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New Novel Sparks Trial In Turkey

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  • New Novel Sparks Trial In Turkey

    NEW NOVEL SPARKS TRIAL IN TURKEY

    Edmonton Sun, Canada
    Sept 10 2006

    ISTANBUL, Turkey -- Elif Shafak, one of Turkey's leading authors,
    is about to have a baby - and go on trial.

    The reason for this strange conjunction of joy and foreboding
    is her new novel, which has exposed her to a charge of "insulting
    Turkishness" because it touches on one of the most disputed episodes
    of her country's history - the massacres of Armenians during the
    final years of the Ottoman Empire.

    A University of Arizona literature professor, the 35-year-old Shafak
    divides her time between Tucson and Istanbul. She sought a postponement
    of her trial, set for Sept. 21, until after her first child is born.

    COULD GET THREE YEARS

    She could get three years in prison, though similar trials of other
    Turkish writers have usually folded on technicalities and no one has
    gone to jail.

    For now, she's reflecting on the peculiarities of being tried for
    the words she gave to an Armenian voice in the novel.

    "I think my case is very bizarre because for the first time they are
    trying fictional characters," Shafak told The Associated Press.

    The case has broad ramifications, highlighting a rising wave of
    Turkish nationalism and the whole question of whether Turkey, a Western
    ally and NATO member, should be admitted to the liberal, democratic
    European Union - something the Bush administration supports. Turks
    who long for EU membership worry that trials of writers are setting
    back their cause.

    But nationalists such as Kemal Kerincsiz, one of the lawyers suing
    Shafak, say Turkey shouldn't have to forsake bedrock convictions -
    for instance, that there was never any Armenian genocide - just to
    please Europe.

    Shafak said the law on insulting Turkishness "has been used as a
    weapon to silence many people. ... My case is perhaps just another
    step in this long chain."

    That chain includes Turkey's best known novelist, Orhan Pamuk, and
    dozens of other writers forced to defend themselves against charges of
    "insulting Turkishness."

    NOVEL DEALS WITH TABOOS

    The novel in question, The Bastard of Istanbul, deals with taboos -
    domestic violence and incestuous rape - that are rarely discussed
    in Turkey.

    But it is what her Armenian-American characters say that has landed
    Shafak in court. For instance, this from a man worried about his
    niece being brought up by a Turkish stepfather:

    "What will that innocent lamb tell her friends when she grows up? ...

    (That) 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!"

    Turkey insists the deaths of up to 1.5 million Armenians during forced
    evacuations in the First World War was not a planned genocide but
    the result of the bloody breakup of the Ottoman Empire.
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