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Azerbaijani Writer Accused Over "Disloyal" Novel

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  • Azerbaijani Writer Accused Over "Disloyal" Novel

    AZERBAIJANI WRITER ACCUSED OVER "DISLOYAL" NOVEL

    Akram Aylisli wanted to show that his fellow-Azerbaijanis could admit
    past mistakes, but his ritual humiliation suggest he was wrong.

    By Maharram Zeynalov - Caucasus
    CRS Issue 675,
    8 Feb 13

    Azerbaijani writer Akram Aylisli has been stripped of a top state
    honour and subjected to public abuse for publishing a novel seen as
    too sympathetic towards Armenians.

    As the criticism mounted, the novelist said he felt as if he was
    living through the worst days of Stalinism.

    Ayisli's novel "Stone Dreams" was published in the December issue
    of the Moscow magazine Druzhba Narodov, and included descriptions of
    mass killings of Armenians in Nakhichevan in the early 20th century,
    and in Sumgait at the end of the Soviet period.

    Protesters burned portraits of Aylisli and members of parliament
    called for him to lose his citizenship.

    President Ilham Aliyev issued a decree on January 7 removing Aylisli's
    title of "People's Author".

    The presidential administration had already made its views clear. Ali
    Hasanov, head of its political department, told the APA news agency,
    "We, the Azerbaijani people, must display public scorn for such
    people. A man who belongs to no nation has no right to speak about
    human feelings."

    Hasanov compared Aylisli to Turkish author Orhan Pamuk, who outraged
    his government by saying genocide was committed against Armenians in
    the early 20th century.

    "Orhan Pamuk earned the condemnation of his nation with the phrase,
    'Turks must recognise the Armenian genocide'. He said this only in
    order to win the Nobel Prize, but as a result, he lost his homeland,"
    Hasanov said. "It appears that Akram Aylisli wants a Nobel Prize. But
    if your nation and your people reject you, is that honour worth
    having? Nothing stands higher than national sentiment."

    The beginning and end of the 20th century were scarred by violence
    between Azerbaijanis and Armenians. Both sides now tend to downplay
    the suffering of the other nation, and artistic depictions of this
    are extremely rare.

    It is not clear how many people in Azerbaijan have read Ayisli's novel,
    but officials queued up to condemn it as unpatriotic.

    "The Armenians should erect a monument to Akram Aylisli," Siyavush
    Novruzov, a member of parliament from the ruling Yeni Azerbaijan party,
    said. "If all the Armenian writers got together and articulated the
    'Armenian truth' in Russian, they couldn't have done so as successfully
    as Aylisli."

    When parliament debated the novel on February 1, one member, Nizami
    Jafarov, suggested that Aylisli be stripped of his citizenship, adding,
    "Let him go to Yerevan and serve in some church there."

    Other members proposed a ban on the publication of his works, while
    deputy speaker Bahar Muradova accused him of treason.

    The day before that debate, a group of pro-government youth activists
    staged a protest outside the premises of the official Writers' Union.

    Burning pictures of Aylisli and posters bearing the titles of his
    books, they chanted: "Armenian Akram, leave the country."

    Aylisli said he was staying put.

    "If they want me to leave the country, they should choose more
    civilised methods," he told IWPR by telephone. "I'm looking out the
    window, and I can see some young people gathering yet again."

    Discussing his novel, Aylisli said he had wanted to send Armenians
    the message that Azerbaijanis were able to acknowledge past mistakes.

    The writer said his wife, son and daughter-in-law had been dismissed
    from their jobs.

    "They sacked my wife in a very strange way - they accused her of
    having books by Armenian authors in her library. Where else should
    they have been? And anyway, they were talking about books that weren't
    by Armenian authors," he said.

    "What is happening is just incomprehensible. We live in Azerbaijan,
    which has responsibilities to the Council of Europe, which has a
    constitution, where they talk about freedom of speech, yet it feels
    like we're living in the Soviet Union of 1937," Aylisli said. "Our
    Academy of Sciences has decided to conduct an entire investigation into
    my book, which also shows things in this country in very poor light."

    He speculated that the campaign against him might also have stemmed
    from his membership of the Intellectuals' Forum, which is headed by
    well-known screenwriter Rustam Ibrahimbeyov who is in trouble with
    the authorities. (See Giant of Azerbaijani Cinema Under Fire.)

    Gunel Movlud, a poet, is among those who have read the "Stone Dreams".

    "As a writer, I couldn't fail to appreciate the literary qualities
    of the novel, which is beautifully written. As a reader, I also got
    great pleasure from it. As a citizen, and also - and I stress this -
    as a refugee from Karabakh, I can say that the novel in no way hurt
    my feelings," she said. "As for the public reaction to the novel and
    the attacks on the novelist, many countries have civilised ways of
    expressing disagreement. You can go to court if a book hurts your
    feelings."

    Maharram Zeynalov is a freelance journalist in Azerbaijan.

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