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Turkish Novelist Denounces Government At Book Fair

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  • Turkish Novelist Denounces Government At Book Fair

    TURKISH NOVELIST DENOUNCES GOVERNMENT AT BOOK FAIR
    By Motoko Rich

    IHT
    October 16, 2008

    FRANKFURT: Orhan Pamuk, the Turkish novelist and Nobel Prize laureate,
    publicly and forcefully denounced the Turkish government for its
    treatment of writers in a speech he gave at the opening ceremony of
    the Frankfurt Book Fair on Tuesday evening as the president of Turkey
    sat listening.

    Every year, a nation is chosen to be guest of honor at the fair,
    an annual rite of the international publishing industry, and this
    year it is Turkey.

    Hundreds of thousands of publishers, editors, agents and authors are
    gathered here from 100 countries to talk about and negotiate deals
    for upcoming books in what has become the most important annual event
    on the book-publishing calendar.

    At Tuesday's opening ceremony in a packed auditorium, Pamuk spoke
    quietly but intensely as Abdullah Gul, the president of Turkey,
    sat in the audience.

    "A century of banning and burning books, of throwing writers into
    prison or killing them or branding them as traitors and sending them
    into exile, and continuously denigrating them in the press -- none of
    this has enriched Turkish literature -- it has only made it poorer,"
    Pamuk said.

    Pamuk, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2006, was the subject
    of criminal charges of "insulting Turkishness" after giving a 2005
    interview to magazine in which he condemned the mass killings of
    Armenians in Turkey in World War I and the killing of Kurds by Turkey
    in the 1980s. The charges were dropped, but many nationalists have
    not forgiven Pamuk.

    "The state's habit of penalizing writers and their books is still very
    much alive," Pamuk said in his speech. "Article 301 of the Turkish
    penal code continues to be used to silence and suppress many other
    writers, in the same way it was used against me; there are at this
    moment hundreds of writers and journalists being prosecuted and found
    guilty under this article."

    When he was working on his latest novel, "Museum of Innocence,"
    Pamuk said he used YouTube to research Turkish films and songs. Now,
    he said that YouTube, along with many other domestic and international
    Web sites, are blocked in Turkey "for political reasons."

    President Gul, who spoke immediately following Pamuk, said that Turkey
    was "really proud" of his Nobel Prize and the fact that Turkish
    literature was being recognized more generally as well as at the
    Frankfurt Book Fair.

    He did not address Pamuk's criticisms directly, but said that "today,
    I can state with happiness that in Turkey, thanks to political
    and economic reforms that have gradually and more intensively been
    integrated," his nation is coming closer to fulfilling the conditions
    necessary to join the European Union. "Although we have not been
    fully successful and there is a lot yet to be done," he said, "If we
    compare it to the situation before, we can say that in Turkey there
    has indeed been a positive development."
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