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  • Orhan Pamuk's Nobel Prize throws Turkish nationalists

    Orhan Pamuk's Nobel Prize throws Turkish nationalists
    by Ron Margulies, Istanbul

    Socialist Worker, UK
    Oct 19 2006

    We may have our own views about Orhan Pamuk's novels, but there can
    be no doubt that Pamuk richly deserves the prize both in literary
    terms and as a man with deeply-held views which he is not afraid to
    express regardless of the consequences.

    Watching the Turkish media and political world squirm and agonise has
    been as joyful and magnificent as the expression on Pamuk's face must
    have been upon hearing the news.

    The prize was announced on the very same day that the French parliament
    voted to make it a criminal offence to deny the Armenian holocaust. In
    1915, the dying Ottoman Empire drove its Armenian citizens into a
    forced migration, which caused one million or more to perish.

    Turkish governments have always denied that there was a systematic
    attempt at ethnic cleansing, that so many Armenians died and that
    this was a holocaust. They admit to a figure of 300,000, claim that
    there was killing on both sides and that the whole incident was an
    unfortunate but unavoidable sideshow of the First World War.

    Pamuk, whose every novel is a literary event and sells hundreds of
    thousands in Turkey, was prosecuted last year for simply saying to
    a German journalist that a million Armenians and 30,000 Kurds had
    been killed in Turkey. He was neither the first nor the last writer
    to be prosecuted under Law 301 which makes it a crime to "insult
    Turkishness", but he was the most prominent internationally. Like
    most of those prosecuted under 301, he was acquitted. But he also
    became a figure of hate for the right and most of the media.

    Normally, a Turk winning an international prize (like a Turkish team
    winning a football game abroad) would be cause for jubilation and
    nationalistic frenzy. In this case, however, the right didn't know
    what to do! On the extreme right, the response was "Pamuk is a traitor,
    he sold his country, and this is his reward".

    The more common response, expressed in one particular newspaper
    headline, was "I don't know whether to be glad or sad".

    Even those who praised Pamuk and agreed that he deserved the prize
    for his novels couldn't stop themselves from saying that he may not
    have been given it if he hadn't spoken out about the Armenians. Prime
    Minister Erdogan telephoned Pamuk to congratulate him, but President
    Sezer pointedly did not do so.

    But most amusing of all was the sight of politicians and journalists
    who have never said a word about any of the many anti-democratic
    laws in Turkey rage about the anti-democratic vote in the French
    parliament. Having never worried about Law 301 here, they suddenly
    became very concerned about the democratic rights of any French
    citizen who wishes to say that there was no Armenian holocaust.

    In ten years time nobody will remember any of these people. Unlike
    Pamuk, who has already taken his place in world literary history.

    http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/article .php?article_id=9979
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