http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/15/world/europe/15turkey.html?_r=1&ref=world&;
oref=slogin

Turkey, a Touchy Critic, Plans to Put a Novel on Trial 

By SUSANNE FOWLER
New York Times
September 15, 2006

Osman Orsal/Associated Press
The novelist Elif Shafak has been charged with insulting "Turkishness." Ms.
Shafak's trial is scheduled to begin next Thursday. The European Union has
urged Turkey to foster free expression. 
 
International Herald Tribune
ISTANBUL - "If there is a thief in a novel," said Elif Shafak recently, "it
doesn't make the novelist a thief." 
Yet, Ms. Shafak is due in court here on Sept. 21 to defend herself against
charges that she insulted "Turkishness" because a character in her latest
novel, "The Bastard of Istanbul," refers to the deaths of Armenians in 1915
as genocide. 
Ms. Shafak, a Turkish citizen who was born in Strasbourg, France, is being
sued under Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code, the same law that ensnared
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/tu
rkey/index.html?inline=nyt-geo> Turkey's best-known contemporary author,
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/p/orhan_pamuk/in
dex.html?inline=nyt-per> Orhan Pamuk, in 2005. 
She is scheduled to give birth to her first child the week of the trial. A
conviction carries a possible penalty of up to three years in jail. 
The plaintiffs are vocal nationalists who she says oppose the government's
efforts to gain admission for Turkey, the only member of
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/n/north_a
tlantic_treaty_organization/index.html?inline=nyt-org> NATO with a largely
Muslim population, into the
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/e/europea
n_union/index.html?inline=nyt-org> European Union. 
"I believe they want to derail the E.U. process because that would change
many things in the structure of the state and the fabric of Turkish
society," Ms. Shafak, an assistant professor of Near Eastern studies at the
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/u/univers
ity_of_arizona/index.html?inline=nyt-org> University of Arizona, said in an
interview. "They would rather have an insular, enclosed, xenophobic society
than an open society." 
Ms. Shafak, 34, initially escaped a court date by successfully arguing that
the statements over which she was being sued were made by fictional
characters who could not be prosecuted. In June, a public prosecutor in
Istanbul agreed and dismissed the charges. 
But Kemal Kerincsiz, a lawyer who is also the leader of a rightist group
opposed to European Union membership for Turkey, filed a new complaint. In
July, a high criminal court in Istanbul overruled the lower court decision,
paving the way for the trial. 
"Article 301 has been used by ultranationalists as a weapon to silence
political voices in Turkey," Ms. Shafak said. "In that sense, my case is not
unusual. But for the first time, they are trying to bring a novel into
court. The way they are trying to penetrate the domain of art and literature
is quite new, and quite disturbing." 
The European Union agrees. 
Olli Rehn, the European Union's commissioner for enlargement, said in July
that such cases were evidence that Turkey had failed to align its laws with
the union's standards. He urged the Turkish authorities to amend Article 301
"in order to guarantee freedom of expression," which he called "a key
principle at the core of democracy." 
Mr. Pamuk, at the time of his trial, said he hoped the charges against him
would not hurt Turkey's chances of entering the union. He was prosecuted for
saying during an interview that "a million Armenians and 30,000 Kurds were
killed in these lands and nobody but me dares talk about it." Eventually,
with a groundswell of support from the West, the charges were dropped. 
But more than 60 similar cases have been brought against writers and artists
in Turkey, although no one has served time in prison yet. The person
potentially most at risk is Hrant Dink, a Turk of Armenian descent who edits
a bilingual Turkish and Armenian newspaper. In July, an appeals court upheld
a suspended six-month prison sentence against him in connection with a
column he wrote, and he faces new charges based on remarks he made in an
interview, according to Reporters Without Borders. 
"The Bastard of Istanbul," Ms. Shafak's novel, was published in Turkish and
has sold 60,000 copies, a best seller in Turkey. It is to be published in
English in January. Its plot centers on two families with a common past:
Turkish Muslims living in Istanbul and Armenian-Americans in San Francisco. 
Among the excerpts opposed by the lawyers' group is a passage in which a man
of Armenian descent worries about which version of history his niece will
accept as she is raised by her Turkish stepfather. He wonders aloud if she
will state, "I am the grandchild of genocide survivors who lost all their
relatives to the hands of the Turkish butchers in 1915, but I myself have
been brainwashed to deny the genocide because I was raised by some Turk
named Mustapha!" 
Turkey says that the deaths of as many as 1.5 million Armenians were not the
result of genocide, but rather of a war in which many Turks also were killed
as the Ottoman Empire was collapsing. 
As a writer, Ms. Shafak has shown a penchant for provocative topics. 
Her previous novels have touched on suicide, the intersection of Islamic and
Jewish mysticism, and even love between a Sufi dervish hermaphrodite and a
Greek man. She has angered critics in the past by, in their view, eschewing
Turkishness by writing in English and by using what Turks today call "old
words" from the Ottoman vocabulary that preceded the reforms of Mustafa
Kemal Ataturk, who founded the Turkish republic in 1923. 
Ms. Shafak also took part in a controversial conference in Istanbul last
year on the Armenian question (the first such conference in Turkey, and one
that Mr. Kerincsiz and his group, the Unity of Jurists, tried to prevent). 
So while Europe struggles to define the idea of Europe and who is European,
Turkey is in the midst of its own debate about what defines Turkishness and
whether Turks even want to be considered European. "There is a clash of
opinion in Turkey," Ms. Shafak said. "On the one hand are the people who are
very much pro-E.U., sometimes for economic reasons, sometimes for political
reasons." On the other hand, she said, are factions, including nationalists,
who fear that Turkish autonomy will be weakened by membership in the union. 
"Fear is a powerful element," Ms. Shafak said. "We were taught ever since we
were little kids that Turkey is a country surrounded by water on three sides
and enemies on all sides and that you can never trust outsiders." 
The charges of "insulting Turkishness" seem particularly galling to Ms.
Shafak, whose mother was a Turkish diplomat and whose husband, Eyup Can, is
the editor of Referans, a respected Turkish daily business newspaper. 
"I was thinking of going back to the States to give birth, but because of
the trial I will stay here," Ms. Shafak said. "And I am happy to be giving
birth in Istanbul. This city is very dear to me, even though it suffers from
a sort of collective amnesia." 
 
Gerard P. Keenan
16 E. Beech St.
Central Islip, NY 11722
(631) 582-1262 (ph/fax)
(516) 768-9602 (cell)
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> fense.net
www.westerndefense. <http://www.westerndefense.net> net
 


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