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ANKARA: Honor History, Homeland Says Nobel Prize Winner Gunter Grass

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  • ANKARA: Honor History, Homeland Says Nobel Prize Winner Gunter Grass

    HONOR HISTORY, HOMELAND SAYS NOBEL PRIZE WINNER GUNTER GRASS

    Hurriyet Daily News
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=germ an-author-gunter-grass-questions-eu-criteria-for-m embership-2010-04-16
    April 16 2010
    Turkey

    Nobel Prize winner Gunter Grass discusses the credibility of
    EU membership criteria, the author's role in promoting minority
    perspectives and the weight of history. The German author appears at
    a panel this week with Turkish counterpart YaÅ~_ar Kemal, who shares
    his rural background and high literary standing

    Legendary literary figures Gunter Grass and YaÅ~_ar Kemal saw their
    rural "native towns as the center of the world," the German novelist
    said when he met his Turkish counterpart at a panel discussion
    Thursday afternoon.

    Both authors come from the periphery: Kemal was born in Cukurova
    in Turkey's south, while Grass was born in the free city of Danzig,
    today's Gdansk in Poland. Though he came to West Germany as a refugee
    in 1945, Grass frequently returns in his fiction to the Danzig of
    his childhood.

    "YaÅ~_ar Kemal and I have both come from the rural areas and saw our
    native towns as the center of the world," Grass said of the Turkish
    novelist of Kurdish descent, who is best known for his stories of
    village life.

    "The one who breaks away from his land cannot be a novelist," said
    Kemal, adding that when he lived in Istanbul, or even in Sweden,
    he always wrote about Cukurova.

    The two writers' dedication to their native lands was one of the
    factors that have created a strong bond between them. When Kemal was
    awarded a peace prize at the Frankfurt Book Fair in 1997 and was asked
    who he would like to present the award, he chose Grass. Organizers
    had previously asked the German author to present an award, but he
    always said no.

    "Then they called me and said Gunter Grass had accepted," Kemal said.

    "I gladly accepted the offer," Grass said. "When I read him, I felt
    as I was reading someone from my own native town."

    The two authors have established a strong relationship since that
    time. This week, they came together within the framework of a European
    Union project called Turkish Literature in Europe, European Literature
    in Turkey.

    Both writers have been described as sharing the common characteristic
    of being the voice of the victims, of the disadvantaged and members
    of minority groups. Yet they also share another commonality that is
    less known to the public, said Osman Okkan, the spokesman for the
    Turkish-German Cultural Forum who moderated the panel. Kemal's native
    language is Kurdish and Grass speaks a language not known by many;
    his mother is of Kashubian origin, part of a group of Slavic people
    distinct from the Poles.

    Perhaps it was this specific background that has made both authors so
    vocal in their views about protecting the rights of minorities. "An
    author should voice the views of the minority, not those of the
    majority," Grass, who is in his early 80s, said in response to a
    question. The German writer was vocal in his criticisms of both Europe
    and Turkey, and careful in his choice of words - he avoided using
    the controversial term "genocide" in talking about the events of 1914.

    Grass also questioned the credibility of the European Union's
    membership criteria, arguing that even some European countries do not
    meet the 27-nation bloc's requirements. "Which country is included
    in Europe and which is not?" he asked. "Some countries do not meet
    EU criteria. Would today's Italy under Berlusconi be an EU member? We
    need to question that."

    Coming from a country that is known to oppose Turkey's accession to
    the EU, Grass caused a stir in Germany - and won fame in Turkey - when
    he wrote a book based on his experiences posing as a Turkish worker.

    "We need to learn to deal with problems," he said, adding that it is
    not good to point fingers at each other.

    Just as Germany did, Turkey should learn how to deal with its past,
    Grass added.

    "We are not proud of our past. But the crimes committed by past
    generations are not accepted by the generations that follow," he
    said, adding that Turkey should learn from this experience in dealing
    with the World War I-era killings of Armenians at the hands of the
    Ottomans. "Turkey should not turn a blind eye to the massacres of
    1914. A million and a half people murdered should not be ignored."

    Saying that the effect of literature in changing society "makes itself
    felt very slowly," Grass called on citizens to take an active role,
    noting the mass protests held in Turkey in response to the murder of
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

    Grass confessed that it has been extremely difficult for him to accept
    the documented deaths in his country, saying many countries such
    as France, Britain, the Netherlands and Belgium also have terrible
    events in their pasts.
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