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ANKARA: Let Their Be Such Cases So All Is Exposed

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  • ANKARA: Let Their Be Such Cases So All Is Exposed

    LET THEIR BE SUCH CASES SO ALL IS EXPOSED
    Opinion by Semih İDİZ

    Turkish Daily News
    Oct 13 2005

    Anti-EU forces that are using the legal system to hound people like
    Orhan Pamuk and Hrant Dink may believe they are doing a great service
    to the country. They don't realize, however, that they are doing the
    opposite. All they are doing in the end is blemishing the good name
    of their country. Whether they have the capacity to understand this
    is another question, of course.

    Looked at from another, and somewhat perverse, perspective, what they
    are doing could actually be considered as being beneficial for the
    country, albeit inadvertently. They are exposing an outmoded system of
    thought for what it is and forcing progressive Turks to rally around
    principles like respect for freedom of thought.

    Take the case of Dink, who received a suspended six-month prison
    sentence for allegedly insulting Turkey. His paper Agos, one of
    Turkey's few Armenian newspapers, has become something of a shrine
    for Turkish intellectuals. A large group of them visited Dink this
    week to express their support for him and to condemn, through their
    show of solidarity, the process under which he and those like him
    can be convicted.

    Of course, such cases are bad for Turkey's EU prospects, as one after
    another of my diplomat friends from Europe like to point out.

    That goes without saying. But it is also a fact that the change in
    mood that has come with this EU perspective -- especially now that
    membership talks are to start -- is helping to separate the good from
    the bad and the ugly in the country.

    Both Pamuk and Dink know that there is little chance of them actually
    being incarcerated at this stage. Even Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul
    thinks as much. Instead, they stand to become folk heroes of another
    kind, which we have always had in this country.

    Take, for example, Atilla Ilhan, the renowned poet and playwright
    who died at the ripe age of 80 on Monday.

    Apart from his literary genius, which touched the hearts of millions of
    Turks from different generations, his claim to fame included being sent
    to prison as a young lad of 16 and being banned -- on the orders of
    the minister for education -- from enrolling in any school in Turkey
    after serving his sentence. What is it that enables a system to do
    this? In Ilhan's case it was that he had sent a poem by Turkey's
    "outlawed poet laureate" -- the determined and unrepentant Marxist
    Nazim Hikmet -- to his girlfriend. Ilhan was sent to prison and banned
    from school for this all those decades ago.

    So Pamuk and Dink join a long list of "literati" who have trodden
    this path, and under much worse circumstances. This is a list that
    includes names such as Kemal Tahir, Fakir Baykurt, Sabahattin Ali
    and, of course, the great Yasar Kemal. In fact, being hounded by the
    system has always been a seal of approval for Turkish intellectuals,
    be they writers, musicians, philosophers or otherwise.

    It is the tradition of these great intellectuals that Turkey has
    as a cultural reservoir that it can tap into in order to show the
    country's best face to the world. Many Turks are engaged in doing
    just that. There is a great explosion in the arts in Turkey today,
    and much of it is not going unnoticed.

    But there also appears to be those who are embedded in the system
    who insist on showing the country's ugly, instead of delightful,
    face to the world. They do so in the name of a nationalism that has
    little to do with true patriotism. So, in a perverse way, one says,
    "Let there be cases like Pamuk and Dink's so that all is exposed."

    Provided, of course, that no one gets hurt -- which certainly was
    not always the case in the past.

    --Boundary_(ID_Hxsj9Zy5fbyB28rQDCQ5Ug)--
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