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Novelist On Trial For The 'Crimes' Of Her Characters

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  • Novelist On Trial For The 'Crimes' Of Her Characters

    NOVELIST ON TRIAL FOR THE 'CRIMES' OF HER CHARACTERS
    by Suna Erdem

    The Times (London)
    September 19, 2006, Tuesday

    Elif Shafak is the latest writer to be charged with "insulting
    Turkishness". They want to control art, she tells Suna Erdem.

    UNCLE DIKRAN, Grandma Shushan and Auntie Zeliha may be figments of
    the novelist Elif Shafak's imagination but they will all be in the
    dock this week in a bizarre trial that has become a test for Turkey's
    European ambitions and commitment to freedom of speech.

    Mrs Shafak, 34, has been charged under Article 301 of the penal code
    with "insulting Turkishness" through the fictional dialogue in her
    bestselling novel The Bastard of Istanbul, about the intertwined
    history of a Turkish and an Armenian-American family.

    The European Union, with which Turkey began accession talks last
    year, has been a strong critic of the law and is expected to condemn
    curbs on freedom of expression in a report on October 24. Turkey's
    parliament is holding an emergency meeting this week on further
    EU-related legal reform, but the Government has so far failed to
    act on Article 301 -which was also used to put Orhan Pamuk, the
    country's most famous novelist, on trial -pointing out that cases
    end in acquittal anyway. That is not the point, Mrs Shafak says.

    "I think the biggest worry regarding Article 301 is not that it puts
    people in prison but it silences them." Even the briefest of Article
    301 court cases has proved a platform for harassment of top writers
    but for Mrs Shafak it is even worse. She gave birth to a baby girl
    last Saturday and, since the court refused her request for the hearing
    to be postponed, she must now either excuse herself through a medical
    report or leave a five-day-old baby to go to court on Thursday.

    Charging fictional characters "is a new step", Mrs Shafak said. "It
    means they are now trying to control art, and this is very alarming
    because in Turkey -a country that witnessed three military takeovers
    -art and literature had always been autonomous."

    The crime committed by her characters is to refer to the taboo subject
    of mass Armenian killings in Ottoman Turkey in 1915. The Armenians
    call it genocide, Turks say large-scale wartime deaths. The fictional
    Uncle Dikran speaks of "Turkish butchers", others talk about being
    "slaughtered like sheep" and claim all Turks are either nationalist
    or ignorant. More absurdly, some Turkish characters are charged over
    routine gripes about the country.

    The accusations demonstrate a wilful misreading of the book, in which
    the families are so mixed up that it is hard to take sides. Mrs Shafak,
    describing how many contemporary Turks are descended from minorities
    in a multicultural Ottoman Empire, is critical both of Turks' amnesia
    regarding events before the country became a republic in 1923 and of
    the Armenian diaspora's apparent obsession with history.

    This trial is not just about her book, she says. The case is part
    of a political effort by extreme nationalists to hamper Turkey's EU
    aspiration by demonstrating how un-European it is.

    As Turkey has undergone almost unprecedented reform over the past few
    years, including a curbing of the powers of the military, it has also
    witnessed rising nationalism. It is surely no coincidence, Mrs Shafak
    says, that early next month Ipek Calislar, a respected journalist,
    will go on trial for "insulting Ataturk", Turkey's revered founder,
    in a book that shared the bestseller spot with The Bastard of Istanbul.

    "We are seeing a clash between those who wholeheartedly support the EU
    process, and others who want to turn this society into a xenophobic,
    isolationist country," she said.

    Kemal Kerincsiz, the lawyer who brought the case against Mrs Shafak,
    is behind several other such cases. He insists that EU membership
    would be a disaster for Turkey, and has claimed that it was not Mrs
    Shafak but some shady imperialists who penned her novel as part of
    a plot to destroy Turkey.

    Mrs Shafak says that many Turkish officials are embarrassed about the
    present situation. She does not believe that she will go to jail and
    is certain that Article 301 will be reformed. But that does not mean
    that Mr Kerincsiz is harmless. Nor does this exonerate the political
    elite, which is responsible for creating an environment in which he
    can operate.

    THE ARMENIAN QUESTION

    * Turkey has long refused to call the events of 1915 to 1917 a
    genocide. It maintains that the Armenians died in the context of
    the First World War and that the State had no role in planning mass
    extermination

    * Turkey condemned efforts last week by the Cordoban regional
    government in Argentina to instate April 24 as a day to commemorate the
    Armenian genocide of 1915, reaffirming its insistence that allegations
    of a so-called genocide were baseless

    * Established a year ago, Article 301 makes it illegal to publish
    material that "denigrates Turkishness" and the institutions of the
    State -the Government, the judiciary, the military or the state
    security apparatus. Under the law, doing so from outside Turkey is
    sanctioned more severely, increasing one's jail sentence by a third

    * About 60 publishers, journalists and writers are being prosecuted
    currently under the law, which has raised considerable controversy
    as Turkey negotiates membership of the European Union
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