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71st World Congress of Writers Opens in Bled
International PEN Seeks to Bridge Political
Divides, Cultural Traditions
Bled, Slovenia, June 14, 2005:
Forty years after an International PEN Congress in Bled opened a
dialogue between writers separated by the Iron Curtain, the
world organization of writers has once again gathered in Bled to reach
across cultural and political divisions and defend writers and freedom
of expression around the world. More than 250 writers representing 88
PEN centers and every
region of the world will be participating in International PEN's
71st World
Congress this week.
At a press conference this morning to mark the
opening of the Congress, International PEN President Jiri Grusa
declared, "We are living in a time of extraordinary threats to
writers and the freedom to write. In the ten years since our
colleague Ken Saro-Wiwa was executed in Nigeria, hundreds of writers
and
journalists around the world have died by
violence. Crackdowns
on internet writers and anti-terrorism legislation
have harmed writers and chilled freedom of expression in a number of
countries. This week we will be challenging these threats."
International Secretary Joanne Leedom-Ackerman
spoke of the significance of Bled, and the Slovene PEN Center, for the
84 year-old organization. "Arthur Miller was elected President of
International PEN the last time we held a Congress here in Bled, and
his presidency, and that Congress, helped PEN become an organization
that connects writers who find
themselves isolated by international conflicts and political passions.
Here in 1965, for the first time, PEN welcomed writers from the
Soviet Union as observers at a PEN Congress, beginning a process
that culminated in the establishment of the first PEN center in a
Soviet bloc country 20 years later."
Underscoring the importance of bridge-building for
PEN, Ms. Leedom-Ackerman paid special tribute to the efforts of Slovene
PEN to bring aid and support to writers in Sarajevo in the early
1990's,
calling that work "one of the clearest embodiments of the PEN spirit in
recent memory." "At the height of the worst conflict in the
Balkans, at a time when dozens of writers were literally cut off from
the rest of the world, Slovene PEN and the Peace
Committee of International PEN, under the
leadership of Boris
Novak, managed to get them critical, very likely
life-saving support, and to keep the lines of communication open. It is
wonderful to be here in Bled to acknowledge the leadership of
the Slovene PEN Center and remember Arthur Miller, who died this past
year."
The 2005 PEN World Congress comes at a time of
unprecedented growth in the international literary organization, which
now encompasses 141 centers in 99 countries around the globe.
Writers from active networks of PEN centers in Latin America, Africa,
and Asia are attending this week's Congress, and major PEN programs
will take place in Ghana, Austria, Kyrgyzstan and Australia later
this year. There are also significant new initiatives under way to
foster PEN centers in the Arab world and to connect writers in the
People's Republic of China with PEN centers around the world.
"At a time when there is a great deal of talk about
the clash of cultures, PEN has become a place where cultures come to
meet and debate," Ms. Leedom-Ackerman said. "Our goal is not to
clash, but to communicate."
International PEN's 71st World Congress of Writers
will feature major round table discussions and readings and literary
programs throughout the week. At the same time, the Assembly of
Delegates and PEN's Peace Committee, Writers in Prison Committee,
Women's Committee, Committee on Translation and Linguistic Rights,
and Exiles Network will take up a number of issues of pressing concern
to writers around the
globe.
Immediately following the Congress in Bled, the PEN Women's Committee
will convene a historic meeting of women
writers in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
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