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  • Nobel Laureate's Travel Fears: Are Turkish-Nationalist Attitudes To

    NOBEL LAUREATE'S TRAVEL FEARS: ARE TURKISH-NATIONALIST ATTITUDES TO BLAME?

    San Francisco Chronicle, CA
    Feb 8 2007

    Late last week, the Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk (winner of the 2006
    Nobel Prize for literature) canceled a reading tour of major cities in
    Germany at the last minute. The apparent reason: the internationally
    acclaimed author of such works as Snow and Istanbul: Memories and
    the City was reportedly concerned about his safety after the recent
    killing of the Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in Istanbul
    last month. "Yasin Hayal, the alleged mastermind behind [Dink's]
    murder, declared on his way into court on January 24: 'Tell Orhan
    Pamuk to wise up!'" (Der Spiegel) Germany has a population of some
    2.6 million people of Turkish origin.

    Like Dink, who was murdered by Turkish nationalists, in his writing
    Pamuk has dared to critically examine aspects of Turkish culture,
    society, history and religious practices that have long been considered
    off-limits subjects for public discussion.

    The writer's biggest boo-boo in the eyes of hardcore Turkish
    nationalists: In the past, he has dared to refer to "the deaths of
    up to one-and-a-half-million Armenians at the end of World War I"
    in what historians and Armenians have referred to as a campaign
    of genocide carried out by the era's Ottoman Turks. As a result,
    "Pamuk is despised by militant Turkish nationalists for talking about
    the mass murder and for criticizing the Turkish government's handling
    of the conflict with the Kurdish separatists in the southeast of the
    country." (Der Spiegel)

    Like Dink, Pamuk was taken to court (in 2005) for allegedly violating
    Article 301 of Turkey's national penal code. That provision makes it
    illegal to "publicly denigrate Turkishness, the Parliament, the state
    as well as the judiciary, the police force and the military..." (New
    Anatolian) Pamuk's case was eventually dropped on a technicality but
    it reinforced international perception of Turkey as a country that
    suppresses free speech - and, as such, as a nation that still may have
    a long way to go before it can meet European Union requirements in its
    government's determined bid for coveted membership in the Euro-club.

    Germany's Der Spiegel noted that Pamuk's "decision to cancel [his]
    tour will be another blow to Turkey's reputation when it comes to
    the issue of freedom of expression."

    Instead of traveling to Germany, Pamuk headed to the United States late
    last week. He told reporters at Istanbul's airport, upon his departure:
    "I will give talks at Columbia University and other universities." (AP
    in International Herald Tribune)

    An editorial in Spain's El País this week hinted that Pamuk's latest
    overseas travels might be seen as the writer's first steps toward
    a permanent move away from his homeland. The Spanish daily pointed
    out that the ultra-nationalist pressure that is oppressing or even
    silencing a growing number of Turkish artists and intellectuals
    directly implicates the government of Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan. Although Erdogan reportedly ordered any government
    officials who may have acted with favor toward Dink's alleged
    murder-conspirators to be disciplined, El País noted that it has
    been hard to miss, in watching Pamuk in TV news clips, that "the
    Nobel laureate has lost confidence in the [Turkish] law-enforcement
    forces that should be protecting him and, as a result, has opted for
    a voluntary exile. As for his life, Istanbul, the scene of and the
    source of his work, and all of Turkey, have become dangerous places."

    --Boundary_(ID_eOIgaFNGkY5dy4CN1aiS jA)--
    From: Baghdasarian
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