Akif Pirinçci

Akif Pirinçci

Akif Pirinçci in 2014
Born (1959-10-20) 20 October 1959
Istanbul, Turkey
Occupation Novelist, screenwriter
Nationality German
Ethnicity Turkish
Subject Murder mystery, thriller, crime fiction, detective
Notable works Felidae

Akif Pirinçci (German pronunciation: [ˈpiːʁɪntʃi]; born 20 October 1959) is a German writer of Turkish origin who is best known internationally for his novel Felidae. His statements on feminism, opposition to immigration, and description of Germany as a "muslim garbage dump" have provoked controversy in Germany and throughout Europe.

Biography

Pirinçci was born on 20 October 1959 in Istanbul, Turkey, but emigrated to Germany together with his parents in 1969. He began to write fiction at a young age, and published his first novel Tränen sind immer das Ende ("tears are always the end") in 1980, at the age of 21. His next literary work, published in 1989, was the novel Felidae, a work of crime fiction with cats as the main protagonists. The novel has been translated into 17 languages and became an international bestseller.

Due to the enormous success of the novel, Pirinçci expanded his concept of "cat crime fiction" and published several sequels to Felidae, out of which Felidae II and Felidae V (Salve Roma!) have been translated into English. An animated movie based on Felidae, the script of which had been co-written by Pirinçci, was produced in Germany in 1994, and was also dubbed in English.

Pirinçci has published several other novels which were not set in the fictional world of the Felidae series – however, none of those works have reached such a high degree of popularity. Lately, however, he had some success with the thriller "The Back Door", which was adapted for the screen in Germany, with Mads Mikkelsen ("Casino Royale") in the leading role. "The Back Door" is the only standalone novel of Pirinçci's that has been translated into English.

Pirinçci currently lives in Bonn in Germany.

Controversies

Political essays

Pirinçci published non-fiction essays in 2012 on Facebook, and in right-wing newspapers such as Junge Freiheit, eigentümlich frei, and Sezession.

Pirinçci's essays were collected in the two books Deutschland von Sinnen - Der irre Kult um Frauen, Homosexuelle und Zuwanderer (2014, "Germany Gone Mad: The Crazy Cult Around Women, Homosexuals, and Immigrants"), which soon became a bestseller, and Die große Verschwulung – Wenn aus Männern Frauen werden und aus Frauen keine Männer (2015, "The Big Gayification: When men become women and women won't become men"), both published by the retail company Manufactum, as part of Edition Sonderweg edited by André F. Lichtschlag, the publisher and editor-in-chief of eigentümlich frei and a writer for Junge Freiheit.

Relationship with anti-Jihad Organisations

While writing and publishing these non-fiction essays, Pirinçci also increasingly came in contact with functionaries of the anti-Islamic movement Pegida, the center-right populist party Alternative for Germany, and the small right-wing German Freedom Party, who organized lecture tours where Pirinçci would read from his two political essay books. When he faced criticism in May 2014, he justified these contacts by telling the online blog of the left-wing newspaper "Die Zeit," "I don't give a flying fuck if people call me a Nazi, I don't give a damn." ("Es geht mir am Arsch vorbei, wenn man mich einen Nazi nennt, das ist mir scheißegal").[1]

Defamation suit

On 20 January 2015, the local paper General-Anzeiger reported that Pirinçci had been found liable for defamation in a civil suit brought by a professor of sociology and biology, whom Pirinçci had described as a "mentally sick, manic queer with a screw loose" ("geisteskranken, durchgeknallten Schwulen mit Dachschaden"). Pirinçci had also described the professor's theories as a "jewel of stupidity" ("Juwel der Doofheit").[2]

19 October 2015 Pegida speech

At the first anniversary of the Pegida protests in Dresden on 19 October 2015, Pirinçci was invited as keynote speaker. He accused German politicians of being "Gauleiter against their own people" and called Germany's government a "shit state" ("Scheißstaat"). Further, according to Pirinçci, Muslims want to "pump infidels full of their Muslim juice" ("Ungläubige mit ihrem Moslemsaft vollpumpen") and stated that Germany is becoming a "Muslim garbage dump" ("Moslemmüllhalde"). He called the German Green Party a "Party of child fuckers" ("Kinderfickerpartei"), and the spokesperson for the mosque in Erfurt a "Muslim guy with a Taliban beard" ("Moslemfritzen mit Talibanbart"), who had as much to do with German culture as "my asshole with the production of perfume" ("wie mein Arschloch mit Parfümherstellung").[3]

However, the most-widely spread quote from Pirinçci's 19 October speech was, "Unfortunately, the concentration camps are out of order at the moment!" ("Aber die KZs sind ja leider derzeit außer Betrieb!"), which was met with applause from the crowd. In a wider context, Pirinçci's concentration camps statement was intended to accuse critics of Pegida of intending to send Pegida members to said concentration camps.[4][5][6] Pirinçci's remarks were apparently deemed too offensive by the crowd, and was booed off the stage.[7]

Within 24 hours after first quotes from Pirinçci's Pegida speech appeared in the media, his publishers Goldmann and Random House issued statements that they had cancelled their contracts with Pirinçci and would no longer sell any of his books, and the webmaster to his online blog also cancelled Pirinçci's contract. At the same time, Amazon Germany chose to de-list his books so they can't be found through searches or ordered through the website. A few days later, all relevant book wholesalers in Germany (Libri, Umbreit, and KNV), also stopped ordering his books, and many independent bookstores issued statements that they would refuse to order his books, even upon request. This reaction by bookstores was criticized by the left-wing daily Der Spiegel as amounting to authoritarian censorship. [8] Volker Beck, member of parliament for the German Green Party, filed charges against Pirinçci for public incitement to commit criminal acts and incitement to hatred. A spokesperson for the federal prosecutor's office confirmed that an investigation is ongoing.[9]

Two weeks after his Pegida speech, Pirinçci told Der Spiegel that the boycott of all his books overnight (except for the two political essays collections at Manufactum) as well as his public notoriety resulting from the affair made him seriously consider emigration.[10]

List of literary works

List of non-fiction works

Further reading

References

  1. AfD und Burschenschaft luden zum Gespräch mit Akif Pirinçci Zeitblog vom 19. Mai 2014
  2. Beleidigung kostet Pirinçci 8000 Euro, General-Anzeiger Bonn, 20 January 2015
  3. Pegida spaltet Dresden, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 19 October 2015
  4. Stefan Niggemeier:Akif Pirinçcis Pegida-Rede: Eine Geschichte von Fehlern, Exzessen und Scheinheiligkeit In: faz.net vom 2. November 2015.
  5. Benjamin Maack: Hetzredner Pirinçci: Mitleid mit dem Demagogen In: spiegel.de vom 20. Oktober 2015.
  6. Chaled Nahar: Akif Pirinçcis Webmaster – „Ich schäme mich, dir behilflich gewesen zu sein“. In: Deutschlandfunk.de, 20. Oktober 2015, Anmerkung der Redaktion.
  7. Barfield, Tom. "Inside Pegida's bellowing and bitter Dresden rally". The Local. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  8. Fleischhauer, Jan (2015). Der Buchhändler als politischer Richter, SPON, 10 November 2015
  9. Ermittlungen wegen KZ-Äußerung von Akif Pirinçci, Süddeutsche Zeitung, 20 October 2015
  10. Fleischhauer, Jan (2015). Der Aussätzige, DER SPIEGEL, No 46, 7 November 2015, pp. 40-43

External links

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