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  • The Turkish Identity

    September 10, 2005
    The Turkish Identity

    Next week, the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, will
    address the United Nations here on one of the issues threatening to
    slow down negotiations to admit Turkey into the European Union -
    recognizing Cyprus. But he should also address the question of Orhan
    Pamuk, the pre-eminent Turkish novelist who has been charged with
    "public denigration" of Turkish identity.

    In February, a Swiss newspaper quoted Mr. Pamuk on Turkey's
    longstanding refusal to discuss the Armenian genocide and the deaths
    of some 30,000 separatist Kurds more recently. Mr. Pamuk's remarks
    inflamed Turkish nationalists, and he left the country. He faces the
    possibility of three years in jail.

    The charges against Mr. Pamuk violate the standards of free speech,
    one of the prerequisites to Turkey's admission to the European
    Union. The charges also cut to the heart of Mr. Pamuk's writing. The
    question of Turkish identity informs his work. In "My Name Is Red,"
    Mr. Pamuk never lets the reader forget the ethnic and cultural
    diversity of Turkey's past. Nor does he flinch, in "Istanbul," from
    reminding readers of the "deliberately provoked" 1955 riots that
    destroyed several non-Muslim neighborhoods in that city. Beneath the
    notion of a Turkish identity lies a tension, still noticeable today,
    that has nourished Mr. Pamuk's writing.

    It has been about six months since Mr. Pamuk's comments were
    published, so it is unclear why the charges are being brought just
    now. Whatever the motive, they are a reminder that one of Turkey's
    biggest obstacles in dealing with the West is the way it chooses to
    patrol its own history.
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