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The Colour Of Blood Is Snow

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  • The Colour Of Blood Is Snow

    THE COLOUR OF BLOOD IS SNOW
    Prasenjit Chowdhury Kolkata

    HardNews Magazine, India
    Dec 4 2006

    The trial of Orhan Pamuk, Nobel Laureate for Literature this year,
    was also a trial of his native Turkey, a country unwilling to face
    its hoary past

    Orhan Pamuk's trial was, to the larger world, also a trial of the
    progressiveness of the entire nation of Turkey. Did Pamuk become a
    Nobel Laureate at the expense of exposing his own country's culture
    of silence and oppression, genocidal record and state assault on
    constitutional freedom to the whole world?

    The most famous author from Turkey and Literature Nobel Laureate for
    2006 spoke in February 2005 to the Swiss newspaper Tages-Anzeiger about
    the Turkish genocide of Armenians. He has met with unmitigated hatred
    ever since. His books were burned at a nationalist demonstration in
    Bilecik; a district administrator ordered them to be removed from
    libraries; and his photo was ripped apart at a rally in Isparta
    province. Hurriyet, Turkey's largest newspaper, called Pamuk an
    "abject creature". He was initially forced to flee Turkey because of
    the hate campaign being waged against him. But, then, there was an
    international outcry, with Amnesty International, PEN (the worldwide
    association of writers) and a collection of renowned authors (including
    Gabriel García Marquez, John Updike, Gunter Grass, Salman Rushdie and
    Umberto Eco) denouncing Turkey's actions to curtail Pamuk's right to
    free speech. Pamuk was able to return to his country, possibly because
    of this international outcry, as Turkey was afraid muzzling Pamuk would
    undermine its chances for becoming a member of the European Union (EU).

    Somehow, the trial of Pamuk has become more symbolic than the literary
    oeuvre of a man who brought to light the traditionalist core of a
    society covered over with a thin layer of ill-seated modernity.

    Many commentators have stressed on the politics of the Nobel-Pamuk
    being among the first writers to be put on trial for mentioning
    the Armenian massacres of 1915, etc. Although Pamuk's literary
    excellence is indubitable, his trial got more attention than what he
    does best-writing.

    Pamuk's writings focus on the religiosity and backwardness of
    Turkey and its Ottoman roots, mixed with a harking back to lost
    Islamic glory. They speak, too, of Ataturk's legacy-without his elan
    and vision-that tries to disown its past of the Kurd and Armenian
    massacres, but is keen to be seen as a forward-looking nation-state
    built on the remnants of a decadent empire. One gets most of this in
    his eight novels, the most notable being My Name Is Red, The Black
    Book, The New Life, The White Castle and Istanbul.

    In his explosive comments published early last year, Pamuk was
    quoted as saying, "Thirty thousand Kurds and a million Armenians
    were killed in these lands and nobody but me dares to talk about
    it." This was a not-so-oblique reference to the conflict between the
    Ottoman Armenians and the Empire's armed forces during World War I,
    as well as the hostilities ongoing since the mid-1980s between the
    Turkish Republic and Kurdish separatists. For his remarks on the
    alleged genocide of Kurds and Armenians in Anatolia between 1915 and
    1917, he was charged by Turkish state prosecutors with "insulting
    Turkishness"-a new offence, which carries a prison sentence of up
    to three years as penalty. Pamuk's trial opened on 16th December,
    2005, and was rescheduled for 7th February, 2006-it posed a serious
    question about the secular democratic credentials of Turkey pending
    its entry into the European Union (EU). In <Snow> and <Istanbul>, too,
    Pamuk punched a hole into the fragile nationalist pride by disclosing
    Turkey's hoary past. The lure of gaining access to the EU seemed to
    act for him, as the Turkish government did not want to undermine its
    human rights record; charges of insulting Turkishness against Pamuk
    were dropped over a technicality earlier this year.

    Pamuk has touched the raw nerves of the secular right-wing of Turkey.

    Not that Turkey disputes the deaths of ethnic Armenians in the
    conflicts that saw the Ottoman Empire fall. But it takes care to
    stress that the killings were never part of a genocidal campaign,
    arguing that many ethnic Turks also lost their lives during that
    period. It also repudiates claims that its efforts to contain Kurdish
    separatist uprisings can be classed as genocide. No two issues are
    more loaded-political or divisive-and using any of them as fuel in
    the anti-EU campaign is deemed risible in Turkey.

    Apart from its past, Turkey, in more ways than one, is the brand
    ambassador of the success of a Western-style secular Muslim state and
    is, as such, considered a foil to radical Islam. Pamuk, in his novels,
    writes about the crisis of identity that originates from living in a
    Westernised fashion in a society that is essentially non-Western in
    its ethos. He admits that, following the occidental, secular reforms
    introduced by Kemal Ataturk, Turkish culture was divided into two:
    the modern culture influenced by Europe and the Ottoman Islamic
    heritage. From the 16th to the 19th centuries, all the cultural and
    material wealth of the Middle East flew towards Istanbul. Turkey has
    a highly-educated secular elite class. The founders of the modern
    Republic of Turkey, Pamuk says, "naively" thought that a shortcut to
    modernity-to Europe-would be to forget about the past; they crudely
    suppressed Ottoman Islamic cultural history. "I write modern, some say
    post-modern, avant-garde-inspired novels, which is a Western form, but
    they carry that suppressed Ottoman culture, Islamic culture," he says.

    Do present-day Turks see themselves as the grieving heirs of what
    was once a world empire? In his novel, My Name Is Red, Pamuk paints
    a picture of Istanbul the way it was at the height of Ottoman power.

    The Ottoman period is, for most Europeans and Americans-and perhaps
    for many Turks as well-a poorly-understood time. The Ottoman Turks
    were the last of the great Eastern invaders-a group including the Huns,
    the Arabs and the Mongols that swept into Europe. The images that have
    trickled down are of moustachioed janissaries, pillaging in the name
    of Islam, contrasted with the perceived opulent licentiousness of the
    harem-images that have become synonymous with Islam in much-popular
    thought. A murder mystery and love story, My Name Is Red is set among
    the artistic intrigues of the Islamic miniaturists of the Ottoman court
    in 16th-century Istanbul. It is a rich and complex work, narrated by
    a range of voices that explores the tension between East and West,
    Islam and Christianity.

    Pamuk, therefore, serves as the much-needed bridge between the West
    and the East, between an ancient Islamic culture and the contemporary
    dream of an economically prosperous nation. His memoir, Istanbul,
    for instance, chronicles the pervasive sadness and anger that attended
    the fall of the Ottoman Empire and the wholesale cultural imitation of
    the West. Snow is a tryst between tradition and modernity, the East
    with the West, and the cultural encounters between Europe and the
    turbulent Ottoman Empire, which underlined the European aspiration of
    a Muslim nation. At some point in history, Istanbul was the centre
    of both Islam and Christianity, and Pamuk's work is often about the
    melting of the two.

    Pamuk is looked upon as the West's mouthpiece in the Islamic world,
    which believes that it is this dubious distinction that earned him
    the Nobel. In 1989, when the fatwa issued by Ayatollah Khomeini was
    haunting Rushdie, Pamuk had the guts to rise up in Rushdie's defence.

    To do so, from a Muslim country, called for courage. His refusal to
    accept the Turkish government's award of 'state artist', in protest
    against its repressive role in the treatment of his fellow writers and
    the Kurdish freedom fighters in December 1998, is, again, a comment
    on his political conviction.

    A purveyor of the theme of clashes between civilisations and the role
    of Islam, Pamuk's works give us an understanding of the origins of
    these clashes and the rise of political Islam.

    http://www.hardnewsmedia.com/portal/2006/1 2/684

    --Boundary_(ID_cZFlnelbQRYvsn1oWYeeNQ)--
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