For this mother’s day, we want to pay tribute to four women, four characters who are mothers in their respective fictions. Because Esme and Gülgün in a new life, and Bahar and Gülçiçek in Renacer, have taught us many things about motherhood during Sunday nights, Monday and Tuesday in Antena 3.
Bahar, Umay and Aziz’s mother
Bahar, protagonist of rebirth, is the emotional heart of the series and a symbol of maternal strength against adversity. Mother of two children, her life changes dramatically when she suffers a serious illness and discovers betrayals from her husband and her surroundings. However, instead of surrendering, Bahar finds in love towards his children reason and energy to fight for his life and reconstruct from pain.
Throughout the series, Bahar shows an extraordinary resilience. Although it faces borderline situations – there, disease, poverty – never stops prioritizing the well -being of their children. Their relationship with them is close, full of tenderness, values and constant care. Bahar not only protects them, but teaches them, with the example, to resist with dignity and hope.
Bahar’s love is transformative. Through its personal rebirth process, it demonstrates that motherhood can be a source of a deep force, capable of moving mountains. Its history moves because it reflects many real women who, without support, manage to get ahead for love to their children. Bahar is not only a fighter mother; It is a lighthouse of humanity in the midst of darkness.
Gülçiçek, La Madre Bahar
Gülçiçek, Bahar’s mother in Renacer, is a character that represents a more traditional motherhood, marked by silences, resignations and hardness that life sometimes imposes. Unlike Bahar, his relationship with motherhood is crossed by difficult decisions, and although he loves his daughter, his way of demonstrating it has been often distant, conditioned by his own wounds and the past he drags.
Throughout the series, the figure of Gülçiçek is complex: at times rigid, even cold, but deeply marked by pain and guilt. His silences hide more love than he appears, and over time, the sacrifices he made for Bahar are revealed, although without obtaining the immediate understanding of his daughter. His strong character is both a shell and an expression of life that had to live, one in which he could not always choose freely.
Gülçiçek symbolizes those mothers who did not know (or could not) love openly, but that they carry with a deep and silent love. His evolution in Renacer shows how the bond with Bahar is transforming, giving way to forgiveness, mutual understanding and recognition of a love that, although imperfect, was always present.
Esme, Suna’s mother and Seyran
Esme, the mother of Seyran and Suna in a new life, is a figure marked by humility, sacrifice and a deep maternal love. Although he lives in poverty and under patriarchal structures, his dignity and delivery for his daughters make it a powerful presence. His life has been full of deprivation, but his greatest wealth has always been the love he offers to his family.
With Seyran, their relationship is loaded with concern and tenderness. He feels impotence to the destiny imposed on his daughter, but never ceases to be constant emotional support. With Suna, he shares a silent but firm connection, reflecting a upbringing based on values, interior strength and mutual understanding.
What defines Esme is your ability to love without conditions, even when you have no resources or power to change reality. It represents so many mothers who love from pain, who sacrifice themselves without expecting anything in return and that are the true emotional support of those who fight for a better life.
Gülgün, La Madre de Fuat y ferit
Gülgün, Mother of Fuat and Ferit in a new life, is a woman trapped between loyalty to family norms and the love she feels for her children. It appears to be the perfect wife and exemplary mother in a powerful family, but its interior is marked by anguish and guilt. Although he tries to maintain harmony, he suffers silently to Ferit’s destructive behavior.
His relationship with Ferit is full of contradictions: love, fear, guilt and a desire to protect him, although he knows that he has often failed to contain him. With Fuat, his bond is more distant, reflecting the effects of raising marked by appearances and emotional repression. Even so, her love for both is deep, although sometimes limited by the context that surrounds her.
Gülgün represents mothers who, without real power, try to exert influence from silence. His figure is that of a woman who suffers inside, who wants a different destiny for her children, and that loads with the weight of a family structure that does not allow her to speak freely, but never prevents her from feeling.
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