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Notebook On Some Topics In Turkey You Must Pussy-Foot

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  • Notebook On Some Topics In Turkey You Must Pussy-Foot

    NOTEBOOK ON SOME TOPICS IN TURKEY YOU MUST PUSSY-FOOT
    by Robert Colvile

    The Daily Telegraph (LONDON)
    April 10, 2007 Tuesday

    "I have to warn you - there's a 50 per cent chance that there's a dead
    cat in our flat." It wasn't the welcome to Istanbul I was expecting,
    but my hostess soon explained: the previous evening, she and her
    flatmate had rescued a desperately unwell kitten they'd spotted
    shivering on the streets.

    Istanbul is a pretty lively place - more people than London, packed
    into a warren of sloping streets on the banks of the Bosphorus. It's
    also home to an astronomical population of street cats, of which
    theirs was a particularly adorable example.

    Fortunately, she made a remarkable recovery and, now that she was going
    to live, needed a name. One suggestion was to pay tribute to Turkey's
    Great Leader, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk - why not "Mustafa Katmal"? This,
    I was firmly told, would be a Very Bad Idea. The Turks venerate Ataturk
    with a fervour that more strictly Islamic countries reserve for the
    Prophet. Any insult to his memory - even naming a kitten after him -
    would be a matter for the police.

    They settled on the eminently English name of "Milly" - which,
    conveniently, sounds like the Turkish word for "national". But
    they weren't joking about the "Father of Turks". In Turkey, his
    reputation is protected by law; his picture hangs in every home;
    "Principles of Ataturk" is a compulsory course at universities; even
    YouTube was briefly banned after some Greeks posted a video labelling
    him homosexual.

    Then there is Anitkabir, Ataturk's mausoleum in the capital, Ankara.

    It's an area half the size of Hyde Park, with a vast neo-Roman plaza
    and memorial at its centre. You approach via the "Lion Road", a paved
    path flanked by stone lions and live soldiers, intended, according
    to the guide, "to make visitors ready for the presence of Ataturk".

    All this is in stark contrast to the treatment of the Ottoman
    sultanate's relics of Mohammed, tucked away in a side room in
    Istanbul's Topkapi Palace. But it's not without cause. Ataturk's
    accomplishments were immense - as a soldier in the First World
    War, he repulsed the landings at Gallipoli, and later defeated the
    occupying Allied and Greek armies (depicted in the Anitkabir museum as
    cross-brandishing despoilers of women); as president, he revolutionised
    Turkish society and created a secular, democratic, prosperous nation.

    He wasn't perfect, though. He liked his drink and his women, didn't
    have much time for opposition, and was harsh, to say the least, to
    the Kurds, Armenians and Ionian Greeks. Anitkabir's holy of holies
    includes his last orders to the Turkish army, engraved in giant golden
    letters, authorising it to intervene in politics to protect his vision
    - as it has on several occasions.

    Of course, discussing any of these issues in Turkey, or attacking
    "Turkishness", is still taboo - best to swallow your tongue and follow
    it with another shot of raki.

    A stiff drink was also on the cards after a day spent tramping round
    the rugged landscape of Cappadocia.

    It is a wonderland of geology in action - volcanic rocks carved into
    all kinds of extraordinary shapes by natural erosion. And by man.

    Most remarkable are the 40 or so underground cities hewn beneath
    the rock of the plains. Entire towns would disappear into them when
    marauding tribes appeared, re-emerging months later when they'd
    marauded off elsewhere.

    You can tell the inhabitants were Christian, because they had an
    astonishing propensity for carving out churches in the caves, many of
    which still retain their thousand-year-old frescoes. I like to imagine
    that the extraordinary ratio of churches to caves is a testament to
    how fissile religion can be: the congregations splitting into rival
    groups over the years, until the valleys were full of hermits, each
    preaching solemnly to an empty cave.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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