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  • Against Silence

    AGAINST SILENCE
    Shelley Walia

    The Hindu, India
    Nov 5 2006

    With Orhan Pamuk, the site of his creativity is also the location of
    political protest.

    LIKE a true postmodernist rebel, Orhan Pamuk, sits in his flat in the
    majestic beauty of his Istanbul, a city known for its amalgamation
    of East and West, poised on the crossroads of Asia and Europe. He
    represents the interface between cultures, a diasporic persona in a
    rigid Islamic society struggling with the pangs of shedding its dark
    Ottoman past

    Orhan Pamuk, infamous for his trial on account of his criticism
    of the Armenian genocide, and now acquitted of criminal charges
    of denigrating his country where it is taboo to speak against the
    State, recently won the 2006 Nobel Prize in Literature for both the
    undeniably high quality of his artistic achievement as well as his
    awareness of the threat of terror and State injustice. Pamuk explains
    that a mere desire to discuss Turkish politics spurred the State to
    declare him anti-nationalist. In his trial he claimed that he loved
    his country and would never do anything to insult it. "But what if
    it is wrong?" he said. "Right or wrong, do people not have the right
    to express their ideas peacefully?"

    Lack of understanding

    Pamuk does not find it necessary to put the blame squarely on Islam
    for the crisis in his life: "It is neither Islam nor even poverty
    itself that directly engenders support for terrorists whose ferocity
    and ingenuity are unprecedented in human history; it is, rather, the
    crushing humiliation that has infected Third World countries. And
    for this the West has to be held responsible because it has failed
    to comprehend the shame and the humiliation that has fallen upon the
    poor nations. Hot-headed military operations and wars will only take
    us away from the order of peace."

    However, to say that Pamuk's involvement with contemporary politics
    is the reason behind the Nobel Prize is to ignore the literary value
    and the throbbing romantic energy of his creative work As he says
    in a recent interview, "Look, I'm a writer. I try to focus on these
    issues not from the point of view of a statesman but from the point
    of view of a person who tries to understand the pain and suffering
    of others... I think literature can approach these problems because
    you can go into more shady areas, areas where no one is right and
    no one has the right to say what is right. That's what makes writing
    novels interesting. It's what makes writing a political novel today
    interesting."

    Pamuk has spoken again. And this time against the French government
    which issued an Act of Parliament that would consider any denial of
    the massacre of the Kurds and Armenians as unlawful. This, according
    to Pamuk, is an infringement of the fundamental right to freedom of
    speech: "The French tradition of critical thinking influenced and
    taught me a lot," he said. "This decision, however, is a prohibition
    and didn't suit

    the libertarian nature of the French tradition."

    Facing the past

    He has, throughout his writing career, endeavoured to break the culture
    of silence and oppression in his country, revoking the genocidal
    record of Turkish history and the State's assault on constitutional
    freedom. For Pamuk, politics based on reason is essential for
    challenging the status quo. Protest for him is intrinsic to civil
    society; we live in a world that is constantly changing, and it is
    by protest that the laws are changed.

    The nature and function of a writer like Pamuk can be debated only if
    his critical politics are related to his function and his position
    in society. All radical work for the transformation of society so
    as to put an end to oppression has to be carried on at the site of
    his creative activity. Politics, as is often thought, does not only
    operate in Pamuk's writings, but is central to his larger concerns.

    He has always stepped beyond the private, academic, or technical
    terms to the "public sphere", and to the sphere of the citizen rather
    than that of the narrow specialist. It is here that his intervention
    becomes as political inside his creative work as real politics is
    outside. As Vaclav Havel writes, "You do not become a `dissident'
    just because you decide one day to take up this most unusual career.

    You are thrown into it by your personal sense of responsibility,
    combined with a complex set of external circumstances. You are cast
    out of the existing structures and placed in a position of conflict
    with them. It begins as an attempt to do your work well, and ends
    with being branded an enemy of society." Such a form of commitment to
    oneself, to memory and to humanity is visible in Pamuk's novels and
    his ideology that makes him the much-needed bridge between the West
    and the East, between an ancient Islamic culture and the contemporary
    dream of an economically prosperous nation.

    Spaces of imagination

    His sensational novel The Black Book concerns itself with the history
    of Turkey and takes up the polemics on the idea of a nation and
    Turkey's identity within the context of its imperial past. Like The
    White Castle, which was translated into English in 1985, My Name is
    Red and Snow also juxtapose tradition and modernity, continuity and
    change in a style that blends mystery, romance, and philosophical
    puzzles with the tension between East and West, the encounters
    between Europe and the turbulent Ottoman Empire, and the inherent
    European aspiration of a Muslim nation: "A Turkish novelist who
    fails to imagine the Kurds and other minorities, and who neglects to
    illuminate the black spots in his country's unspoken history, will,
    in my view, produce work that has a hole in its centre."

    Pamuk stresses that "the history of the novel is the history of
    human liberation: by putting ourselves in other's shoes, by using our
    imagination to free ourselves from our own identities, we are able to
    set ourselves free." He, therefore, has always tried to transcend the
    political with all its inherent connections with religious and the
    cultural histories of the land, and reach out to the more artistic
    and aesthetic aspects of his existence. But that is not to say that
    the political is ever absent. This aspect of his writings is evident
    from his explanation: "But later, as I began to get known both inside
    and outside of Turkey, people began to ask political questions and
    demand political commentaries. Which I did because I sincerely felt
    that the Turkish state was damaging democracy, human rights and the
    country. So I did things outside of my books."

    Modern landscapes

    His most political novel, Kar (Snow, 2002) is a story about Ka's
    investigation into a mass suicide by girls who have been ordered not
    to wear headscarves, a reminder of Ataturk's ban of (on) headscarves.

    Though Ka is killed, he regains his poetic creativity, which according
    to Pamuk, is symbolic of human resistance and the need to share new
    ideas with the world. As Margaret Atwood writes about this novel in
    the New York Times Book Review: "The twists of fate, the plots that
    double back on themselves, the trickiness, the mysteries that recede
    as they're approached, the bleak cities, the night prowling, the sense
    of identity-loss, the protagonist in exile - these are vintage Pamuk,
    but they're also part of the modern literary landscape."

    Pamuk elucidates in A New Life a poetic rendition of his theory of
    fiction: "The challenge of a historical novel is not to render a
    perfect imitation of the past, but to relate history with something
    new, enrich and change it with imagination and sensuousness of
    personal experience." Writing makes possible the vision of making
    real a painless world. He has created literature out of despair
    and neurosis. The past has to be remembered and any amount of
    Westernisation cannot justify the forgetting of one's history. "If
    you try to repress memories, something always comes back," reiterates
    Pamuk. "I'm what comes back."
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