Murat Belge

Last updated

Murat Belge
Born (1943-03-16) 16 March 1943 (age 80)
Spouse(s)Taciser Ulaş (div. 1997)
(m. 2006)
Parent Burhan Asaf Belge (father)
Relatives Yakup Kadri Karaosmanoğlu (uncle)

Murat Belge (born 16 March 1943) is a Turkish academic, translator, literary critic, columnist, civil rights activist, and occasional tour guide.

Contents

Career

Belge was a member of the organizing committee for a two-day academic conference that started on 24 September 2005, held at Istanbul Bilgi University in Istanbul, titled "Ottoman Armenians During the Decline of the Empire: Issues of Scientific Responsibility and Democracy". [1] The conference offered an open dispute of the official Turkish account of the Armenian genocide, and was denounced by nationalists as treacherous. [1] [2]

This is a fight of 'can we discuss this thing, or can we not discuss this thing?'…This is something that's directly related to the question of what kind of country Turkey is going to be.

Belge, during the conference opening. [1]

Belge's remarks led to his facing a ten-year jail sentence for criticizing the judicial ban; he was acquitted. [3] He also commented, "We have a very unhealthy relation with our history … It's basically a collection of lies." [4]

A leaked Turkish military memo, dated November 2006 (reported by Nokta in March 2007, prior to being shut down [5] ), lists journalist deemed "trustworthy" and "untrustworthy" by the Turkish Armed Forces. [6] Murat Belge was listed as "untrustworthy." [7]

Since 1996 he has been a professor of comparative literature at Istanbul Bilgi University.

Personal life and education

He is the son of political journalist Burhan Asaf Belge (who was married to Hungarian-American socialite Zsa Zsa Gabor from May 1935 [8] to December 1941), nephew of Yakup Kadri Karaosmanoğlu, and the grandson of a former governor of Bursa. He received his Ph.D. from Istanbul University in 1969 on leftist criticism in English literature. [9] From his student years in the 1960s, until the early 1980s, he had been an active participant of a close-knit left-wing group of scholars at Istanbul University's Department of English Language and Literature; he used to be a Marxist himself. [10] His fellow scholars of those years included Berna Moran, Mina Urgan, Cevat Capan, Aksit Gokturk and Vahit Turhan. After the military coups of 1971 and 1980, he was compelled to leave academic life and began publishing left-wing classics with Iletisim Press in Istanbul.

Since the early 1980s, he has been guiding tours of Istanbul's yalılar (waterfront mansions). [11] [12]

He is married to actress Hale Soygazi.

Writing

Belge is one of the founders of Birikim , a leftist cultural magazine. [9] In 1984 he also established another publication, Yeni Gündem . [13] For several years he wrote columns for the daily Radikal , before shifting to Taraf in June 2008. On December 14, 2012, Belge stepped down from his post at Taraf together with editor-in-chief Ahmet Altan, assistant editor Yasemin Çongar and columnist Neşe Tüzel, [14] and he has written occasionally for openDemocracy since 2001.

Belge has translated works of James Joyce, Charles Dickens, D. H. Lawrence, William Faulkner and John Berger into Turkish. He is an active member of the Helsinki Citizens Assembly.

Related Research Articles

Ragıp Zarakolu is a Turkish human rights activist and publisher who has long faced legal harassment for publishing books on controversial subjects in Turkey, especially on minority and human rights in Turkey.

Halil Berktay is a Turkish historian at Ibn Haldun University and was columnist for the daily Taraf.

Perihan Mağden is a Turkish writer. She was a columnist for the newspaper Taraf. She was tried and acquitted for calling for opening the possibility of conscientious objection to mandatory military service in Turkey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">İlber Ortaylı</span> Turkish historian

İlber Ortaylı is a Turkish historian and professor of history of Crimean Tatar origin at the MEF University, Galatasaray University in Istanbul and at Bilkent University in Ankara. In 2005, he was appointed as the director of the Topkapı Museum in Istanbul, until he retired in 2012.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hrant Dink</span> Turkish-Armenian journalist (1954–2007)

Hrant Dink was a Turkish-Armenian intellectual, editor-in-chief of Agos, journalist, and columnist. As editor-in-chief of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos, Dink was a prominent member of the Armenian minority in Turkey best known for advocating Turkish–Armenian reconciliation and human and minority rights in Turkey. He was often critical of both Turkey's denial of the Armenian genocide and of the Armenian diaspora's campaign for its international recognition. Dink was prosecuted three times for denigrating Turkishness, while receiving numerous death threats from Turkish nationalists.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ahmet Altan</span> Turkish journalist and author (born 1950)

Ahmet Hüsrev Altan is a Turkish journalist and author. A working journalist for more than twenty years, he has served in all stages of the profession, from being a night shift reporter to editor in chief in various newspapers.

<i>Nokta</i> Turkish news magazine

Nokta was a leading Turkish weekly political news magazine. Founded in 1983, it was closed down by its owner in 2007 under military pressure after revealing several coup plots. Revived in 2015, it was closed again in the course of the 2016–17 Turkish purges.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Anarchism in Turkey</span>

Anarchism in Turkey only began to emerge in 1986 with publication of the magazine Kara.

Taraf was a liberal newspaper in Turkey. It had distinguished itself by opposing interference by the Turkish military in the country's social and political affairs. It was distributed nationwide, and had been in circulation since November 15, 2007. On July 27, 2016, the newspaper was closed under a statutory decree during the state of emergency after the 2016 Turkish coup d'état attempt, due to its links with the coup plotters' Gülen movement.

Etyen Mahçupyan is a Turkish Armenian journalist, writer, columnist and politician of Armenian descent who served as the senior adviser to Prime Minister of Turkey Ahmet Davutoğlu from 2014 to 2015. He is one of the executive members of the founders' committee of the Future Party (Turkey).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Assassination of Hrant Dink</span> 2007 murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist

The prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was assassinated in Istanbul on 19 January 2007. Dink was a newspaper editor who had written and spoken about the Armenian genocide and was well known for his efforts for reconciliation between Turks and Armenians and his advocacy of human and minority rights in Turkey. At the time of his death, he was on trial for violating Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code and "denigrating Turkishness". His murder sparked both massive national protests in Turkey itself as well as widespread international outrage.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ahmet Şık</span>

Ahmet Şık is a Turkish investigative journalist, the author of several books, a trade unionist, and member of Parliament in Turkey. His book, The Imam's Army, investigating the controversial Gülen movement of the Islamic preacher Fethullah Gülen, led to his detention for a year in 2011–2012 and the book's being seized and banned. He was under indictment in the OdaTV case of the Ergenekon trials; his cause has been taken up by English PEN, an association of writers fighting for freedom of expression. In 2016, the prosecutor in this case requested Şık's acquittal. On 29 December 2016, Şık was taken into custody once again on charges of "propaganda of terrorist organisations", with reference to 11 tweets that he had published. The following day, an Istanbul judge ordered Ahmet's arrest. According to lawyers, Şık was denied access to legal advice, held in solitary confinement, and not given drinking water for three days. He ran as an HDP candidate in 2018 Turkish elections and got elected from Istanbul's second electoral district. In 2020, he resigned from HDP, citing political differences and after sitting as an independent for a year, he joined the Workers' Party of Turkey.

Sarıkız, Ayışığı, Yakamoz, Eldiven were the names of alleged Turkish military coup plans in 2004.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Xenophobia and discrimination in Turkey</span> Racism and ethnic discrimination in Turkey

In Turkey, xenophobia and discrimination are present in its society and throughout its history, including ethnic discrimination, religious discrimination and institutional racism against non-Muslim and non-Sunni minorities. This appears mainly in the form of negative attitudes and actions by some people towards people who are not considered ethnically Turkish, notably Kurds, Armenians, Arabs, Assyrians, Greeks, Jews, and peripatetic groups like Romani people, Domari, Abdals and Lom.

"I Apologize" is an online campaign launched in December 2008 in Turkey by numerous journalists, politicians, and professors, calling for a collective apology for the Armenian genocide, which the campaign calls "the Great Catastrophe that Ottoman Armenians were subjected to in 1915." The campaign was launched by Prof. Ahmet İnsel, politician Baskın Oran, Dr. Cengiz Aktar, and journalist Ali Bayramoğlu. The campaign emphasizes regret on behalf of Turkey that Armenian requests for recognition of the 1915 genocide have been actively suppressed within Turkey. The campaign was signed by 5,000 people within the first 24 hours, and had collected over 30,000 signatories by January 2009. The campaign created widespread outrage in Turkish society.

Özden Örnek was a Turkish admiral. He was the Commander of the Turkish Naval Forces from 2003 to 2005. In 2012 Örnek was sentenced to twenty years in prison for his alleged role in the 2003 "Sledgehammer" coup plan.

Tuba Çandar is a Turkish journalist and author of biographies of three leading Turkish intellectuals. Her 700-page biography of the murdered Armenian journalist Hrant Dink's life "Hrant" (2010) is a best-seller in Turkey for which she interviewed 125 people.

İdris Küçükömer was a Turkish academic, philosopher and economist whose views has been influential in Turkish politics. He developed an alternative interpretation of Kemalism from the mid-1960s to his death.

Birikim is a leftist magazine which has existed since 1975 in Turkey. It was banned by the military authorities in 1980 immediately after the coup. The magazine resumed its publication in 1989. It was a print magazine under the subtitle Aylık sosyalist kültür dergisi until 2005 when it was redesigned as an online publication.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Harvey, Benjamin (24 September 2005). "Turks debate painful past, permitting discussion over whether ancestors committed genocide". San Diego Union-Tribune . Retrieved 20 July 2008.
  2. Mahoney, Robert (16 March 2006). "Turkey: Nationalism and the Press". Committee to Protect Journalists.
  3. Court acquits fifth journalist who criticised conference ban, IFEX. 9 July 2006.
  4. Cheterian, Vicken (2015). Open Wounds: Armenians, Turks and a Century of Genocide. Hurst. p. 71. ISBN   978-1-84904-458-5.
  5. Belli, Onur Burçak (21 April 2007). "Nokta Weekly to be shut down". Turkish Daily News . Retrieved 2 February 2008.[ permanent dead link ]
  6. Şık, Ahmet (8 March 2007). "İki Tür Gazeteci Vardır: TSK Karşıtları, TSK Yandaşları". Nokta (in Turkish).
  7. E. Baris Altintas, Ercan Yavuz (9 March 2007). "New military media scandal exposed". Zaman . Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 2 February 2008.
  8. Marriage entry, 17 May 1935 Budapest 11th district, 172/1935
  9. 1 2 Academic profile Archived 9 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine , Istanbul Bilgi University
  10. Alçı, Nagehan (3 September 2007). "İkinci Cumhuriyet için sol şart". Akşam. Archived from the original on 20 June 2015. Retrieved 16 August 2008. We, as old Marxists, are closer to AKP
  11. Tavernise, Sabrina (25 October 2008). "On the Bosporus, a Scholar Tells of Sultans, Washerwomen and Snakes". New York Times . Retrieved 25 October 2008.
  12. Altfuldisch, Christian (October 2008). "Murat Belge". Return to Europe. European Stability Initiative. Retrieved 30 October 2008.
  13. Eylem Akdeniz (2011). The Democrat as a Social Type: the Case of Turkey in the 1990s (PhD thesis). Bilkent University. p. 112. ISBN   979-8-209-95486-6. ProQuest   2652596120.
  14. "Taraf'ta istifa depremi". Hürriyet (in Turkish). 15 December 2012. Retrieved 15 December 2012.