The Clearing with Katherine May

Ece Temelkuran’s landscape of belonging

Jan 24, 2026
Ece Temelkuran, writer and political commentator who warned about rising authoritarianism, reflects on exile, home and rebuilding belonging. She talks about putting her heart on ice, finding comfort in small rituals, treasured objects and food, and how trees and landscapes shape moral life. Short, intimate scenes of rest, ritual and the slow work of repair.
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INSIGHT

Early Warnings Met Denial

  • Temelkuran warned Western audiences about creeping authoritarianism well before many accepted it, and found denial tiring.
  • She notes the shift as editors later accepted 'fascism' as an apt subtitle, showing changing recognition of threats.
INSIGHT

Heart In The Freezer

  • Ece Temelkuran put her heart 'in the freezer' to survive exile and the urgency of warning about rising authoritarianism.
  • That numbness later melted and led her to explore personal and collective homelessness in Nation of Strangers.
INSIGHT

Modern Homelessness Is Multipronged

  • Temelkuran links personal exile to wider 'homelessness' of our era: moral, spiritual, and physical displacement.
  • She argues we are asked to numb ourselves and must rebuild dignity and mutual kindness as new homes.
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