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Commentary: Literature matters in Turkey

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  • Commentary: Literature matters in Turkey

    New Statesman
    May 8, 2006

    Commentary

    BYLINE: Alev Adil


    Literature matters in Turkey - really matters. Just about every
    Turkish writer with an international reputation has been persecuted
    by the state, from the nation's greatest poet, Nazim Hikmet, who died
    in exile in Moscow, to Orhan Pamuk. Even the prime minister, Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan, did time for misquoting poetry.

    So perhaps it's no surprise that the controversial columnist and
    novelist Perihan Magden is to be prosecuted, too. Magden's
    bestselling latest novel Two Girls, the story of an intense lesbian
    affair, was recently published in the UK to acclaim. Writers such as
    Pamuk and Magden are among Turkey's most convincing ambassadors as
    the country bids to join the EU, not because they peddle any
    political agenda, but because they articulate the complex and
    compelling hybridity of modern Turkey. You'd think they would be
    lauded for providing a fresh vision of their homeland, but instead
    Turkey seems intent on prosecuting its writers.

    Magden will stand trial on 7 June, charged with "alienating the
    people from military service". In a column in Aktuel in December last
    year, she drew attention to the case of Mehmet Tarhan, a
    conscientious objector imprisoned for refusing to do military
    service. Magden suggested that a modern country with ambitions to
    enter the EU should respect the rights of conscientious objectors and
    provide non-violent options such as community service. For this she
    faces three years' imprisonment.

    Magden isn't alone. Around 60 writers, publishers and journalists
    have been before the courts in Turkey in the past year, many charged
    under Article 301 of the penal code, which states that "a person who
    explicitly insults being a Turk, the Republic or Turkish Grand
    National Assembly, shall be imposed a penalty of imprisonment for a
    term of six months to three years". Recent cases include Hrant Dink,
    editor of the Armenian-Turkish-language weekly Agos; the publishers
    Ragip Zarakolu and Fatih Tas; and the journalists Ismet Berkan, Murat
    Belge, Haluk Sahin, Hasan Cemal and Erol Katircioglu. Turkey amended
    its penal code last year, in an attempt to remove human-rights
    anomalies from its law. But the EU's enlargement commissioner, Olli
    Rehn, has said that such trials have cast a shadow over Turkey's
    application. Perhaps that's just what Magden's prosecutors want.

    The plight of Turkey's writers reflects clashes in the wider culture.
    The country's identity is in flux as it moves into the 21st century,
    with capitalism, minority rights, feminism, Islam, secularism,
    socialism and multiculturalism coexisting uneasily. Magden is a
    feisty and courageous woman. She's a playful writer, but that doesn't
    mean she isn't serious. When it comes to freedom of expression,
    there's everything to play for in modern Turkey, but the stakes are
    high and the game is a dangerous one. Without international pressure,
    Magden could end up in jail.
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