Women of Cyprus

Maria, a Greek Cypriot, visits with a Turkish Cypriot man currently living
in her family village.

 

Women of Cyprus

Zehra, a Turkish Cypriot, holds Vasiliki, a Greek Cypriot,
who reminds her of her grandmother.

 

Women of Cyprus

Greek and Turkish Cypriot women discuss the reunification of
the island on the eve of the referendum on the Annan plan.

 

Women of Cyprus

Turkish Cypriot women fleeing their homes during the 1963-64 conflict.

 

Women of Cyprus

Settler women from Turkey tease a young boy in the North of Cyprus.

 

Women of Cyprus

Greek Cypriot students protest the Annan plan in 2004.

Women of Cyprus

Maria, a Greek Cypriot, picks a lemon from her grandmother’s garden
in the north of the island.

Women of Cyprus

Turkish Cypriots flee their village under U.N. protection
during the 1963-64 conflict.

Women of Cyprus

Maria, a Greek Cypriot, visits her family home where Hussein’s family now lives.

Women of Cyprus

Vasiliki, a Greek Cypriot, and Zehra, a Turkish Cypriot, read
the future in their coffee grounds.

Women of Cyprus

Greek Cypriot mother and daughter run away from the violence.

Women of Cyprus

Turkish Cypriot woman cooks in a refugee camp in the aftermath of the 1963-64 conflict.

Women of Cyprus

Cats talk to each other across the divide.

Women of Cyprus

Zehra, a Turkish Cypriot, visits her grandmother’s home where a Greek Cypriot family now lives.

women of cyprus

A Greek Cypriot woman stares out at the devastation during the 1974 war.


 

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Women of Cyprus

In the spring of 2004, Maria, a Greek Cypriot, and Zehra, a Turkish Cypriot, cross to opposite sides of the green line dividing Cyprus since the war of 1974 to visit the family homes they had not seen for thirty years. Thus begins the personal journey of these women as the film follows them through their pasts, haunted by war and pain, to their present search for reconciliation and common ground.

On the eve of the U.N. referendum to reunite the divided island, many buried stories from the past surface. Rare archival footage adds context to the Cypriot conflict. The filmmakers bring together women from both sides of the island who share their fears, distrust and hopes. For some, this includes years of experience working together to bridge the divide between their communities. Candid interviews and revealing group discussions trace the women's inspiring capacity for contact that transcends ethnic differences.

As the referendum approaches, they must confront how to appease their hesitations, define safety, trust and learn to live with each other again. With heartbreaking honesty, insight and humor, the women define their concepts of home, community and relation to the land. For four years, the filmmakers returned to Cyprus to collaborate with the women in the film, to process the conflict with them and witness their resolve to live together again.

As the film has been screened in different parts of the world, especially where populations continue to suffer conflict and division and the need for peace remains urgent, viewers identify with the struggles of the women on both sides of the divided island, gaining perspective on their own reality and finding inspiration in the possibilities of reconciliation.