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Nobel Prize Winner Orhan Pamuk in Exile

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  • Nobel Prize Winner Orhan Pamuk in Exile

    Bits of News
    Feb 16 2007


    Nobel Prize Winner Orhan Pamuk in Exile

    Thursday, 15 February 2007 Written by Alexander G. Rubio

    Orhan PamukUnder threat of assassination, Turkish author Orhan Pamuk
    has left his homeland, perhaps never to return. And it's hard to
    blame him. First he was put on trial for "denigrating Turkish
    identity", following an interview he gave to a Swiss newspaper about
    the genocide of the Armenians in the early twentieth century (which
    may form the backdrop for a movie, unlikely as it may seem, by none
    other than Sylvester "Rambo/Rocky Balboa" Stallone).

    And for a while it seemed like reason would prevail. Not only was the
    case dropped, but one would have thought that Pamuk being awarded the
    Nobel Prize in Literature would have salved any bruised national
    pride.

    But then Armenian journalist and editor of the Armenian-Turkish
    language weekly Agos magazine, Hrant Dink was gunned down in broad
    daylight outside his office in downtown Istanbul.

    It seems threats have been made against Pamuk's life by the same man
    who confessed to being responsible for the assassination of Hrant
    Dink.

    British daily The Guardian reports that his lecture tour to the
    United States might be extended, indefinitely.
    The International Herald Tribune reported on Thursday February 1 that
    Pamuk had boarded a plane for New York to begin a lecture tour of
    American universities and, according to Fatih Altayli, a prominent
    columnist writing for the Turkish daily newspaper Sabah, he has no
    plans to return to Turkey. The writer had already cancelled a tour of
    Germany, which has a sizeable Turkish community, at the end of last
    month.

    "What I was told was more than mere rumour: Pamuk recently withdrew
    $400,000 from his bank account and said he would leave Turkey and
    would not be returning to his country anytime soon," wrote Altayli.
    According to the Daily Telegraph, those close to Pamuk have declined
    to comment publicly on the report because of the "sensitivity of Mr
    Pamuk's position".

    Now, some might say, even with no small measure of smugness, that
    this is the act of a coward, that he should have laid his life on the
    line, daring the assassins' bullet.

    But Pamuk never asked to be a martyr to free speech, only to have the
    right to it. His death would not vindicate any principles, which
    should, in Thomas Jefferson's words, be self-evident, but only serve
    to silence others who would claim the right to state their opinion.

    Only the Turkish people, through the Turkish government they elect,
    can make a forceful case for those principles, by repealing the legal
    statutes used to make Pamuk, Hrant Dink, and others, targets in the
    first place.

    http://www.bitsofnews.com/content/view/5098/2/
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