Turkish novelist Burhan Sönmez has told Al Majalla that he is writing his latest book in Kurdish, his mother tongue.
His published novels include The North, Sins and the Innocents, Istanbul, Istanbul, and Labyrinth. They have been translated into more than 40 languages, including Arabic.
He won Turkey’s prestigious Orhan Kemal Award in 2022 and also won an award for Disturbing the Peace in 2017.
Issued by the Vaclav Havel Library, this recognised his boldness in raising issues of oppression and human rights in his novels.
Born in 1965, Sönmez studied law at Istanbul University and then worked as a human rights lawyer before becoming an author.
He is the president of PEN International, the writers’ foundation that defends free expression and supports authors who are at risk.
Al Majalla talked to him about his work, the fight for artistic freedom during the war, and his decision to use the Kurdish language for his latest novel.
Your work often explores people’s struggles against oppressive systems and personal identity within shifting sociopolitical landscapes. Does your background or politics inform your work?
Our identity is shaped by our experiences and by the ideas we develop, which are influenced by everything around us, including society, history, and books.
When I write, I don’t have a certain direction in mind. I just follow my instincts and imagination, which are nothing but a reflection of my personality, which has been shaped throughout my life.
In your latest novel, Stone and Shadow, you explored Turkey's social and cultural complexities from the 1930s. Tell me more.
In that, I tried to understand the lifeline of a man reflected by the society he lives in.
How are we shaped and influenced by our conditions? How do we direct our own destiny despite all the difficulties around us?
I wanted to explore how a person's and a country's destiny can be connected and how much they can be free from each other.