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ANKARA: Armenian-American Writer's Soul Back In Turkey

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  • ANKARA: Armenian-American Writer's Soul Back In Turkey

    ARMENIAN-AMERICAN WRITER'S SOUL BACK IN TURKEY

    Turkish Daily News
    October 4, 2008 Saturday
    Turkey

    The Turkish Culture Ministry has announced plans to open a museum in
    honor of Pullitzer Prize-winning Armenian-American writer William
    Saroyan. The museum will be located in the southeastern province
    of Bitlis, where Saroyan's family lived before migrating to the
    United States at the beginning of the 20th century. Saroyan is being
    commemorated on the 100th anniversary of his birth with various events
    in different parts of the world, including a UNESCO declaration of
    2008 as the year of Saroygan. "The search in Bitlis continues on where
    exactly the house that belonged to Saroyan's family is located. If we
    could discover where it is located, we will convert it into a museum
    in early 2009," said Ertugrul Gunay, the Turkish culture minister.

    Speaking to the Turkish Daily News, Gunay said Turkey had not
    been sensitive about its artists so far and had not shown enough
    interest in the places where they lived. "We will eliminate such
    perceptions. Changes will be introduced in the cultural realm in
    Turkey in 2009," he said. Saroyan was born in Fresno, California. He
    grew up listening to stories being told by family members about
    Anatolia, the land where his ancestors settled. Saroyan attracted the
    attention of world literary critics with his first work. In 1939,
    he won the Pulitzer Prize, immediately after publishing his second
    book, "The Trouble with Tigers." The Turkish Daily News conducted an
    interview with Rober Koptas, editor-in-chief of Aras Publications,
    which publishes the Saroyan collection, and Aziz Gokdemir, editor of
    the collection.

    For Gokdemir, a Saroyan museum in Bitlis is a dream that will not
    come true. "We just could not bear it if we knew the total number of
    valuable artifacts that Turkey has lost so far. The West has protected
    what Turkey would have lost. We just could not grasp the value of
    artists like Saroyan when they were alive. I do not believe in any
    possibility of opening a museum in memory of Saroyan," he said. "In
    Turkey, there exists a widely held prejudice against the Armenian
    Diaspora. We aim to put an end to such a rigid prejudice with the
    Saroyan collection we publish," said Koptas. "On the one hand, there
    is a diaspora,' the existence of which depends on its anti-Turkey
    stance. On the other hand, there are those diaspora members, such as
    Saroyan, who longed for Anatolia throughout their lives," he said.

    Anatolia drops from Saroyan's pen

    "Saroyan's writing is warm. He is not didactic, not a message-driven
    writer. He is like one of the ordinary people of Anatolia," said
    Gokdemir, adding that the United States was home to many Armenian
    writers similar to Saroyan. "Armenians carried the spirit of Anatolia
    to Fresno, California, Watertown and Glendal when they had to leave
    it. Warm and friendly people live thousands of miles away from us,"
    he said.

    There are a considerable number of Saroyan experts of Armenian descent
    in the world, but Aras Publications employs Gokdemir as translator and
    editor of Saroyan's books because of his highly successful Saroyan
    analyses, which have appeared in most prominent literature journals
    in Turkey.

    Saroyan before Bitlis, Saroyan after Bitlis Saroyan was told numerous
    stories about Anatolia when he was a child. He came to Turkey in the
    early 1960s to pay his first visit to Bitlis, a southeastern province
    where his family had settled before they migrated to America at the
    beginning of the 20th century.

    Gokdemir said the journey to Bitlis had a strong effect on Saroyan's
    writing. "If we want to study Saroyan, we should divide his life
    into two eras: Saroyan before Bitlis, and Saroyan after Bitlis,"
    he said, adding that the author's works written after his visit to
    Bitlis contain a deep feeling of melancholia.

    Gokdemir said his favorite Saroyan story was "Summer Joy" (Yaz Nesesi).

    "Whenever I read that story, I cry like a child," he said.

    "I hope humans will not have to face such pain in life anymore. I hope
    no one will ever have to leave the land where they live," he added.

    Koptas, on the other hand, said the Saroyan series was one of the most
    prominent collections of Aras Publications. Six books by Saroyan have
    greeted Turkish readers so far.

    Koptas's favorite story by Saroyan is "Cowards are Brave" (Odlekler
    Cesurdur). "I think this world needs not heroes but good-hearted
    cowards," he said.
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