MESA Banner
Making home(s) in the ‘Non-Existent’: Syrian War-Time Migration in Abkhazia
Abstract
This project seeks to tell the story of how people leave, find, and make spaces of home for themselves in times of war and its aftermath. In 2014, Abkhazia, a separatist state that separated from Georgia after the break-up of the Soviet Union, sponsored repatriation trips for Syrians of Circassian descent. Disenchanted with the lethal conditions in Syria, the country they had grown up and lived in, at least 400 Syrian-Circassians decided to “return” to the homeland of their ancestors. While Abkhazia framed the trip as a homecoming, newcomers found themselves having to deal with the estrangement of life in the space of an aftermath of another war, that of separatism from Georgia. This project posits the question: how does one create spaces of home in the context of war and its aftermath? What role do women and their labor inside and outside the domestic space have in the practices of homemaking (which can also take place inside and outside domestic spaces)? And how does making home relate to the wider processes of nation-state building and capitalist market integration? The project hence examines the gendered spatial divisions of the home, and the ways they reflect themselves on different imaginings of the state, and movement between states/across borders. In this paper, I argue that Abkhazian statehood had come to be practiced and performed through Syrian war-time migrants’ repatriation and homemaking. I invoke Navaro Yael Yashin’s (2012) notion of the “make-believe space,” which she coins in an ethnography about the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, another unrecognized state, Abkhazia. As Yashin reminds us, the point is not to make an anomaly out of unrecognized states, but rather to consider that most administrative practices in those spaces are not different from other states and their own practices of make-believeness. By looking at houses that were abandoned and (re)inhabited by refugees, I examine the politicized and gendered ways that negotiations of state power reflect themselves inside and outside spaces of the home.
Discipline
Anthropology
Geographic Area
Caucasus
Sub Area
Diaspora/Refugee Studies