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02/07/2025
Varosha: A City Trapped Between Memory and Future
Memory, Ownership, and the Geopolitics of Return in a Divided Cyprus
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Famagusta & Varosha, Cyprus
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Varosha: A City Trapped Between Memory and Reality

I first saw Varosha from behind the wire — a quiet stretch of Mediterranean shoreline framed by vacant hotels, silent streets, and the occasional rattle of wind against shattered glass. The buildings remain upright but hollowed out, with interiors exposed and the texture of abandonment worn into every surface. Faded signs still hang over doorways, stairwells sit open to the sky, and nature steadily infiltrates concrete and tile.


There are no crowds. Just a few onlookers, walking the perimeter, absorbing a place caught between presence and emptiness. The beach, still beautiful, remains untouched by tourism. The sea goes on as if nothing ever happened. Varosha gives the impression not of destruction, but of something paused mid-transition — a suburb not erased, but suspended. In its silence, you sense not just the sadness of displacement but also a flicker of hope, as if history has left the script unfinished, waiting for someone bold enough to rewrite its destiny. 


The pause feels tangible but not permanent. The silence carries a different weight now, not just of memory, but of potential. Fences are shifting and locks are being changed. Legal frameworks that were once settled are under review. This is not Pripyat —transformation is happening slowly. And when the time comes, the shift may be quiet, or sudden.

Varosha is not just a memory of 1974. It’s a mirror to older stories of possession, loss, and layered authority. From Ottoman legal traditions like the vakif, to British property records and post-independence disputes, the idea of ownership here is not only political, but historical. What does it mean to reclaim land? How far back does restitution reach? And who gets to say what “home” means, when the map has been drawn and redrawn so many times?


The answers aren’t obvious. But in this suspended state — between past and possibility — the landscape hints that the story is not finished.

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Standing at the edge of Varosha’s iconic Golden Sands, with the silent, abandoned high-rises of Famagusta stretching into the distance - a reminder of a once-thriving resort now frozen in time.
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Sunlight dances on gentle waves as they roll onto Varosha’s golden sands, where the silence of abandoned high-rises meets the soft footsteps of a few curious visitors. Once a glamorous playground for the world’s elite, this stretch of Famagusta’s coast now offers a surreal tranquility-nature reclaiming the shore, with only the sound of the sea and the occasional tourist to break the stillness.
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Been there especially for you ;-)
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this stretch of Famagusta’s coast remains a powerful symbol of unresolved property rights and contested histories. Just steps from the demarcation line, a newly reopened hotel now welcomes guests-while most of the beachfront still stands silent and claimed by its original Greek Cypriot owners.
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Where the golden sands of Varosha meet the turquoise sea, the abandoned skyline stands as a stark reminder that property rights do not tolerate a vacuum. Even as new ventures cautiously open near the demarcation line, the legal and moral questions of rightful ownership remain unresolved-underscoring that, in Varosha, the fate of every building and beach rests on the enduring claims of those displaced, and the principle that ownership cannot simply be erased by time or circumstance.
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Once celebrated as a paradise on earth, Varosha’s golden sands and turquoise waters now stand in stark contrast to the deserted skyline of crumbling hotels and empty towers. Decades of abandonment have turned this former jewel of the Mediterranean into a landscape of ruin and silence-a haunting reminder of how swiftly paradise can become a desert of rubble when conflict and division take hold.
A Time Capsule by the Sea

By the 1960s and early 1970s, Varosha had transformed into the "Copacabana of the Mediterranean," a dazzling resort district in Famagusta that attracted the world's elite. Its pristine beaches were lined with modern high-rise hotels such as the Argo, the Asterias, and the King George, offering state-of-the-art amenities. The Golden Sands Hotel, reportedly owned by King Charles, was renowned for its opulence, featuring a private railway to transport guests within the complex. Varosha's allure drew celebrities like Elizabeth Taylor, Brigitte Bardot, Richard Burton, and Sophia Loren, who frequented its exclusive boutiques, gourmet restaurants, and vibrant nightlife venues. At its peak, Varosha boasted over 100 hotels, accommodating thousands of tourists and significantly supporting Cyprus's economy.


 

Famagusta's historic walled city complemented Varosha's modern appeal, offering cultural and historical attractions that enriched the tourist experience. Together, they formed a harmonious blend of antiquity and contemporary luxury, making the region a premier destination in the Mediterranean.


However, the political landscape shifted dramatically in the summer of 1974. The coup orchestrated by the Greek military junta aimed to annex Cyprus to Greece, which led to Turkey’s military intervention. As Turkish troops pushed forward, Varosha’s mainly Greek Cypriot population fled in haste, abandoning homes, livelihoods, and cherished belongings — believing they would soon come back. What was expected to be a brief displacement turned into indefinite exile, as the Turkish military surrounded the district with fences, declared it a restricted military zone, and banned all return. This decision was influenced by strategic considerations and the desire to use Varosha as leverage in future negotiations.


Internationally, the status of Varosha has been a contentious issue. United Nations Security Council Resolutions 550 and 789 explicitly call for the area to be transferred to UN administration and for the return of its lawful inhabitants. Despite these resolutions, Varosha remained sealed off for decades, symbolizing the enduring division of Cyprus. In 2020, parts of Varosha were controversially reopened by Turkish and Turkish Cypriot authorities, drawing criticism from the international community and reigniting debates over property rights and the island's future.


Today, Varosha stands as a poignant reminder of a bygone era, its once-bustling streets and luxurious hotels now silent and decaying. Sun-bleached facades of mid-century modern buildings rise like skeletons against the bright Mediterranean sky, their balconies crumbling, awnings frayed, windows either shattered or vanished. Streets once alive with the hum of scooters, shopkeepers calling out, and beachgoers laughing are now cracked and buckled, overtaken by weeds and wild fig trees pushing through the asphalt. Rusting signs still hang over storefronts, faded in Greek and English — reminders of tailors, jewelers, and cafes that once catered to both locals and international visitors. Sidewalks are littered with debris, and lampposts lean at odd angles, as if bowing under the weight of forty years of stillness. The entire district feels like a city locked in mid-breath, a glamorous world interrupted and left suspended in time.

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Faded “No Photography” signs stand as relics of another era, guarding empty apartment blocks and deserted hotels in the shadow of a once-vibrant neighborhood. Behind these outdated warnings, private homes and silent high-rises tell the story of Famagusta’s lost glory.
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The echoes of Muslim worship highlight the contrast between the mosque’s restored presence and the surrounding emptiness of a city whose original residents never returned.
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Amidst empty hotels and abandoned storefronts, the Avenue of Democracy invites reflection on the city’s turbulent past and uncertain future, where echoes of lost glamour meet the realities of division and renewal.
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At the crossing by the deserted Toyota dealership in Varosha, faded signage and empty showrooms offer a haunting glimpse into the city’s abrupt abandonment. Once a bustling hub of commerce, the dealership now stands silent, its vacant interior and weathered facade echoing the lost vibrancy of Varosha’s streets and the decades of stillness that followed 1974.
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Former Famagusta Town Hall. Its neoclassical design, with prominent columns and a triangular pediment above the entranceserved as the main governmental building for the city before Varosha’s abandonment in 1974. This structure is a key landmark on Democracy Avenue, representing the civic and administrative heart of pre-1974 Famagusta.
The Long Shadow of 1571

To truly understand Varosha, one must look back further than the Turkish invasion of 1974 — to a conflict centuries older, when Famagusta was a Venetian fortress city, and even earlier. Throughout history, Cyprus’s location in the eastern Mediterranean rendered it a desirable target for successive imperial powers. In 1571, Ottoman forces led by Lala Mustafa Pasha, defeated the Venetian defenders of Famagusta.


The final defeat was more than just a military conquest — it became infamous for its brutality. Lala Mustafa Pasha, who had promised safe passage to the Venetian commander, Marco Antonio Bragadin, and his men, blatantly broke that promise. Bragadin, after having his nose and ears cut off, was paraded as a trophy of Ottoman power and ultimately flayed alive; his skin, stuffed with straw, was displayed as a macabre exhibit. Such tragic events struck fear into the hearts of the city’s inhabitants and effectively broke their will to resist.


Following the conquest, the Ottomans transformed Famagusta both physically and spiritually. The city's largest cathedral was converted into the Lala Mustafa Pasha Mosque, symbolizing the shift in religious and administrative control. The Ottoman administration implemented the millet system, categorizing the population primarily by religion rather than ethnicity. Christians, including Orthodox Greeks, Armenians, and Maronites, were designated as "zimmis" (non-Muslim subjects) and were granted a degree of religious autonomy under their respective religious leaders. While some Christians stayed within the walled city, many chose to settle in areas beyond the fortifications, especially into the southern outskirts known today as Varosha. This migration shaped the city’s geography for centuries.


When the British took over Cyprus in 1878, they found Famagusta with its ancient walls intact but somewhat hollowed out by earlier waves of violence and demographic changes. Varosha, once a mere suburb or village, began to morph into a more significant settlement. Its transition from an Ottoman outpost to a British administrative hub set the stage for the modern cityscape that flourished in the twentieth century.


Interestingly, the term "Greek Cypriots" emerged during the British colonial period, reflecting the colonial administration's efforts to define and categorize the island's diverse population along ethnic lines. Under Ottoman rule, identities were primarily based on religious affiliation, with the population divided into Muslims and non-Muslims. The British introduced a more rigid ethnic classification system, which contributed to the development of distinct national identities among the island's inhabitants.


Understanding this layered history is essential to grasp the complexities surrounding Varosha and the broader issues of property, identity, and restitution in Cyprus.

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Standing proudly at the main roundabout near Famagusta’s Land Gate, the Zafer Anıtı (Victory Monument) greets visitors entering the city.
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Once the grand Gothic Cathedral of Saint Nicholas, this iconic edifice was converted into the Lala Mustafa Pasha Mosque after the Ottoman conquest in 1571.
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The vast, light-filled interior, stripped of Christian imagery but rich in medieval stonework and subtle Ottoman touches, invites quiet reflection on Famagusta’s and Varoshas layered history.
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Panoramic 360° views from Famagusta’s mighty Venetian walls reveal a city where centuries of history meet the sparkling Mediterranean. From this vantage near the harbour, gaze across medieval bastions, the bustling port, and the timeless old town-where Gothic spires, Ottoman minarets, and ancient ruins tell the story of Cyprus’s crossroads of civilizations
The Vakif Enigma

To grasp why Varosha’s ownership question is so fraught, one must understand the Ottoman concept of vakif (also spelled waqf). In its ideal form, a vakif was a charitable endowment — land or property set aside in perpetuity to fund communal goods: schools, mosques, hospitals, or social services. It reframed land not as something to be exploited or traded, but as a trust. One that, in principle, transcended the individual and was meant to endure even through political upheaval.


But this notion was never entirely apolitical. The Ottomans used the vakif system not only to support religious and social life but also to restructure conquered lands, embedding imperial authority through legal and religious infrastructure. When Cyprus fell to Ottoman forces in 1571, local property was reclassified, often forcibly, into these frameworks. What may now be seen as sacred communal land was, then, part of a new order imposed by conquest.


Over the centuries, this system eroded. The British colonial administration introduced land reforms and legal categories that clashed with Ottoman precedents. New registries, taxation laws, and modernization campaigns often disregarded or confused vakif designations. Titles were lost, reinterpreted, or overwritten. And while many saw this as necessary progress, Turkish Cypriots today argue that properties — especially in areas like Varosha — were illegally seized and reassigned to Greek Cypriots or private individuals, breaching the foundational principles of the vakif system. While Turkish Cypriot authorities assert the vakif foundation’s continued legal status, international courts and UN resolutions have not treated these historical claims as grounds for exclusive ownership today.


Varosha thus becomes a collision point — not just between two ethnic communities, but between fundamentally different ideas of what land is. Is it a sacred trust tied to memory, culture, and spiritual obligation? Or is it a transferable asset, subject to sale, restitution, or abandonment? These aren’t abstract questions — in Cyprus they shape how land is remembered, claimed, and lived on.

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Layers of Displacement

Varosha’s story is far more than a tangle of legal claims or ideological divisions. It is a story about people and loss that has lasted generations. For Greek Cypriots who fled in 1974, Varosha was not a seasonal getaway, but home. Families lived year-round in tightly knit neighborhoods where morning swims gave way to afternoon gossip in shaded courtyards, and children played barefoot between corner shops and backyard lemon trees. Many still hold the keys to homes they locked during that frantic evacuation — keys that have become symbols of longing, hope, and betrayal. Mementos of a life abruptly interrupted — even the doors they once opened — no longer exist.


The pain of such displacement finds echoes in other unresolved conflicts — in places like Palestine, Kosovo, or Abkhazia — where the right to return is still disputed, and years of exile have turned departure into a permanent condition of uncertainty. Unlike post-war cities where return and rebuilding, however fraught, were possible, Varosha stands frozen — not by ruins, but by wire, politics, and unresolved tensions.


Displacement tears at more than geography. It changes the relationships and rituals that make a place feel lived in — neighbors who shared meals, watched each other’s children, tended common gardens. In Varosha, those invisible threads can still be felt in every rusted gate, in every mailbox bearing a faded name. The city’s silence is not just a mystery — it is quiet mourning, an epitaph for what once was, and for what still waits, suspended in time.

Path Dependence and the Immovable Property Commission

Years of diplomatic stalemate have only deepened Varosha’s inertia. Scholars of history and economics use the term path dependence to describe how early decisions — like the forced displacement of populations or the sidelining of vakif claims — create self-reinforcing patterns that are extremely difficult to undo. For decades, Cyprus’s unresolved status has left Varosha suspended in ambiguity, fueling legal disputes and emotional grievances.


In 2005, the Turkish Cypriot authorities — under pressure from the European Court of Human Rights — established the Immovable Property Commission (IPC) to manage Greek Cypriot property claims in the north. On paper, it offers three options: restitution, property exchange, or financial compensation. But in practice, restitution has remained largely theoretical. With Varosha still under Turkish military control and broader political recognition absent, only a handful of cases have resulted in the actual return of property. Most applicants face lengthy delays or are ultimately offered monetary compensation, which to many feels like being paid to abandon the idea of going home.


Out of nearly eight thousand applications submitted to the IPC, more than six thousand remain unresolved. Around 1,949 cases have ended with compensation — totaling nearly 600 million euros — but only 15 have led to full restitution, and even less to property exchanges. This situation causes deep dissatisfaction among Greek Cypriots. For many, accepting money rather than recovering land is not just a legal compromise — it's a symbolic capitulation, a quiet burial of the right to return. It undermines the longstanding international consensus, affirmed by UN resolutions, that Varosha should be returned to its former owners.


From the Turkish Cypriot perspective, however, the IPC offers a rare institutional pathway to reduce legal uncertainty and make economic planning possible. In a context where negotiations remain stalled, some view it as a pragmatic tool — flawed but necessary — for breaking out of perpetual limbo.


Yet no court, regardless of its structure, can resolve the deeper identity conflict that haunts Varosha. Can monetary compensation ever equal the weight of generational loss? Can even successful restitution undo the trauma of exile? And where, in this modern legal process, do unresolved historical claims — like those tied to Ottoman vakif — fit in? IPC, established to resolve property titles, faces a far more complex task: reconciling memory, longing, and the unfinished legacy of conflict.

Realpolitik: Reopening the Coastline

In 2020, Turkey and the Northern Cypriot administration made a provocative move by reopening part of Varosha’s coastline for the first time in nearly five decades. Turkish officials framed it as a pragmatic step to revitalize an area frozen in time, losing its economic potential. Turkish newspapers, including the mainstream Sözcü, estimated that revitalizing the wider Famagusta region could cost over $10 billion—covering over a hundred hotels, thousands of shops, entertainment venues, banks and theaters.


The economic argument is tempting: why preserve a decaying ghost town when it could be generating tourism and jobs? But the implications go far beyond redevelopment. For Greek Cypriots and majority of the international community, this unilateral action violates the core of United Nations resolutions — especially UNSC Resolution 550 — which call for Varosha to be placed under UN administration until a comprehensive political settlement is achieved. Reopening even a part of the city under Turkish Cypriot control is seen not as restoration, but as occupation dressed in pragmatism.


Moves such as hotels reopening, the return of tourists, investments flowing in escalate tensions. Turkey and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus challenge the very foundation of negotiation: that the future of Varosha remains open to mutual agreement. Instead, they are reinforcing the current status quo. What was once temporarily closed becomes the subject of territorial claims. Each beach towel and umbrella serves not just a symbol of leisure, but becomes an object of territorial assertion.


In many ways, this reflects patterns in other disputed regions — from East Jerusalem to Northern Kosovo — where gradual normalization under control of one side becomes nearly irreversible without the risk of renewed conflict. In Cyprus, the danger is that such a strategy could close the path to any peaceful resolution, or even reignite confrontation, especially if perceived as a final blow to hopes for reunification.


To some, this signals the triumph of realpolitik over principle — a cold acceptance that what is built will eventually outweigh what was lost. And perhaps, over time, even among the displaced, nostalgia may give way to resignation. But this future is not inevitable. As history shows, lines drawn by force often appear solid — until they suddenly are not. Without mutual agreement, the revival of Varosha is not a gesture of peace, but a political provocation that risks reigniting conflict. Yet, without a breakthrough event—something like the fall of the Berlin Wall that suddenly reshapes political reality — this pragmatic course might become the entrenched future of Varosha.

Identity, Faith, and the Unfinished Conversation

Varosha’s present limbo can also be read through the lens of faith, given how central religious institutions have been in shaping both Ottoman and European societies. In Poland, the Catholic Church historically served as a cultural and educational center, owning large tracts of land, while running schools, hospitals, and orphanages. Similarly, under Ottoman rule, vakif lands funded mosques, religious schools, and social institutions. Both the Catholic Church and the concept of vakif saw land as a spiritual and social endowment, not merely a commodity.

I can imagine that when Varosha was bustling, most residents did not question whether they occupied former vakif land.


Life was pragmatic; people built houses and hotels, opened businesses, and enjoyed their Mediterranean surroundings. Only when the city was emptied did the old questions resurface — who truly owned the soil beneath all that concrete and rebar? Disputed claims to religious or communal rights have become part of the modern legal battle, linking centuries of Ottoman and British colonial legacies with present-day politics.


 This conversation remains fundamentally unfinished because it involves competing moral and historical frameworks. If the Greek Cypriot perspective is anchored in recent memories and international law affirming their right to return, the Turkish Cypriot stance extends further back, invoking Ottoman legacies and the principle of restoring a system they believe was unjustly dismantled. It leaves us with the question whether Lala Mustafa’s victory over Venetians in 1571 can really be a source of Turkish legitimacy on the island? Adding to this the broader context of displacement and identity, we receive the layers of tension that no court ruling alone can resolve.

The High Price of a Frozen City

Meanwhile, Varosha remains unused, losing potential revenue for both communities and for Cyprus as a whole. Hotels that once attracted thousands of tourists per season are now visited by stray cats and the occasional UN or Turkish patrols. The emotional cost of leaving Varosha deserted for nearly fifty years is incalculable, but the economic losses are measurable.


As mentioned, according to estimates reported in Turkish media, the revitalization of the wider Famagusta district could cost $10 billion. This substantial sum would allow the renovation of 105 hotels, 3,000 shops, 99 entertainment venues, 4,649 vacation homes, 21 banks, and 24 theaters or cinemas. On the one hand, it’s a huge investment that could modernize the region’s entire infrastructure. On the other hand, financing such a project in a territory whose political status remains disputed presents significant challenges. Investors and international lenders are rarely willing to commit funds to a place where fundamental questions of ownership and governance remain unresolved. Even in Turkey proper, there are thousands of more secure and attractive opportunities for real estate investment.


This dilemma accentuates the contradiction at the heart of Varosha. From an economic perspective, it’s almost irrational for a city with prime beachfront real estate to remain a ghost town. From a political standpoint, any unilateral attempt at redevelopment might deepen existing conflict. As a result, city lingers in a costly stalemate, with each side aware that any compromise might undermine its legal or historical claims.

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Unfinished Return

Standing on Varosha’s beach, it’s impossible not to imagine what this place could be. The sea, still translucent and inviting, gently laps at a silent shore as if daring people to return. The potential for renewed life sparkles in every sunbeam reflecting off the waves. At times, you can almost hear echoes of laughter and sense the bustle of commerce, as though the city itself is longing to shake off decades of neglect.


Yet that vision remains as fragile as the shattered glass in the hotel lobbies. Whether Varosha will emerge as a symbol of coexistence or remain an emblem of unresolved division depends on more than local decisions. It hinges on geopolitical currents, on Turkey’s policy toward Northern Cyprus, on how the international community responds to unilateral moves — like the 2020 reopening of part of Varosha’s beach — and, above all, on the ability of Greek and Turkish Cypriots to forge a shared narrative about their past and future.

That reopening, while framed by Turkish Cypriot authorities as a pragmatic step, occurred without the consent of the displaced Greek Cypriot residents and in defiance of UN Security Council resolutions. Since then, over 1.8 million visitors have entered the zone, but most of the city remains abandoned—its buildings crumbling, streets empty, original inhabitants still barred from returning. Only limited areas are open—beach and some cleared streets, offering tourism without reconciliation, presence without justice.


If there is hope, it can still be found in smaller gestures. Across the buffer zone, occasional collaborations are taking place, such as cultural festivals, intercommunal art initiatives, youth dialogue programs. It shows that some Cypriots, especially younger generations, are willing to imagine a different future — one less defined by the legacy of 1974 or 1571, and more by shared interests and pragmatic coexistence.


But even those seeds of hope grow in difficult soil. The weight of grief, historical injustice, and territorial disputes loom large. No court or body can force forgiveness and reconciliation. They are built — slowly, painfully — through trust, dialogue, and the willingness to compromise. Until that happens, Varosha remains what it has been for nearly fifty years: a place suspended between past and future, a city waiting for a return that has never truly begun.

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Echoes from Berlin and Warsaw

I can’t help recalling how in my childhood in the late 1980s I was secretly looking at the Berlin Wall from the window of my father’s car. That barrier, gray from the eastern side, with graffiti on the western side seemed immovable, as though it had always been and always would be there. Only a year or two later, it collapsed in a cascade of hope and euphoria that no one fully anticipated. Berlin was freed from the weight of its division. That same wave of change that began in Gdansk in 1980, spread eventually across all of Eastern Europe, uprooting communist regimes once considered to be unbreakable.


Warsaw rose from the ashes as well. The city of 1.3 million inhabitants before World War II had 90% of its buildings leveled to the ground after the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 and was completely depopulated as the civilian population after deaths of approximately 200,000 people was directed to the camps set up south of Warsaw. After World War II entire neighborhoods were rebuilt from rubble, brick by brick, ironically, driven by the communist leadership’s vision of the whole nation rebuilding its capital together. The transition to free market economy after the fall of communism in 1989 was slow and difficult, but it taught me that any city can be reborn with collective determination, if institutional set-up allow it.


Could Varosha be brought back to life? Some local groups and academics have suggested ambitious initiatives, such as the Famagusta Ecocity Project, imagining Varosha reinvented as a model of sustainable living where Greek and Turkish communities could coexist. This vision includes green architecture, solar energy, and cross-cultural initiatives. In essence, it is both an environmental and political statement: a demonstration that Varosha can be more than a symbol of conflict — it can be a symbol of reconciliation and innovation. Yet the division of Cyprus, unlike Berlin’s wall or Warsaw’s ruins, persists not for lack of will or vision, but because the question of determining who owns the land remains fundamentally unresolved.


The path is filled with obstacles. Unlike Berlin, where both German sides shared a deep cultural identity longing for unity, or Warsaw, where external occupiers withdrew and rebuilding became possible, Cyprus’s divisions are tied to broader geopolitical interests — yet remain somewhat on their periphery. Turkey sees Northern Cyprus as a strategic foothold, while Greek Cypriots view their displacement as a wound that can’t be easily healed by half-measures. In other words, Varosha may need an event of equally historic magnitude — some modern parallel to the collapse of the Soviet Union — to break the chains of decades-long stalemate and escape the rimland.

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An Unwritten Epilogue

For centuries, from Lala Mustafa Pasha’s conquest to the British colonial era, from the forced displacement of 1974 to today’s partial reopening of the coastline, Varosha has borne witness to the extremes of human cruelty and aspiration. Warsaw rose from rubble, Berlin overcame its wall — and perhaps Varosha, too, will one day cross the barbed wire, the barriers and the bitterness of half a century.


For now, while I’m standing on the sun-scorched pavement, looking out at an empty resort that once hummed with life, I find myself caught between sorrow and hope. Sorrow for the families who lost not only their property, but neighborhoods, memories, entire chapters of life. Hope that, perhaps, a sweeping change — on the scale of the fall of communism or the collapse of empires — could unlock a new chapter here.


Until that day comes, the city’s shattered windows and silent streets will continue to pose a question that neither time nor politics has adequately answered:

Can a place truly be reborn if those who once called it home are excluded from its future?


The answer remains unwritten, a blank space in history’s ledger — much like the vakif claims that linger in dusty archives: invoked, disputed, reinterpreted. These competing legacies — legal, emotional, historical — demand more than compensation or control. They call for recognition, reckoning, and above all, for a future shaped not just by power, but by memory.


In that silent, haunted cityscape, the promise of renewal endures — fragile yet unshaken, like a single beam of light filtering through a door boarded shut.

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© 2025 Jarek Jurczak