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Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk wins Nobel

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  • Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk wins Nobel

    October 12, 2006
    By MATT MOORE and KARL RITTER, Associated Press Writers



    STOCKHOLM, Sweden - Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk, whose uncommon lyrical
    gifts and uncompromising politics have brought him acclaim worldwide and
    prosecution at home, won the Nobel literature prize Thursday for his works
    dealing with the symbols of clashing cultures.

    The selection of Pamuk, whose recent trial for "insulting Turkishness"
    raised concerns about free speech in Turkey, continues a trend among Nobel
    judges of picking writers in conflict with their own governments. British
    playwright Harold Pinter, a strong opponent of his country's involvement in
    the Iraq war, won last year. Elfriede Jelinek, a longtime critic of
    Austria's conservative politicians and social class, was the 2004 winner.

    Pamuk, currently a visiting professor at Columbia University in New York,
    told The Associated Press in a telephone interview that he was overjoyed by
    the award, adding that remarks he made earlier this year referring to the
    Nobel literature prize as "nonsense" were a mistranslation.

    He told AP that he accepted the prize as not "just a personal honor, but as
    an honor bestowed upon the Turkish literature and culture I represent."

    The author did have one complaint: The Swedish Academy announced the prize
    at 7 a.m., EDT.

    "They called and woke me up, so I was a bit sleepy," said Pamuk, adding that
    he had no immediate plans to celebrate, but looked forward to being with
    friends back in Turkey.

    Pamuk, whose novels include "Snow" and "My Name is Red," was charged last
    year for telling a Swiss newspaper in February 2005 that Turkey was
    unwilling to deal with two of the most painful episodes in recent Turkish
    history: the massacre of Armenians during World War I, which Turkey insists
    was not a planned genocide, and recent guerrilla fighting in Turkey's
    overwhelmingly Kurdish southeast.

    "Thirty-thousand Kurds and 1 million Armenians were killed in these lands,
    and nobody but me dares to talk about it," he told the newspaper.

    The controversy came at a particularly sensitive time for the overwhelmingly
    Muslim country. Turkey had recently begun membership talks with the
    European Union, which has harshly criticized the trial.

    The charges against Pamuk were dropped in January, ending the high-profile
    trial that outraged Western observers.

    The Swedish Academy said that the 54-year-old Istanbul-born Pamuk "in the
    quest for the melancholic soul of his native city has discovered new symbols
    for the clash and interlacing of cultures."

    In Turkey, fellow novelists, poets and publishers were among the first to
    congratulate Pamuk, but nationalists who regard the novelist as a traitor
    accused the Swedish Academy of rewarding the author because he had belittled
    Turks.

    "The prize came as no surprise, we were expecting it," said Kemal Kerincsiz,
    a nationalist lawyer who helped bring charges against Pamuk. "This prize was
    not given because of Pamuk's books, it was given because of his words,
    because of his Armenian genocide claims."

    Turkey's Foreign Ministry congratulated Pamuk, wishing him continued success
    and saying the prize would help give Turkish literature a wider audience
    abroad.

    Prominent Armenian writers also hailed the decision to award a Nobel to
    Pamuk.

    "This a lesson to those Turks who wanted to put him on trial. This is a
    victory for democracy in Turkey," said Perch Zeituntsian, a leading Armenian
    writer and playwright, speaking in Yerevan, Armenia.

    The head of Armenia's Union of Writers, David Muradian, said the decision to
    award Pamuk the Nobel prize sends a strong message. "This is a both a
    literature prize and about morality."

    The head of the PEN American Center, the U.S. chapter of the international
    writers-human rights organization, also praised Pamuk's selection.

    "I think that Orhan Pamuk was a splendid choice for the Nobel Prize, not
    only for the evident literary merit of his work, but because of his
    courageous defiance of political pieties in Turkey," said historian Ron
    Chernow, the chapter's president.

    Academy head Horace Engdahl said Pamuk's political situation in Turkey had
    not affected the decision.

    "It could, of course, lead to some political turbulence, but we are not
    interested in that," Engdahl said. "He is a controversial person in his own
    country, but on the other hand, so are almost all of our prize winners."

    He said Pamuk was selected because he had "enlarged the roots of the
    contemporary novel" through his links to both Western and Eastern culture.

    "This means that he has stolen the novel, one can say, from us Westerners
    and has transformed it to something different from what we have ever seen
    before," Engdahl said.

    Earlier Thursday, French lawmakers in the National Assembly in Paris
    approved a bill making it a crime to deny that the mass killings of
    Armenians in Turkey during and after World War I amounted to genocide, a
    move that has infuriated Turkey.

    Pamuk has spoken up for other writers in peril. He was the first Muslim
    writer to defend Salman Rushdie when Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah
    Khomeini condemned Rushdie to death because of "The Satanic Verses," a
    satire of the Prophet Muhammad published in 1989. Pamuk has also been
    supportive of Kurdish rights.

    Pamuk himself had little religious upbringing. Growing up in Istanbul, his
    extended family was wealthy and privileged ' his grandfather was an
    industrialist and built trains for the new nation. Religion, Pamuk has said,
    was considered to be something for the poor and the provincial.

    Instead, Pamuk was educated at the American school, Robert College, founded
    in the 1860s by secular Americans, where half the classes were taught in
    English. Among the Turkish graduates are prime ministers and corporate
    executives.

    Pamuk has long been considered a contender for the Nobel prize and he
    figured high among pundits and bookmakers. His works, written in Turkish,
    have been translated into other languages, including English, French,
    Swedish and German.

    Pamuk's prize marked the first time that a writer from a predominantly
    Muslim country has been honored for literature since 1988, when the award
    went to Egyptian Naguib Mahfouz, who died in August.

    In its citation, the academy said that "Pamuk has said that growing up, he
    experienced a shift from a traditional Ottoman family environment to a more
    Western-oriented lifestyle. He wrote about this in his first published
    novel, a family chronicle ... which in the spirit of Thomas Mann follows the
    development of a family over three generations."

    "Pamuk's international breakthrough came with his third novel, 'The White
    Castle.' It is structured as an historical novel set in 17th-century
    Istanbul, but its content is primarily a story about how our ego builds on
    stories and fictions of different sorts. Personality is shown to be a
    variable construction," the academy said.

    In winning the prize, Pamuk will likely see new interest in his work,
    although there was little increase in sales for Jelinek and Pinter. Pamuk
    will also receive a $1.4 million check, a gold medal and diploma, and an
    invitation to a lavish banquet in Stockholm on Dec. 10, the anniversary of
    the death of prize founder Alfred Nobel.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Mattias Karen contributed to this report.
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