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Novelist May Be Jailed for a Character's Remarks

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  • Novelist May Be Jailed for a Character's Remarks

    Novelist May Be Jailed for a Character's Remarks

    The New York Sun
    July 13, 2006 Thursday

    By SHALIN PUNN, Special to the Sun

    Turkey's government is making a second attempt to prosecute one of
    its leading authors after she allegedly "insulted Turkishness" with
    a comment made by a character in her latest novel, "The Bastards
    of Istanbul."

    Elif Shafak will appear in the country's seventh high criminal court
    on charges of violating Article 301 of the Turkish Criminal Code,
    which prohibits the denigration of any aspect of Turkish culture. Ms.
    Shafak's translator, Asli Biscan, and her publisher, Semi Sokemen,
    also face charges.

    In June, similar charges against Ms. Shafak were dismissed after
    a public prosecutor argued that the book is a work of fiction and
    therefore does not represent the views of the author. But the decision
    was overruled by the high court after complaints from a group of
    right-wing lawyers, the Unity of Jurists.

    Ms. Shafak and her publishers have said they are not sure which comment
    in the book is "anti-Turkish." In an e-mail message to her agent in
    America, Marly Rusoff, the author suggested possible paragraphs that
    are being "particularly targeted by the ultranationalists."(The book's
    American publisher, Viking, forwarded the email to The New York Sun.)

    * "I am the grandchild of genocide survivors who lost

    all their relatives to the hands of Turkish butchers in

    1915, but I myself have been brainwashed to deny the

    genocide because I was raised by some Turk named

    Mustapha! What kind of joke is that?"

    "What happened to the millions of Armenians? Assimilated! Massacred!
    Orphaned! Deported! And then forgotten!"

    "Do you think they are going to say: oh yeah, we are sorry we massacred
    and deported you guys, and then contentedly denied it all?"

    The passages refer to the massacre of 1.5 million Armenians by the
    Turkish government in 1915.The massacre is recognized as the first
    genocide of the 20th century, but in the last few decades the Turkish
    government has attempted to deny it ever took place. In May 2005,
    the Turkish justice minister, Cemil Cicek, labeled Turkish historians
    who have said the genocide occurred as "traitors."

    Ms. Shafak is not the first author to be prosecuted by the Turkish
    government for talking about the genocide. In January, author Orhan
    Pamuk was found not guilty of similar charges for comments he made
    to the press.

    An artistic rights organization, PEN American Center, has defended
    Ms. Shafak and other authors. "It is very discouraging that she is
    being prosecuted again by the conservative members of the judiciary,"
    the director of PEN's Freedom to Write program, Larry Siems, said.
    "Writers shouldn't be held responsible for what their characters say
    and do."

    Mr. Siems added that underlying these sorts of trials is a political
    battle within the country over Turkey's bid to join the European
    Union. "The ultranationalist faction is pressing for prosecution as
    a way of embarrassing Turkey in its bid to join the E.U.," he said.
    "Cases like Shafak's and Pamuk's, involving internationally renowned
    authors, point to the fact that they are looking to get international
    headlines."

    The date for Ms. Shafak's trial has not been set, but if convicted
    the author could be sentenced to up to three years in prison. No one
    has ever been convicted under Article 301, but Mr. Siems said Ms.
    Shafak faces a "long and trying" battle.

    "The Bastard of Istanbul" confronts the genocide alongside the issue
    of feminism. It tells the story of an Istanbul-based family and an
    exiled Armenian family who discover that they share a secret that
    links them back to the 1915 genocide.

    The novel, originally written in English, was a best seller on its
    release in Turkey in March. Viking is set to release the book in
    America in early 2007.
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