Monday, December 12, 2005

Freedom of Expression

The Turkish tyranny is trying Orhan Pamuk for his politically-incorrect views on the Armenian genocide.

Mr. Pamuk, writing in The New Yorker, finds such antipathy to free expression not just in Turkey, but all around the world (including in India). Progress has brought the developing world a defensive rancor -- seeking to bulldoze free voices into submission. The new Right's borrowing of the stalinist-leftist idea of speech suppression is reprehensible -- true nationalists should stay clear of this.

Here is Mr. Pamuk in his very important essay:

In recent years, we have witnessed the astounding economic rise of India and China, and in both these countries we have also seen the rapid expansion of the middle class, though I do not think we shall truly understand the people who have been part of this transformation until we have seen their private lives reflected in novels. Whatever you call these new elites -- the non-Western bourgeoisie or the enriched bureaucracy -- they, like the Westernizing elites in my own country, feel compelled to follow two separate and seemingly incompatible lines of action in order to legitimatize their newly acquired wealth and power. First, they must justify the rapid rise in their fortunes by assuming the idiom and the attitudes of the West; having created a demand for such knowledge, they then take it upon themselves to tutor their countrymen. When the people berate them for ignoring tradition, they respond by brandishing a virulent and intolerant nationalism. The disputes that a Flaubert-like outside observer might call bizarreries may simply be the clashes between these political and economic programs and the cultural aspirations they engender. On the one hand, there is the rush to join the global economy; on the other, the angry nationalism that sees true democracy and freedom of thought as Western inventions.

V. S. Naipaul was one of the first writers to describe the private lives of the ruthless, murderous non-Western ruling elites of the post-colonial era. Last May, in Korea, when I met the great Japanese writer Kenzaburo Oe, I heard that he, too, had been attacked by nationalist extremists after stating that the ugly crimes committed by his country's armies during the invasions of Korea and China should be openly discussed in Tokyo. The intolerance shown by the Russian state toward the Chechens and other minorities and civil-rights groups, the attacks on freedom of expression by Hindu nationalists in India, and China's discreet ethnic cleansing of the Uighurs all are nourished by the same contradictions.

4 comments:

froginthewell said...

I hear ( I am not well versed in this issue at all ) that it was not just armenians perishing in Turkey but quite a few Turks were killed in the rest of Europe. This issue is never raised. Unfortunately for westerners only the murder of fellow-westerners and women amount to murder.

And I doubt if the so-called "the non-Western bourgeoisie or the enriched bureaucracy" have anything to do with nationalism. Most of the recently rich just don't seem to care about such issues.

doubtinggaurav said...

Ironically Mr V. S. Naipaul supports demolition of Babri Masjid.

I am one of those "Hindu Nationalist", but I didn't know that I was rich, thanks for informing me.

Regards

froginthewell said...

What I heard ( from a lecture here , I don't know much more ) is that the most reliable source of information about the Armenian population of that time is the Turkish census before the alleged genocide, and according to this there were lesser than 1.5 million Armenians in Turkey to begin with ( I forget the number quoted ). Moreover most of the deaths were caused by the stressful journey that the evacuated Armenians had to make. Please see the summary of the position of the Turkish government and intellectuals in wikipedia.

One should also consider the fact that Turkey atleast made an attempt to formally try those involved in the massacre ( again, I only heard this; don't know how authentic it is ). I am not sure the imperialist powers ever did such things in their colonies.

Now I am not saying all the things I am quoting are correct but I am pained at the western tendency to look at only one aspect of it.

Also please see the controversy regarding Mr. Pamuk mentioned in wikipedia. Possibly this is a case of third-worldish-country writers trying to get fame by slamming their own culture.

froginthewell said...

I agree. Thanks and regards.

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