Tweeting Turkish pianist Fazil Say denies religious insult charge

(Turkish classical pianist Fazil Say performs during a concert in Ankara October 14, 2010. REUTERS/Stringer)
Turkish concert pianist Fazil Say’s exuberance has won him fans around the world, but it has also helped land him in court as a cause célèbre for those alarmed by Turkey’s creeping Islamic conservatism.
On trial for insulting religion in citing a thousand-year-old poem on his Twitter account, the 42-year-old performer and composer told a first brief hearing in Istanbul on Thursday that he denied the charge, which can carry an 18-month sentence.
As fellow artists crammed the courthouse in a show of support for Say, who performs with some of the world’s leading orchestras, the case was adjourned for four months.
It was a retweet sent in April of a verse in which the 11th-century Persian poet Omar Khayyam mocks pious hypocrisy which led prosecutors to charge Say with “explicitly insulting religious values”. Religious conservatives have become ever more assertive since Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan’s AK Party, which has roots in Islamist politics, swept to power a decade ago.
“I do not accept the accusations brought against me. I deny them,” Say told the court, according to the official record. So packed was the small chamber within one of Istanbul’s main court buildings that the crowd spilled out into narrow corridors outside, through courtroom doors thrown open to ease the heat.
Read the full story Can Sezer and Nick Tattersall here.
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