Baris Dilaver
Born in Istanbul in 1974, I left my home country at a very young age after having completed my training to become a ballet dancer. I spent the following 20 years dancing on stages all over the world, including the Vienna State Opera. In 2007 a serious injury put a sudden end to my career as a professional dancer – a turning point in my life. Convalescent and deprived of my identity as a dancer, I decided to come back to Vienna where I had found a second home. But my return proved to be disillusioning: The Viennese, who are known for their heart of gold and who welcomed me with open arms when I was still a member of the State Opera’s ballet, were now fearful, disrespectful and, in some cases, even hostile in their reactions to the Turk in Vienna. And that’s when I embarked on my journey in search of my identity and my future and I started by searching for my roots. I shared the fate of my Turkish home country: I had started to feel and act “European” a long time ago but did that mean that I had to deny my Turkish identity? And did I want to be part of a Europe whose right-wing populists tried hard to preserve an image of Turkey characterized by Islamism, women being forced to wear headscarves and forced marriage? My search for what unites us and what separates us made me delve deeper into the history of Europe and Turkey, the Ottoman Empire, the Christian and Islamic religions. Movement, change, being on the road and an open future: these notions characterize my own life and are also reflected in my film. It is an attempt to fight static views and black-and-white judgments which lead to generalizations and tell only half the truth, thus frustrating any chance of fruitful dialogue. But on the other hand there is also an abundance of positive encounters and experience that marked the joint history of our countries and these are also shown in my film. 247,000 Turks live in Austria, many of them in Vienna. Being one of them, it is probably my purpose in life to build a bridge between our cultures, which are full of similarities and diversity, like the bridge across the Bosporus which connects the Orient and the Occident.