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  • Under Fire, But Staying True To Art

    UNDER FIRE, BUT STAYING TRUE TO ART
    Joy E. Stocke

    Philadelphia Inquirer, PA
    Oct 15 2006

    Thursday, it was announced that Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk had won
    the 2006 Nobel Prize for Literature. When I interviewed Pamuk on the
    Columbia University Campus last year, rumors were circulating that
    he had been short-listed for the Nobel. But he was already focused
    on his new memoir, Istanbul: Memories and the City, which was still
    in galleys.

    The day before, an advance copy of Istanbul had helped me stay awake
    for the 11-hour flight home from that city. We'd originally been
    scheduled to meet at his flat overlooking the Bosphorus. But before I
    was to leave for Istanbul, Pamuk phoned. He spoke beautiful English,
    with an accent inflected with the rhythm of an upper-class Turkish
    background.

    "I have left Turkey for personal reasons," he said. But something
    in his voice made me doubt those words. Pamuk is a lightning rod in
    Turkey, writing candidly about ethnicity, race, and Ottoman history,
    subjects that have long been considered taboo. I was, and still am,
    thrilled by his work. I am often transported by his dark sense of
    humor, and unflinching eye in the face of political and cultural
    truths.

    In February 2005, Pamuk had spoken to a Swiss journalist, expressing
    his opinion that during the final years of the Ottoman Empire,
    100,000 Armenians and 30,000 Kurds were killed in an effort to rid the
    empire of its Armenian population, addressing what might be the most
    sensitive subject in Turkey, the charge that the first genocide of the
    20th century took place there. Even as Turkey works toward acceptance
    into the European Union, the government has vehemently denied charges
    of genocide. (Last week, when France passed a law against denial of
    the Armenian genocide, it touched off demonstrations in both France
    and Turkey.)

    Pamuk told me that when he spoke to that Swiss journalist, he had
    asked that his remarks remain off the record. They were printed.

    Death threats came thick and fast. Eventually Pamuk was charged with
    crimes against Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code. His crime:
    insulting Turkishness. If he were proven guilty, he would be sentenced
    to prison. (Charges were dropped on Jan. 22.) At the urging of friends,
    he sought refuge in New York City.

    Something stays in my mind about the day we finally met in a large
    ballroom with a piano on one end, a table and two chairs at the
    other. The man accused of crimes against the state sat down at the
    piano and played. As music filled the cavernous room, his actions
    made it clear that our interview was to concern art.

    "My all-consuming passion," he said, "is to write the very best books
    I am capable of writing." He spoke about his new memoir.

    "First of all, I did not intend to write a book about Istanbul,"
    he said. "As my agent was shopping around my novel Snow, I said,
    'I have so many articles about Istanbul, let's put them together and
    sell that book, too.'

    "Publishers were enthusiastic," he said, "And I thought, 'I can't
    give these guys who are so honest and strong in their support a mere
    collection of articles. I will give them a new book.' I stopped
    everything on my current novel, The Museum of Innocence, which is
    more ambitious than anything else I've written. I thought I would
    write the memoir in sixth months. It took a year. I worked 12 hours
    a day, just reading and working. My life, because of so many things,
    was in a crisis. But every day I would wake up and have a cold shower
    and sit down and remember and write."

    Opening a notebook filled with dense handwriting, he added, "A writer
    is nothing if he cannot be true to his work."

    I'm reminded of the first sentence of one of Pamuk's less-known novels,
    The New Life, a sentence that sums up what Pamuk's work has meant to
    so many: "I read a book one day, and my whole life was changed."

    For the full text of Joy E. Stocke's interview with Orhan Pamuk,
    see http://go.philly.com/pamuk
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