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Turkish Publisher Ragip Zarakolu Honored By PEN

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  • Turkish Publisher Ragip Zarakolu Honored By PEN

    TURKISH PUBLISHER RAGIP ZARAKOLU HONORED BY PEN
    By Doris V. Cross

    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2012/05/17/turkish-publisher-ragip-zarakolu-honored-by-pen/
    Posted on May 17, 2012

    NEW YORK - At the annual Literary Gala held by PEN on May 1 at the
    Museum of Natural History, Istanbul publisher Ragip Zarakolu was the
    recipient of the annual Association of American Publishers' Jeri Laber
    International Freedom to Publish Award. Peter Balakian, whose memoir,
    Black Dog of Fate: An American Son Uncovers His Armenian Past, was
    published in a Turkish edition by Zarakolu's Belge Publishing House,
    presented the award to his two children, Seref and Zerrin Holle.

    Zarakolu, who has been repeatedly jailed for challenging free
    expression restrictions in his country, and was recently released
    pending trial, was not well enough to make the trip from Istanbul.

    In addition to Zarakolu, Eskinder Nega, one of Ethiopia's most
    courageous journalists, was honored with the Barbara Goldsmith Freedom
    to Write Award. Nega is currently in prison and standing trial on
    manufactured terrorism charges. He could face the death penalty if
    convicted. Nega's wife, Serkalem Fasil, has been jailed herself for
    her journalism and traveled from Addis Ababa to accept the award on
    her husband's behalf "at a time when freedom of expression and press
    freedoms are at the lowest point in Ethiopia."

    This year's PEN Literary Service Award was conferred on Edward Albee
    as "a writer whose critically-acclaimed work illuminates the human
    condition in original and powerful ways."

    In accepting the Freedom to Publish Award on behalf of Zarakolu,
    his children read a mes- sage from their father. Seref Holle began,
    "I spoke with Ragip a couple of hours before com- ing over here. He
    wanted to personally apolo- gize for not being able to make it tonight,
    and he asked my sister Zerrin and I to share this letter with you:"

    "I want to thank the International Freedom to Publish Committee of
    the Association of American Publishers for the honor of the Jeri
    Laber award.

    "When I entered the field of publishing in 1977 by establishing
    Belge International in Istanbul I did not expect to spend the next
    35 years struggling for freedom of expression. I assumed it would be
    accomplished in a matter of years.

    "Belge began in response to the undeclared civil war of the late 1970s
    that resulted in the 1980 military dictatorship in Turkey. Since that
    time Belge has been dedicated to the open dis- cussion of political
    and historical taboos. I have always believed that such discussions
    were necessary for the democratization of Turkey.

    "For years, civilian governments have promised this democratization
    but it is never realized. Unfortunately the current government has
    continued for nearly a decade to delay the sary reforms. As long as
    the 1982 constitution and its supplemental anti-democratic laws and
    decrees exist the freedom to publish remains threatened.

    "Freedom of expression is not a favor to be granted by sultans,
    dictators or prime ministers; it is a universal right. If in a country
    the expression of independent thoughts and their publication becomes
    a matter of courage, that country is in a grave situation.

    "While I am fortunate to have been released from Kandira Prison, many
    other publishers, editors, writers and journalists, including my son
    Deniz, remain in prisons throughout Turkey. I gratefully accept this
    award in their honor.

    "I also want express my gratitude to both the American PEN Center
    and the American Association of Publishers for their many years of
    support. I thank you from the bot- tom of my heart."

    Since founding Belge in 1977 with his late wife, Ayse Hur, Zarakolu has
    defied Turkey's censorship laws by translating and publish- ing Turkish
    editions of works by Armenian, Greek, Kurdish and other writers,
    dealing with such forbidden subjects as the Armenian Genocide and the
    repression of Turkey's Kurdish minority. If Zarakolu is convicted of
    the present charges against him he faces up to 15 years in prison.

    In Balakian's introductory remarks he recalled first meeting Zarakolu
    in 1998, at

    "Ragip was there to receive a prize from the Frankfort Book Fair on
    behalf of his wife, Ayse Hur, who was in prison in Turkey. We became
    friends and he would soon be my Turkish publisher, bringing out a
    beautiful edition of my memoir, Black Dog of Fate, which deals with
    the Armenian Genocide. Ragip opened up a new world for me - and as
    my first Turkish friend, he would become a bridge to another side of
    Turkish society - a more complex and rich Turkey - that many of us
    had hoped somehow to find. For many of us, who wrote on the Armenian
    Genocide in particular, had been objects of ridicule from the Turkish
    nationalists we had encountered.

    "When you meet Ragip, you immediately encounter his quiet strength,
    warmth and gentleness that lets you know that he is at home with
    himself and his life. His life's work is an emanation of who he is. He
    is humble about his work, but he is confident about what his work is
    and means. He is courageous and he inspires courage.

    "He and his late wife Ayse - and now their son Deniz who is also in a
    Turkish prison at this time for his work as a publisher - have devoted
    their lives to bringing intellectual freedom and democracy to Turkey.

    And Ragip's present wife, Katherine Holle, and children Seref and
    Zerrin have been sustain- ing forces to this project in the past
    decade.

    "Ragip's recent arrest is set in a long con-

    text of Turkish repression of intellectuals and free expression.

    Turkey (along with China and Syria) has had consistently one of the
    worst human rights records over the past decades. And, this year,
    Reporters Without Borders has noted that the recent arrests of 99
    journalists in Turkey is the worst 'wave of arrests since the military
    dictatorship.' Zarakolu was part of that purge.

    "Imagine a publisher in Turkey bringing out books year in and year
    out on the following subjects: the Greek expulsion from Turkey;
    the tragedy of the Turkish left; tor- ture and capital punishment in
    Turkey; the status of Turkish prisons; the 'Kurdish question'; the
    Armenian Genocide; the ethnic cleansing and genocide of the Pontic
    Greeks and Assyrians; anti-Semitism and the rights of women in Turkey.

    "If you think of the hundreds or perhaps thousands of books that
    come out each year in the US on parallel or equivalent subjects you
    realize that Ragip Zarakolu's publishing company is this entire sector
    of intellectual life for Turkey, and you get a sense of what he means
    to his nation.

    "And yet, he has been rewarded by his government with endless trials,
    harassment, persecution and imprisonment. His late wife, Ayse, was
    in prison or on trial more than 30

    times. His publishing company was bombed, destroyed by Turkish
    nationalists in 1996. At the moment Ragip is out on bail but he will
    have to stand trial for being accused of that endless false pretext
    called 'terrorism'~Q for supporting and publishing works on Kurdish
    rights. And through all of this Ragip has proceeded with calm, with
    patience, with perseverance, with grace and dignity, with great courage
    and with a love of what he does. Ragip has said, 'I'm not an activist,
    I'm just a publisher.'

    "He is more than a publisher; he is a force for democracy, intellectual
    freedom and the very foundation of human society in Turkey over the
    past 40 years - and he is an embodiment of these realties for all
    societies, because intellectual freedom is something that can never
    be taken for granted."

    PEN American Center is the largest of the 144 centers of PEN
    International, the world's oldest human rights organization and the
    oldest international literary organization. The Freedom to Write
    Program of PEN American Center works to protect the freedom of
    the written word wherever it is imperiled. It defends writers and
    journalists from all over the world who are imprisoned, threatened,
    persecuted or attacked in the course of carrying out their profession.

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