Founded by Stefano Vaccara

Subscribe for only $6/Year
  • Login

Editor in Chief: Giampaolo Pioli

VNY La Voce di New York

The First Italian English Digital Daily in the US

English Editor: Grace Russo Bullaro

  • English Edition
  • Letters
  • New York
  • U.N.
  • News
  • People
  • Entertainment
  • Arts
  • Lifestyles
  • Food & Wine
  • Travel
  • Sports
  • Italian Edition
No Result
View All Result
VNY
  • English Edition
  • Letters
  • New York
  • U.N.
  • News
  • People
  • Entertainment
  • Arts
  • Lifestyles
  • Food & Wine
  • Travel
  • Sports
  • Italian Edition
No Result
View All Result
VNY La Voce di New York
No Result
View All Result
in
Arts
November 3, 2019
in
Arts
November 3, 2019
0

Bella Ciao: A “Kurdish Anthem” Made in Italy, Has Become a Global Sensation

Long an anthem of anti-fascist resistance, famously against the Nazis, the Italian folk song has permeated Kurdish culture for ten years.

Deborah ParkerbyDeborah Parker
Time: 5 mins read

The past is never past. When I was choosing songs for my Italian class this Fall, I had no idea that one of them, “Bella Ciao” had become a global phenomenon. A colleague told me that “Bella Ciao” was the theme song for Money Heist, Netflix’s most viewed non-English program.  As I looked into the way Money Heist (Casa de Papel in Spanish) had used “Bella Ciao,” I discovered another appropriation: since 2009 the Kurds have adopted “Bella Ciao” as a partisan song. As the Kurds in Northern Syria face President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s military assault, “Bella Ciao” is a fitting soundtrack of their resistance and fight for self-governance.

Both the Kurds and the creators of Money Heist draw on the history of “Bella Ciao” as a song of resistance, one for a revolutionary cause, the other for entertainment. In one episode, the Professor, the mastermind behind the scheme to rob Spain’s Royal Mint of two billion euros, sings the song with his half-brother Berlin. “Bella Ciao” also accompanies the climactic ending to the heist in which Berlin sacrifices himself to save the other robbers. The use of the “Bella Ciao” song in Money Heist is effective but superficial.

The original Italian song’s social roots run deep. In its first version, which emerged in the late nineteenth century, the singer is a poor female laborer working in rice fields under brutal conditions in Northern Italy. Swarmed by mosquitoes, hunched over for long hours, and guarded by cane-wielding overseers, she laments her lost youth and longs for freedom from her miserable life. In this version, the phrase “bella ciao” refers to the laborer’s dream of liberation.

I was stunned to learn that “Bella Ciao” has permeated Kurdish culture for ten years. In 2009, the Kurdish filmmaker Ehsan Fattahian made a YouTube video  which he dedicated to Kurdish people and all others seeking freedom before he was killed. Fattahian describes “Bella Ciao” as an “emotional” song with a historical background. He refers to the second and more famous version of “Bella Ciao,” in which the singer is a partisan who awakes one morning to find himself before a German invader. Having died a partisan, he imagines the invader burying his corpse in the mountains where a flower will bloom. Passersby will see the blossom as “the flower of the partisan who died for liberty.” “Bella Ciao” here refers to a beautiful death.

Fattahian notes that the Italian partisans were normal people who risked their lives to free their country from a fascist regime and the Nazis. The cultural leap to another class of oppressors—Turks, Syrians, or Iranians—is easy. The song’s elemental quality lends itself to adaptation and transmission: an invader kills a partisan who hopes for remembrance and a beautiful death.

Kurdish children learn “Bella Ciao” at a young age, along with traditional Kurdish songs. The line “O partigiano portami via” are words which resonate especially. “Bella Ciao” recalls a youth  who participated in a sit-in at the Glençler Meydana; it “gives you a positive energy, it gives you courage.”

In 2014 the singer Chia Madani cemented the idea of resistance further when he released a melodic version of “Bella Ciao” in Kurdish with a video backdrop of Kurdish men and women fighting together. Perhaps the most poignant versions are the ones sung by Kurdish women against images of other young women performing military exercises. The Kurds have assimilated this Italian import and given the song’s partisan message a new force. All these videos feature young Kurdish fighters, seemingly ordinary men and women—in steep rugged terrain. The mountainous backdrop furnishes another link to “Bella Ciao,” whose partisan died in the mountains. The mountains of Northern Syria are the only refuge for Kurdish partisans.

This spring the song’s Kurdish and Italian histories merged uncannily. After becoming interested in the Rojava Revolution, Lorenzo Orsetti, a Florentine cook, waiter and sommelier, became a revolutionary. He joined the Syrian Defense Forces (SDF). Orsetti was killed by ISIS during the battle of Baghuz in March 2019 when his group was ambushed. Attendees at the funeral services for Orsetti sang “Bella Ciao” in Italian and Kurdish.

Music lingers and links. Platforms like YouTube facilitate the mobility of influence across cultures. “Bella Ciao’s” prominence in Money Heist inspired new iterations. The song became a summer hit across Europe in 2018. Remixes by Florent Hugel, a Marseille DJ, a multi-ethnic group in France which includes emerging artists, Naestro, Vitaa, Dadju e Slimane, and a Spanish version   added electronic, techno, rap and cumbia elements. YouTube videos from Money Heist, the Italian version, and Hugel’s remix have been viewed more than 190 million times.

The difference between hearing “Bella Ciao” on Money Heist and on Kurdish videos is dramatic and startling. In the Netflix series, the song marshals political ideas ironically, or even cynically, in a hip, late capitalist entertainment spectacle. There is no entertainment in seeing the young Kurdish men and women loading ammunition and engaged in other military operations. What prevails is the somber reality of their fight for self-governance.

The Kurds’ adaptation of “Bella Ciao” brings it back to its resistance roots in chilling ways. We do not know the Kurds. Only the American soldiers who fought alongside them know them. The Kurdish version of “Bella Ciao” humanizes the men and women in haunting ways. This richly historic song ennobles their fight for freedom, universalizing a desire for liberty from oppression.

Since Trump acceded to Erdogan’s request that he withdraw American troops from Syria, a decision which has cleared the way for the removal of the Kurds, if not their extermination, “Bella Ciao” becomes the sound track of infamy. It is the song of betrayal by an unreliable ally, the last turn on a sad history of re-purposing. The deaths of Kurds fighting for self-governance will be anything but a bella ciao. Should they be looking for a song of betrayal, they might turn to “Mi tradì quell’alma ingrata”  (loosely translated as: “the ungrateful wretch betrayed me”) from Don Giovanni.

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Deborah Parker

Deborah Parker

DELLO STESSO AUTORE

Bella Ciao: A “Kurdish Anthem” Made in Italy, Has Become a Global Sensation

Bella Ciao: A “Kurdish Anthem” Made in Italy, Has Become a Global Sensation

byDeborah Parker

A PROPOSITO DI...

Tags: Bella CiaoDonald TrumpGlobal PoliticsItalian PartisansKurdsResistanceSyriaSyrian ConflictTayyp Recep ErdoganTurks
Previous Post

Natalia Pavlova: from Russia with a Love for Italian Culture and Music, also in NY

Next Post

L’idea di patria: perché è importante che l’Italia celebri il 4 novembre

DELLO STESSO AUTORE

No Content Available

Latest News

Newark Mayor Ras Baraka Arrested at ICE Detention Center

Newark Mayor Ras Baraka Arrested at ICE Detention Center

byDavid Mazzucchi
Donald Trump Appoints Fox News Host Jeanine Pirro Interim U.S. Attorney for D.C.

Donald Trump Appoints Fox News Host Jeanine Pirro Interim U.S. Attorney for D.C.

byDavid Mazzucchi

New York

“Trump Effect” Tanks Tourism in New York City: 400k Fewer Visitors in 2025

“Trump Effect” Tanks Tourism in New York City: 400k Fewer Visitors in 2025

byDaniele Di Bartolomei
Agenti USA / Ansa

Spara a un corriere di Door Dash: arrestato funzionario di New York

byGrazia Abbate

Italiany

Il Prosecco italiano conquista i cuori delle donne USA

Il Prosecco italiano conquista i cuori delle donne USA

byAndrea Zaghi
Da sinistra: Elvira Raviele (Ministero delle Imprese e del Made in Italy), Fabrizio Di Michele (Console Generale d’Italia a New York), Maurizio Marinella, Luigi Liberti (Direttore Patrimonio Italiano TV), Mariangela Zappia (Ambasciatrice italiana a Washington), e Diego Puricelli Guerra (Preside Istituto Bernini De Sanctis di Napoli)

Marinella a New York: l’eleganza del Made in Italy all’Istituto Italiano di Cultura

byMonica Straniero
Next Post
L’idea di patria: perché è importante che l’Italia celebri il 4 novembre

L'idea di patria: perché è importante che l'Italia celebri il 4 novembre

La Voce di New York

Editor in Chief:  Giampaolo Pioli   |   English Editor: Grace Russo Bullaro   |   Founded by Stefano Vaccara

Editor in Chief:  Giampaolo Pioli
—
English Editor: Grace Russo Bullaro
—
Founded by Stefano Vaccara

  • New York
    • Eventi a New York
  • Onu
  • News
    • Primo Piano
    • Politica
    • Voto Estero
    • Economia
    • First Amendment
  • People
    • Nuovo Mondo
  • Arts
    • Arte e Design
    • Spettacolo
    • Musica
    • Libri
    • Lingua Italiana
  • Lifestyles
    • Fashion
    • Scienza e Salute
    • Sport
    • Religioni
  • Food & Wine
  • Travel
    • Italia
  • Mediterraneo
  • English
  • Search/Archive
  • About us
    • Editorial Staff
    • President
    • Administration
    • Advertising

VNY Media La Voce di New York © 2016 / 2025 — La testata fruisce dei contributi diretti editoria d.lgs. 70/2017
Main Office: 230 Park Avenue, 21floor, New York, NY 10169 | Editorial Office/Redazione: UN Secretariat Building, International Press Corps S-301, New York, NY 10017 | 112 East 71, Street Suite 1A, New York, NY 10021

VNY Media La Voce di New York © 2016 / 2025
La testata fruisce dei contributi diretti editoria d.lgs. 70/2017

Main Office: 230 Park Avenue, 21floor, New York, NY 10169 | Editorial Office/Redazione: UN Secretariat Building, International Press Corps S-301, New York, NY 10017 | 112 East 71, Street Suite 1A, New York, NY 10021

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
La Voce di New York
Gestisci Consenso
Per fornire le migliori esperienze, utilizziamo tecnologie come i cookie per memorizzare e/o accedere alle informazioni del dispositivo. Il consenso a queste tecnologie ci permetterà di elaborare dati come il comportamento di navigazione o ID unici su questo sito. Non acconsentire o ritirare il consenso può influire negativamente su alcune caratteristiche e funzioni.
Funzionale Always active
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso sono strettamente necessari al fine legittimo di consentire l'uso di un servizio specifico esplicitamente richiesto dall'abbonato o dall'utente, o al solo scopo di effettuare la trasmissione di una comunicazione su una rete di comunicazione elettronica.
Preferenze
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso sono necessari per lo scopo legittimo di memorizzare le preferenze che non sono richieste dall'abbonato o dall'utente.
Statistiche
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso che viene utilizzato esclusivamente per scopi statistici. L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso che viene utilizzato esclusivamente per scopi statistici anonimi. Senza un mandato di comparizione, una conformità volontaria da parte del vostro Fornitore di Servizi Internet, o ulteriori registrazioni da parte di terzi, le informazioni memorizzate o recuperate per questo scopo da sole non possono di solito essere utilizzate per l'identificazione.
Marketing
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso sono necessari per creare profili di utenti per inviare pubblicità, o per tracciare l'utente su un sito web o su diversi siti web per scopi di marketing simili.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
Visualizza preferenze
{title} {title} {title}
La Voce di New York
Gestisci Consenso
Per fornire le migliori esperienze, utilizziamo tecnologie come i cookie per memorizzare e/o accedere alle informazioni del dispositivo. Il consenso a queste tecnologie ci permetterà di elaborare dati come il comportamento di navigazione o ID unici su questo sito. Non acconsentire o ritirare il consenso può influire negativamente su alcune caratteristiche e funzioni.
Funzionale Always active
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso sono strettamente necessari al fine legittimo di consentire l'uso di un servizio specifico esplicitamente richiesto dall'abbonato o dall'utente, o al solo scopo di effettuare la trasmissione di una comunicazione su una rete di comunicazione elettronica.
Preferenze
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso sono necessari per lo scopo legittimo di memorizzare le preferenze che non sono richieste dall'abbonato o dall'utente.
Statistiche
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso che viene utilizzato esclusivamente per scopi statistici. L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso che viene utilizzato esclusivamente per scopi statistici anonimi. Senza un mandato di comparizione, una conformità volontaria da parte del vostro Fornitore di Servizi Internet, o ulteriori registrazioni da parte di terzi, le informazioni memorizzate o recuperate per questo scopo da sole non possono di solito essere utilizzate per l'identificazione.
Marketing
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso sono necessari per creare profili di utenti per inviare pubblicità, o per tracciare l'utente su un sito web o su diversi siti web per scopi di marketing simili.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
Visualizza preferenze
{title} {title} {title}
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • New York
  • Onu
  • News
    • Primo Piano
    • Politica
    • Economia
    • First Amendment
  • Arts
    • Arte e Design
    • Spettacolo
    • Musica
    • Libri
  • Lifestyles
    • Fashion
    • Scienza e Salute
    • Sport
    • Religioni
  • Food & Wine
    • Cucina Italiana
  • Travel
    • Italia
  • Video
  • English
    • Arts
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Food & Wine
    • Letters
    • Lifestyles
    • Mediterranean
    • New York
    • News
  • Subscribe for only $6/Year

© 2016/2022 VNY Media La Voce di New York

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?