Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey Illustrates Deep Cultural Divide

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

  • Turkey Illustrates Deep Cultural Divide

    TURKEY ILLUSTRATES DEEP CULTURAL DIVIDE
    by Rebeca Chapa

    San Antonio Express-News
    September 21, 2006 Thursday
    State&Metro Edition

    Today, in a Turkish courtroom, writer Elif Shafak will go on trial
    for "insulting Turkishness" through the use of dialogue in her latest
    novel, "The Bastard of Istanbul."

    In the book, whose English version will be released next year, a
    fictional character refers to the historical killings of more than
    a million Armenians as "genocide."

    "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!" one of her characters says.

    The death of 1.5 million Armenians nearly a century ago has been a
    long-standing gash in Turkey's history. Armenians portray the event
    as genocide while Turkish nationalists call the deaths the unintended
    casualties of war.

    Shafak, a French-born Turkish citizen, is a professor of Turkish
    studies at the University of Arizona. The writer, who bore a child
    on Saturday, is expected to appear in the Istanbul courtroom today.

    If convicted, she could face up to three years in prison for violating
    Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code.

    Keep in mind, these are fictional characters saying made-up dialogue.

    Shafak's trial comes less than a year after another highly publicized
    Turkish trial, that of writer Orhan Pamuk. In an interview, Pamuk
    said that Armenians and Kurds were killed "in these lands and nobody
    but me dares talk about it."

    For his outspoken statements, Pamuk was subjected to regular harassment
    during his trial. Charges against him were dropped early this year,
    but the assault on expression continues to be worrisome.

    More than 60 cases have been brought against writers and artists
    in Turkey, including a case against a newspaper editor for writing
    articles about the Armenian diaspora.

    Politically, Turkey is walking a fine line as it seeks entry to the
    European Union. Cases such as Shafak's could seriously threaten its
    admission. In July, Olli Rehn, the EU's commissioner for enlargement,
    issued a statement urging Turkey to amend Article 301 in order to
    guarantee freedom of expression, a criterion for admission.

    Ironically, the law cuts both ways.

    Supporters believe it limits dissemination of a controversial past,
    thereby avoiding a negative perception as Turkey bucks for entry.

    Opponents say the law's very existence indicates oppression in Turkey,
    which is equally harmful to admission.

    Despite a growing aversion to respectful dialogue and a tendency toward
    staunch stances in this country, freedom of expression remains a
    cornerstone of our democracy. To that end, the United States should
    simultaneously encourage Turkish authorities to reconsider the
    restrictive 2005 law and support its conditional entry into the EU.

    It may be diplomatically difficult.

    The U.S.-Turkey alliance has soured since 2003, when Turkey denied the
    use of its territories as a launching pad for attacks on neighboring
    Iraq. Chaos is now brewing along that border, as the Kurdistan Workers'
    Party, or PKK, has long invaded southeastern Turkey from bases in Iraq.

    The group, classified as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the EU
    and the United States, has been fighting for Kurdish autonomy for more
    than 20 years. With tensions in Iraq already high, the United States
    has warned the Turkish government not to overstep its boundaries in
    fighting the PKK.

    With the war in Iraq in its fourth year, we are increasingly reminded
    of the dilemma in assuming that a Western vision of democracy --
    whatever the motivation -- can be stenciled onto a different country
    with different people who share a different history.

    Both Shafak's trial and the ongoing Turkish conflict are reminders
    of the historical and cultural elements of the broader war in the
    Middle East.
Working...
X