Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Week in Books

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • A Week in Books

    The Independent (London)
    September 15, 2006 Friday

    BOYD TONKIN;
    BOOKS A Week in Books



    What do you call a state that puts a writer on trial because of
    remarks made by a character in a novel, on a charge that carries a
    three-year sentence, and then schedules the hearing for a few days
    before her first baby is due? A likely candidate for swift progress
    towards entry to the European Union? Probably not. Yet, in Turkey,
    the surface story seldom tells the entire truth.

    Elif Shafak, who will face a court in Istanbul on 21 September to
    answer a case of "insulting Turkish identity" under the notorious
    Article 301, knows that better then anyone. Her fiction (The Gaze and
    The Flea Palace are published here by Marion Boyars) sets out with
    passion, wit and courage to break down every Turkish monolith. It
    tells tales within tales, shows layers under layers, to reveal a past
    and present full of fractures that let the daylight in and banish the
    shadows that narrow minds. Fair-haired, fashionably-dressed, raised
    in Spain and France and with a university post in Arizona, Shafak
    nonetheless rescues old Ottoman traditions and Sufi beliefs from the
    disdainful condescension of Ataturk's secular state. I heard her
    speak, compellingly, about her work in London this summer. Any
    country should be saluting such a writer, not menacing a mother-to-be
    with a prison stretch for thought-crimes.

    Armies of her admirers in Turkey share that opinion. Yet the recent
    spate of prosecutions under Article 301 - about 60 in the past year
    or so, most famously against Orhan Pamuk - is being driven by
    right-wing secular nationalists who dread the dilution of "pure"
    Turkishness into a European super-state. Sounds familiar? As Shafak
    says, many lands now host culture-wars between hopeful openness and
    xenophobia.

    So every foreign pundit who howls that such cases should scupper
    Turkey's EU accession talks does the diehards'job for them. They fear
    European influence, and the cosmopolitanism that an author such as
    Shafak brings. Another point that needs endless iteration in today's
    nervy climate is that these artistic persecutions have nothing
    whatever to do with any official "Islamist" agenda. Exactly the
    contrary: Shafak has shown plenty of sympathetic interest in the
    rising appeal of the headscarf and the mosque for educated Turks of
    her (thirtysomething) generation. She carefully calls the
    pro-European government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan a "Muslim democratic"
    regime, not an Islamist one. Like it or not, judicial independence
    (and competing powers) fuels this war against the written word.

    The deeper truth is that Turkey is a political nation at war with
    itself. Shafak likens it to "a tapestry of clashing and coexisting
    forces", where "the government and the state are not one and the
    same". Last autumn, a conference on Armenian history in Istanbul was
    initally banned by the justice minister (it later went ahead) but
    welcomed by the foreign minister. And it is, of course, the
    still-open wound of the Armenians' terrible fate as the Ottoman
    empire broke apart that has led to Shafak's day in court next week.

    In her new novel The Bastard of Istanbul (originally written in
    English - another "insult" in nationalist eyes), an Armenian figure
    whose grandparents died in the massacres regrets having "been
    brainwashed to deny the genocide" of 1915. Invoke the G-word with
    reference to the mass death of Armenians, and every warning light in
    the Turkish "deep state" will glow a wrathful red. The outcome is a
    Satanic Verses-style furore in which fictional creatures stand
    accused of a secular blasphemy. Shafak drily points out that: "As
    much as I believe in their vivacity, my Armenian characters cannot go
    to court to be tried under Article 301." So she must, with - I hope -
    the support of every reader and writer who cherishes the freedom she
    upholds.
Working...
X