Everything that is not directly related to material
    gains is considered odd in a place where life is very hard," said
    Fuat, adding that what the band was doing was first perceived as
    "unnecessary" at best. Fuat said it is hard for metal music, which is
    a product of Western industrial society, to exist in a traditional
    society where individuality hardly exists. "But we are aware that
    humanity is getting closer to forming a single community. Just because
    this isn't so visible in Hakkari, doesn't mean it's not important to
    us." The band believes that the concept of individuality will evolve
    faster among Kurds today because individuality is on the agenda both
    locally and internationally. "We are trying to form a connection with
    the world that is apart from just being Kurds, or alongside that,
    but one that features our individuality, too," Fuat said.

    The booklet of their album lists "Hevalno," a song by international
    Kurdish musician Å~^ivan Perwer as the opening track but the song is
    not on the CD. "We could not reach Å~^ivan Perwer because he lets his
    lawyers handle the royalties," Fuat said. The band was disappointed
    with the lawyers for asking for such a high price from a band that used
    a bank loan to record their album because they could not initially
    afford it. According to Fuat, "Hevalno" is kept in the booklet as a
    reaction. He said they still play the song live onstage.

    One look at the album cover is enough to capture the political content
    of the songs if you are familiar with the Kurdish problem in Turkey,
    but that is not all. Ferec has songs about love, too. "It is not just
    about politics here. We fall in love, we fight, too," said Fuat. Their
    lyrics are rebellious, but not pessimistic. The line "Ci bikin warê
    me hemÃ" sotin" (What can we do? They have burned all of our houses
    down), is followed by "Tev werin warê xwe nÃ"da xemlînîn" (Come on
    let us beautify our houses once more). "Being optimistic is the most
    important part of our perception on life," said Fuat. "We are trying
    to produce hope. We do not cry out just to resist, we do not just
    swear. We also have hope that the world can be a better place. It is
    probably because we are from a region where you cannot stay on your
    own two feet without hope. We do not want to ideologize our traumas.

    We believe that we must think of tomorrow, too."

    On the other hand, Ferec is a metal band and anger is an important
    element in the music. Anger is a clear emotion, which is audible in
    the title track of the album about helicopters. As kids, the band
    members thought the helicopters represented games, but soon realized
    it was all too real. The chorus, which includes the only Turkish words
    of the album, goes: "SerleÅ~_ker dike qêrî" (The commander shouts)
    "Rahat hazır ol niÅ~_an al" (Ready steady aim).

    Fuat said Hakkari is a very special place for them, not only because
    they were born and raised there, but also because the town is important
    as a place where many important names in Kurdish literature were
    born and many different ethnic groups and religious beliefs have
    coexisted in peace throughout history. The band does not like the
    term "tolerance," because it does not believe that people "tolerate"
    each other. Instead, Ferec's uses the definition of "the culture for
    living together."

    Turkey has come a long way since the official policy of the government
    towards Kurds and the days of "there are no Kurds, there are mountain
    Turks." The members of Ferec certainly believe the "Kurdish initiative"
    by the current administration is a positive thing. Fuat said the
    highest ranks of the government speaking about the past injustices,
    and the torture and cruelty of the past as if in apology, is progress,
    but that it is not enough. "Other citizens of Turkey, the ones who
    were militarized, were made into enemies of the Kurds. They suffered
    similar traumas to ours and deserve an apology, too. The people of
    Turkey must be told: 'We have deceived you for 90 years. We made
    enemies of your brothers and we are apologizing for that, too.'"

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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