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Azerbaijan: Writer Buckling Under Strain of Literary Controversy

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  • Azerbaijan: Writer Buckling Under Strain of Literary Controversy

    EurasiaNet.org, NY
    Feb 14 2013


    Azerbaijan: Writer Buckling Under Strain of Literary Controversy

    February 14, 2013 - 2:00pm, by Shahin Abbasov


    The furor that erupted over his unconventional take on Azerbaijan in
    the early 1990s is taking a toll on writer Akram Aylisli.

    Aylisli's latest work, titled `Stone Dreams,' shuns a nationalist
    viewpoint on events, in particular the conflict between Azerbaijan and
    Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh territory, offering instead a
    generally sympathetic portrayal of Armenians. Its publication last
    December has touched off a full-throttle hate campaign against
    Aylisli, a campaign somewhat reminiscent of that unleashed against
    Salman Rushdie following the 1988 release Satanic Verses. Aylisli,
    along with family members, have been subjected to official
    retribution. And, in the most notorious instance of hate-mongering,
    Hafiz Haciyev, head of the pro-government Muasir Musavat Party,
    offered a 10,000 manat (roughly $12,000) bounty to anyone who cut off
    the author's ear.

    In a February 13 interview with EurasiaNet.org, Aylisli, appearing
    exhausted and jittery, said that the harassment, which he described as
    the most difficult experience in his life, is forcing him to consider
    leaving Azerbaijan. The police, he added, have taken no measures to
    protect his family or him from possible physical attacks.

    `I do not want to leave Azerbaijan. I am 75,' he explained. `I didn't
    decide yet, but it looks like I will have to ask for political asylum
    abroad. It is sad.'

    Aylisli's case has raised the question of whether a country like
    Azerbaijan is capable of reconciling sensitive episodes in its history
    with a constitutional guarantee for freedom of speech. For many in
    Azerbaijan, the answer appears to be no. But some aren't willing to
    sacrifice free speech at the altar of national pride.

    While few agree with Aylisli's negative group portrayal, in which
    ethnic Azeris harshly treat ethnic Armenians in Baku during the
    Karabakh conflict, local human-rights activists, representatives of
    opposition parties and ordinary social-network users are speaking out
    strongly against the anti-Aylisli campaign.

    Staging fake funerals for Aylisli's books, burning his works, banning
    his plays and urging people to cut off his ear `is not less harmful
    for the country' than the novel's `deceitful lampoon' of Azerbaijan's
    past, argued popular detective writer Chingiz Abdullayev, president of
    the Azerbaijani PEN-Club. `People should not behave this way,' he
    added.

    A small group of young Azerbaijani writers rallied in support of
    Aylisli on February 3 to reaffirm his constitutional right to write
    what he wants, no matter what it may be. `No one can impose a ban on a
    writer, pressure him,' commented 27-year-old writer Gunel Movlud. `It
    is censorship otherwise.'

    The 2012 extradition to Azerbaijan and subsequent official pardon of
    Lt. Ramil Safarov for the murder of an Armenian army officer in
    Hungary was the event that pushed Aylisli to publish his novel, which,
    he said, contains stories `based on real life.'

    `When I saw the crazy reaction and the artificial fueling of hatred
    between Armenians and Azerbaijanis, which went beyond any borders, I
    decided to publish my novel,' he said.

    A writer, he insisted, has the right to express his thoughts in his
    novels without their being considered a traitor.

    But President Ilham Aliyev has treated him as just that. Adding fuel
    to the hate-campaign, the president stripped Aylisli of the title of
    `people's writer,' and of his pension. Meanwhile, Aylisli's son, Najaf
    Naibov, was fired from a senior position in the State Customs
    Committee, and his wife, Galina, was dismissed as the head of a
    children's public library.

    Various members of parliament have lambasted Aylisli's work as
    treasonous and have called for him to be stripped of his citizenship
    -- even though the Azerbaijani constitution bars such a measure.
    Others go still further. `Some MPs accuse me of being an `Armenian,''
    Aylisli recounted. `Is it a crime to be Armenian? It is racism.'

    On February 13, Sheikh-ul-Islam Haji Allahshukur Pashazade, head of
    the Caucasus Muslims Office, a government ally, tossed another dart by
    denouncing Aylisli as an `infidel.'

    The fact that the campaign against Aylisli gained steam only in recent
    weeks -- over a month after Stone Dreams appeared in the December 2012
    issue of the Russian-language literary journal Druzhba Narodov - leads
    some Baku observers to believe that it is intended to distract popular
    attention from recent, violent protests in Baku and the regional town
    of Ismayilli.

    A few suggest official displeasure is rooted in Aylisli's less than
    flattering depiction of Heydar Aliyev, the incumbent leader's deceased
    father. Officially, Heydar Aliyev is venerated as the chief architect
    of independent Azerbaijan. `Stone Dreams' features the late president,
    who headed Azerbaijan's Communist Party for nearly 20 years during the
    late Soviet era, but refers to him only as `the master.'

    Regardless of whether Aylisli remains in Azerbaijan or leaves, more
    controversy could be in the works. Stone Dreams is part of an
    envisioned trilogy, the first installment, titled Yemen, was published
    in 1990. The last installment, tentatively titled Big Traffic Jam,
    hasn't been officially published. But Aylisli, seeking feedback, has
    distributed a limited number of drafts in Baku among friends and
    colleagues. He declined to discuss the novel's focus, but reiterated
    his intent to publish it. A person who has seen a draft told
    EurasiaNet.org that the story examines `crimes' allegedly committed
    during the 1993-2003 presidency of Heydar Aliyev.

    Publication of a clear-cut denunciation of the elder Aliyev could pose
    an even more severe free-speech test for Azerbaijan than that
    generated by Stone Dreams. One literary son of the Caucasus, the
    bestselling Russia-based author Boris Akunin, had some words of
    advice. `[M]y dear Azerbaijanis,' he wrote in his blog, `Don't you
    know that the state ... cannot win in a war with a writer?'

    Editor's note: Shahin Abbasov is a freelance reporter based in Baku.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66556

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