Jamala-1944

Jamala’s Victory

I have learned not to blow Eurovision out of all proportion. However the victory which was gained by Susana Jamaladynova – by her stage name Jamala – is beyond getting the first place in a competition or singing a song in mother language in European stage.

I could not sleep the night I heard what happened in 18th of May, 1944 from my wife Elvina – who was not my wife that time yet – whose grandparents suffered from the same thing. Although I had never seen or heard,  I could not help hearing the voices or seeing the faces of Crimean Tatars who had been fiercely exiled from their homeland in one night.

Realizing my unawareness of a massive murder which was committed against my cognates right beside me – on the North coast of Black Sea which is just across my hometown Samsun – was as devastating as learning the sufferings.

Now, thanks to Jamala’s marvelous song and victory, a great number of people will learn about Crimean Tatar Exile in 1944.

Those who will hear Jamala’s scream at the end of the song will also hear the tearful screams of Crimean Tatar kids, ladies and elderlies who were savagely plucked off from their homeland while their brothers , fathers , husbands were fighting for Soviets whose commander – Stalin – was the person who signed the order of this massacre.

Jamala’s victory has not only made all Crimean Tatars proud but also has given them chance to be heard of. Just like Cengiz Dağcı, the most famous writer of their history thanks to whose novels millions of people have heard about Crimea and Crimean Tatars.

The dark history behind the song makes it a powerful message for everyone regardless of any nationality:

Music and words are much more powerful and long lasting than brutality.  Goodness will always win no matter how strong the latter is.

 

Published by

Emre Seven

Turkish Philologist Film Critic and Columnist. He was born in 1988 in Samsun, Turkey. He graduated from Hacettepe University British Language and Literature Department in 2010. He participated in Work and Travel Cultural Exchange Program in USA in 2009, 2010. He worked as a supevisor in Türkçe Yaz Okulu 2014 which was organised by Yunus Emre Institute and YTB of Turkish Prime Ministry. He has been working for Ankara University Turkish and Foreign Languages Research and Application Center Samsun Branch as an instructor of English and Turkish Languages since 2011 and he is the head of Turkish and Foreign Languages Deparments of the institution. He writes film reviews and columns for three websites. He is married to Crimean Tatar Pianist Elvina Seven.