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From Public Enemy To Turkey's National Hero

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  • From Public Enemy To Turkey's National Hero

    FROM PUBLIC ENEMY TO TURKEY'S NATIONAL HERO

    Independent
    Thursday, 16 October 2008
    UK

    Nobel Laureate Orhan Pamuk was persecuted in Turkey. Now he is a
    global ambassador for his homeland. Boyd Tonkin meets him

    The route that takes an enemy of the state on to the global stage
    as a national icon can be as short as the flight from Istanbul to
    Frankfurt. This week, Turkey is enjoying its status as "country of
    honour" at the 2008 Frankfurt Book Fair. The programme, backed by
    the government in Ankara, began with an address by a writer who knows
    that parts of his country's armed forces once plotted to assassinate
    him. Orhan Pamuk may have won the Nobel Prize for literature in 2006,
    but in that year he also survived a prosecution for "insulting Turkish
    identity", under the infamous but now reformed Article 301 of the
    penal code, after he spoke abroad about the Armenian massacres of
    the First World War.

    Pamuk's role at the head of the 300 writers and 100 publishers who
    are showcasing the multi-cultural "colours" of his country's life and
    arts at the book world's annual marketplace highlights the Turkish
    paradox: a country where state and government often pull fiercely in
    opposite directions. Pamuk's swing from ostracised zero to poster-boy
    hero is another odd outcome of the stand-off between the elected,
    soft-Islamic government and the "deep state" - with its strongholds
    in the army and courts.

    In recent months, Turkey has been riveted and outraged by revelations
    from the so-called "Ergenekon" scandal: the latest evidence of the
    army's chronic itch to meddle in politics and society in order to
    protect the secular nationalism of the state founded by Ataturk in
    the ruins of the Ottoman empire. As for the justice system, in July
    the supreme court avoided by one vote a calamitous decision to ban
    the ruling AKP party, which has Islamist roots, for violating the
    constitution. Indeed, six judges out of 11 voted to outlaw a movement
    that won 47 per cent of the vote and a crushing majority in the 2007
    elections - but seven was the majority required.

    The Ergenekon exposés and shocks, such as the murder of a Turkish-
    Armenian newspaper editor Hrant Dink in 2007, have given Pamuk and
    other free-thinking writers a local boost after years of being treated
    as unpatriotic whipping-boys by vindictive courts and their tabloid
    allies. "I think the bad times are over for me now," Pamuk told me in
    his flat overlooking the Bosphorus in central Istanbul. When his new
    novel, The Museum Of Innocence, appeared, he says, "for the first time,
    the Turkish media gave me a sweet reception". Now, the culture ministry
    has sanctioned a Frankfurt Book Fair pitch celebrating the diversity
    of Turkey's cultural heritage - Kurdish, Jewish, Armenian, gypsy
    and Anatolian Muslim. A committee chaired by the radical publisher
    Muge Sokmen has shaped the "country of honour" jamboree. For Pamuk,
    the AKP government's long-held desire to join the EU means it knows
    it has to put on a pluralist face "in order to be more attractive,
    to appear more European".

    Pamuk, like many of Istanbul's most liberal and cosmopolitan
    artists, is not as worried as outsiders about how deep the AKP's
    pluralism really runs. For them, the real threat still lurks among
    the hard-line secular chauvinists in the army and judiciary who have
    for decades banned and jailed authors and journalists. Perihan Magden,
    an outspoken popular columnist, thinks readers see her as a "national
    bitch" as well as a successful novelist.

    She also suffered an Article 301 prosecution in 2005 for defending the
    right of a conscientious objector to refuse military service. "I don't
    see a fundamentalist threat in my country," she says. "I don't think
    the AKP has a hidden agenda. They're not hiding in the closet ready
    to jump out at us." Even if they merely follow the old maxim of "my
    enemy's enemy is my friend", Turkey's frankest authors clearly distrust
    behind-the-scenes ultra-secularists more than upfront, vote-chasing
    Islamic politicians. "I'm not pro-AKP," adds Magden. "I'd never vote
    for them. But as long as they are democratic, I support them."

    Elif Shafak, a best-selling novelist indicted and then cleared in court
    for the Armenian themes of her novel The Bastard Of Istanbul, recently
    joined other writers for lunch with Turkey's AKP president, Abdullah
    Gul. Often treated with suspicion in Europe as a crypto-Islamist,
    he is controversial at home as well, not least because his wife
    wears that most emotive of Turkish garments, the headscarf. For
    Shafak, this dialogue "is symbolic, but in this country, symbols
    are important". Her writing aims to build cultural bridges and to
    show the gulf between Muslim and non-religious Turkey may not run
    as deep as outsiders imagine. In ordinary homes and in the streets,
    "They manage to co-exist," she says. "I feel that's healthy - but
    the elite draw the boundaries more clearly. Real life is more fluid."

    For Frankfurt organiser Muge Sokmen, whose publishing company Metis
    is still "harassed" by cases under Article 301 even after its terms
    were tightened up in April, the fair should at last allow observers
    to see a hybrid Turkey. Above all, she wants to tell the story of a
    people more creatively mixed up than foreign headlines ever admit. "The
    outside world presents Turkey as either black or white. Our colours
    are never seen". This week, Orhan Pamuk is opening the paintbox.

    Dissident Turks: Writers who fell foul of the law

    Perihan Magden

    A columnist for Rakidal newspaper and Aktuel magazine, Magden, 48, has
    published poetry and novels, including The Companion, Messenger Boy
    Murders and Two Girls. In 2006, she was prosecuted but acquitted for
    defending a conscientious objector who refused military service. Last
    year, Magden received a suspended sentence for "defaming" a provincial
    governor.

    Elif Shafak

    The columnist and writer was born to a diplomatic family in 1971 and
    has published seven novels, including The Flea Palace and The Bastard
    Of Istanbul, whose discussion of Turkish-Armenian history provoked
    a court case in 2006 that led to her acquittal on an Article 301
    charge. Her new book is a memoir of surviving post-natal depression.

    --Boundary_(ID_3zDlmPL3lVmQsmcw1sJSzw )--
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