“Happy Birthday, Abdullah Öcalan!”

The International Initiative “Freedom for Abdullah Öcalan — Peace in Kurdistan has released a statement on the occasion of Abdullah Öcalan’s 70th birthday, today.

The statement opens with a quote from great Colombian writer and Nobel Prize Gabriel Garcia Marquez from his book, Love in the time of Cholera. “Human beings are not born once and for all on the day their mothers give birth to them, but … life obliges them over and over again to give birth to themselves.”

The statement reads: “While most of us refer to their own birth with a certain date, referring to the day of their physical birth, Abdullah Öcalan has frequently mentioned that he was born three times.

The third birth — after his physical birth and the founding of the organization he is best known for, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party or PKK — is his paradigm shift towards his concept of “democratic civilization”. This rebirth was also, in many different ways, a rebirth for the Kurdish society. On April 4, 2019, Öcalan “celebrates” his 70th birthday. That is — if we can talk about a celebration at all.”

Indeed as the statement recalled Öcalan “has been in solitary confinement for more than twenty years now. Since 2011, he has not had a consultation with a lawyer; since April 2015, apart from two brief visits from his brother, he has seen no-one from outside of the island prison. Right now, more than 7,000 persons are on hunger strike with the plain and simple demand: to lift Öcalan’s isolation.”

After twenty years in prison — he was abducted from Nairobi, Kenya, on February 15, 1999 — Abdullah Öcalan is “as present as ever” said the statement, adding: “through his ideas, even more so than twenty years ago. He continues to inspire many people, including, but not limited to, countless revolutionaries in Northern Syria or Rojava. The books he wrote in prison have been translated into many languages and are being read around the world.

Editions of his texts have been published in places as far away as South Korea and Argentina, India and the USA, South Africa and Iran — not to speak of numerous editions in Europe and the Middle East.”

When Öcalan was abducted, imprisoned and sentenced to death, the statement continued, “around his 50th birthday, he was already a symbol for the Kurdish rebirth and the Kurdish liberation struggle. Today, at his 70th birthday, he is a symbol for the struggle of women, of oppressed people for liberation and self-determination in the Middle East and beyond. We congratulate the tremendous effort, waged by Abdullah Öcalan behind prison walls and the millions inspired by his ideas and his struggle. This is why today we say: Happy birthday, Abdullah Öcalan!”

The statement ends with a call “on everybody to celebrate with us Abdullah Öcalan’s 70th birthday, to celebrate life, to celebrate freedom. We also call on everybody to join us and the hunger strikers in the struggle against his isolation and for his freedom — a step that will be crucial on the way to peace and a political solution of the ongoing conflict.