
In the summer of 2013, Rüzgâr Buşki was on his way to Istanbul to make a documentary about his close friend Şevval, a trans-LGBTI activist.
In the summer of 2013, Rüzgâr Buşki was on his way to Istanbul to make a documentary about his close friend Şevval, a trans-LGBTI activist.
The 32-year-old PhD candidate Onur finds himself in a dilemma: Should he pay to be exempted from military service or should he enlist for the compulsory six month period?
The chronicle of a phenomenal fight to save the century-old Emek Theatre.
In 2013, millions of people took to the streets to speak out against the Turkish government, which responded with excessive violence.
“Bağlar” is about those who won’t give in to despair.
Since 2007, the Committee on Missing Persons in Cyprus has been conducting excavations in the Kyrenia Mountains with the hopes of returning the remains of Greek and Turkish Cypriots to their respective families.
Every day, Mehmet travels for an hour to open his teahouse that is frequented by only a handful of people still left in the village.
The ruthless gentrification policies of the government and rapid urban transformation have taken a big toll on Istanbul in the past decade.
On 28 December 2011, 34 civilians, including 19 children, were killed by the Turkish army, who “mistook” them for PKK militants in an airstrike in Uludere district near the Turkish-Iraqi Border.
About a world that’s hardly ever talked about: what is it like to do your compulsory military service in Turkey as an Armenian, Greek or Jewish citizen?
A young gallery assistant goes to dinner with her boss, joined by an art collector, a curator and an institutional director. She has a hard time fitting in.
Approximately one million people in Turkey are hired as seasonal workers every year. They are severely exploited, working for very low wages without any insurance. Most of them are Kurdish and underage.
One of the most comprehensive and entertaining accounts of the Yesilçam Turkish cinema industry of the 1960s and 1970s.
Jwan is one of the three million Syrians who have fled the war and arrived in Turkey.
In April 1915, amid the mass killings and expulsion of the Armenian population from Anatolia, Gülnaz Bingöl’s great-grandfather witnessed the execution of 99 Armenians by the sacred tree as a militiaman.
Memories and identities had long been eradicated or buried in Eastern Anatolia after the disappearance of its Armenian inhabitants; some managed to survive, but only secretly.