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Orhan Pamuk of Turkey wins Peace Prize in Germany

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  • Orhan Pamuk of Turkey wins Peace Prize in Germany

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    June 22, 2005, Wednesday
    16:21:52 Central European Time

    Orhan Pamuk of Turkey wins Peace Prize in Germany

    Frankfurt


    Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk, 53, has won this year's German Book
    Trade Peace Prize for his literary work in which "Europe and Islamic
    Turkey find a place for one another", the prize committee announced
    in Frankfurt on Wednesday.

    Pamuk, whose novels including "Snow", "My Name is Red" and "The White
    Castle" have been translated into 34 languages, lives in Istanbul.

    The annual prize, handed over on the last day of the Frankfurt Book
    Fair, is for writing that contributes to reconciliation. It is funded
    by the Boersenverein, Germany's association of publishers and
    booksellers, and is worth 25,000 euros (30,250 dollars) this year.

    The prize committee said Pamuk had pursued "the traces of the West in
    the East, and of the East in the West" and was committed to a notion
    of culture based on knowing and respecting other people.

    Last year's winner was Hungarian author Peter Esterhazy and the 2003
    winner was Susan Sontag of the United States. This year's award
    ceremony will take place in Frankfurt on October 23.

    The committee said Pamuk was a supporter of human rights and minority
    rights and stood up to be counted on Turkish political issues,
    despite encountering the hatred of Turkish nationalists.

    This year there was controversy in Turkey after he spoke in sorrow of
    the killing of a million Armenians in Turkey in 1915-1916. In
    response several nationalist politicians demanded that Pamuk's books
    be burned.

    The New York Times named his novel "Snow" one of the best non-U.S.
    books of 2004. The author, whose books are mainly read by younger
    Turks, comes from an affluent family and trained in architecture and
    journalism.

    Germany's state minister of the arts, Christina Weiss, praised Pamuk
    as an author who held up a mirror to the west by making the conflicts
    within Turkish society more visible.

    Faruk Sen, director of the Essen Centre for Turkish Studies in
    Germany, said the choice was "excellent", adding, "That may make
    waves." He said it was important that Turkey have critical authors,
    but the prize was also a recognition of Turkey itself. dpa jbp sc sr
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