By Yaşar Kemal
The story has the feel of an epic struggle against fate and
the elements, but told within the personal details of peasant life. Ali is a
heroic and sympathetic character. He tries to build up his family’s position by
taking on enormous tasks and facing overwhelming risks. Inspired by his mother,
he pushes on against a raging storm (his mother rages against her fate like
Lear in the storm). He tries to help his village and the lying braggart Old
Halil, although they don’t return his support. Ali is a good soul who would be
a good friend, although he is beaten down by bad luck time after time.
While his story is unrelenting struggle, it is not unending
misery. The family cares for each other, even while they play out their
personal issues. Ali resents his mother, but over and over he risks his life
and his family’s future to look after her. Ali’s wife makes his favourite foods
even though she has only what she can carry on her back. His kids play and
sing, but they also have their ideas about how they can support the family. Occasionally,
it seems that things are going their way, and they can take a break. Then their
life appears almost idyllic, loving and rich.
The concrete details of their environment and their lives make
the story real and relatable. The smells in the wind, the sparkle of a stubble
field, the offerings hanging from a holy tree seem to come from first-hand
knowledge, and they place a reader in the scene. They give insight into what
the characters are seeing and feeling, and help a Canadian urban reader empathize
with them on their journey over the Turkish mountains.
This makes the struggle of a traditional family in the
modern world more poignant. Things don’t work the way they used to, and a
corrupt modern political and economic system undermines them as much as their
struggles against nature. They face their epic struggle yearly, and the village
leaders aligned with the modern Turkish state of the 1950s exploit them for
their labour or send them off to the army. The villagers know they need to
organize to protect themselves, but they are stuck in their atomized families,
each one struggling alone to survive.
Perhaps this conflict is the key theme that Yashar Kemal
wants to point to in the novel – the need for traditional Turkish peasantry to
organize together instead of fighting alone among themselves. He shows that it
will not be easy – their attempts flounder twice in the novel, and the village
leader is shown trying to buy off each family individually – but it seems to be
the only way that the families will get ahead in a market economy that does not
support them.

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