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Book Review: Passion On The Bosphorous

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  • Book Review: Passion On The Bosphorous

    PASSION ON THE BOSPHOROUS
    Rasheeda Bhagat

    Business Line
    http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/life/2008 /01/25/stories/2008012550050200.htm
    Jan 25 2008
    India

    Istanbul conjures up visions of grandeur... of domes and minarets... of
    the Blue Mosque, the Hagia Sophia, the Ottoman empire and the
    unbelievable treasures in the Topkapi Palace museum. But it also
    reminds you of the long-prevailing tensions between the Turks and
    the Armenians, the unimaginable oppression and violence to which
    Armenians were subjected by the Turks.

    The Bastard of Istanbul by Elif Shafak (Viking Penguin) makes a
    bold attempt to admit and examine the persecution of Armenians,
    a topic which puts most Turks in an immediate denial mode. Another
    commendable feature that recommends the book is a strong underlying
    feminist theme in the entire narrative, which is presented entirely
    through the eyes of women.

    It is basically the story of Zeliha Kagazci and her illegitimate
    daughter Asya; the novel begins with Zeliha's failed attempt to get
    an abortion. A modern, educated and headstrong woman, she refuses to
    tell her family about the father of the child in her womb.

    The Kazanci family is cursed in that all the male members of the family
    die young. After being guarded through his childhood through evil-eye
    beads and amulets to break the voodoo, Mustafa, the 18-year-old
    son of Gulsum, and Zeliha's brother, is packed off from Istanbul to
    Arizona. This leaves Gulsum with four daughters, each with a strong
    idiosyncrasy, and the only male member, Pasha the Third, a tommy cat.

    Shafak describes the four daughters' idiosyncrasies with great delight
    and delectable prose. For instance, Feride with her obsessive medical
    disorders, was first diagnosed with a "stress ulcer". But nobody in
    the family took the diagnosis seriously "because 'stress' had become
    some sort of a catchphrase. As soon as it was introduced into Turkish
    culture, 'stress' had been so euphorically welcomed by the Istanbulites
    that there had emerged countless patients of stress in the city."

    Banu has the art for clairvoyance - later this is used rather artfully
    in the novel to take a peep into the past on the systematic execution
    of Armenian intellectuals in 1915 by the Turkish administration. Zeliha
    earns her living by running a tattoo parlour and is passionately
    loved by Aram, who is Armenian.

    Into this Istanbul family comes Armanoush, the daughter of an Armenian
    father and an American mother, with the mission of getting to the
    bottom of the mystery surrounding the execution of her Armenian great
    grandfather in the 1915 event. As Mustafa is her stepfather, she
    manages to trick the family into believing - the teenager would never
    get the permission of her parents to travel alone to Istanbul where
    Armenians cannot be 'safe' - that she is his guest. The resultant
    feasts and Turkish delicacies to which she is treated is another
    theme of the book - food.

    Both Asya and Armanoush have their own private worlds to escape to.

    The characters in Cafe Kundera, "a fictive place with fictive people",
    where Asya hangs out with the oddest of friends and drowns carafes of
    wine - oh yes, there are enough references in the book to reiterate
    that Turkey is not a typical Islamic country where alcohol or strong
    and independent women are frowned upon - are sketched with a light
    and expert touch. Her companions include the Dipsomanic Cartoonist,
    Non-nationalist Scenarist of Ultranationalist Movies, Exceptionally
    Untalented Poet and Closeted-Gay Columnist.

    Another reiteration of Turkey being a modern Islamic nation comes
    when Gulsum frowns on her daughter Banu emerging one day, all of a
    sudden, with a cherry red scarf on her head, which she dubs a "sorry
    thing". She adds: "What kind of nonsense is that? Turkish women took
    off the veil 90 years ago. No daughter of mine is going to betray the
    rights the great commander-in-chief Ataturk bestowed on the women of
    this country."

    Armanoush's private world is the Internet chat room where Armenians
    of different hues talk about the Turks with deep resentment, and are
    the only ones who are aware of Armanoush's journey to Istanbul, and
    how Turks react to her story. The openness with which Asya accepts
    Armanoush's mission, embraces her cause and introduces it and her to
    her companions at Cafe Kundera are indicative of hope from the youth
    on both sides.

    Asya's companions at the Cafe are incredulous about the pain, torture
    and executions the Armenians were put through by their predecessors.

    "That didn't happen", is the first response, followed by: "But it
    was a time of war. People died on both sides. Do you have any idea
    how many Turks have died in the hands of Armenian rebels? Did you
    ever think about the other side of the story? It's tragic but we
    need to understand that 1915 is not 2005." Somebody else calls it
    "collective hysteria". Shafak was prosecuted by the Turkish government
    for terming the massacre of Armenians 'genocide' in the book, but
    later the charges were dropped.

    The essence of the Armenian-Turkish conflict/mistrust is best captured
    in the passage where a puzzled Armanoush asks Aram, Zeliha's lover,
    why he continues to stay on in Istanbul. His reply will find an echo in
    the hearts of many Indian Muslims who are asked by the lunatic fringes
    of the Sangh Parivar to migrate to Pakistan. "This city is my city. I
    was born and raised in Istanbul. My family's history in this city goes
    back at least 500 years. Armenian Istanbulites belong to Istanbul,
    just like the Turkish, Kurdish, Greek and Jewish Istanbulites do. We
    have first managed and then badly failed to live together. We cannot
    fail again."

    He adds how he knows every street in the city. "I love strolling
    these streets in the mornings, evenings, and then at night when I am
    merry and tipsy. I love to have breakfasts with my friends along the
    Bosphorous on Sundays. I love to walk alone amid the crowds. I am in
    love with the chaotic beauty of this city, the ferries, the music,
    the tales, the sadness, the colours, and the black humour."

    Aram also explains the dangers of the Armenians not having Turkish
    friends and being acquainted with the Turks only through the
    "heartbreaking stories" they've heard through their grandparents.

    Shafak's prose is both gripping and evocative. Asya always resents
    the fact that she is not as beautiful as her mother, and Zeliha "could
    clearly see that the knowledge of her physical dullness, among other
    things, was pricking at her daughter's young heart. If only she could
    tell that the beauties would only attract the worst guys. If only she
    could make her understand how lucky she was not to be too beautiful;
    that in fact both men and women would be more benevolent to her,
    and that her life would be better off, yes, much better off without
    the exquisiteness she now so craved."

    The heartache, the bitter secret in Zeliha, the rebellion and
    frustration within Asya at not knowing who her father is, till the
    very end in a shocking detail, the grey and hazy world of Alzheimer's
    that grips 96-year-old Petit-Ma's existence, the frustrations and
    craziness that can engulf an all-female family are skilfully and
    movingly sketched in this passionate book.

    The imagery that Shafak invokes is simply brilliant. Having entered
    the fifth stage of Alzheimer's, Petit-Ma muddles up the most familiar
    faces and facts in her life. "Last week, for instance, toward the
    end of the afternoon prayer, as soon as she had bent down and put her
    forehead on her little rug for the stage of sajda, she had forgotten
    what to do next. The words of the prayer she had to utter had all of a
    sudden fastened together into an elongated chain of letters and walked
    away in tandem, like a black, hairy caterpillar with too many feet
    to count. After a while, the caterpillar had stopped, turned around,
    and waved at Petit-Ma from a distance, as if surrounded by glass walls,
    so clearly visible yet unreachable."

    How Zeliha, who knows nothing about namaz, or religion, brings her
    out of this creepy predicament is both touching and funny!

    This book is a compelling read for all feminists - men and women -
    and those interested in understanding the various nuances of conflict
    and conflict resolution. The frustrations and bitterness that can
    dominate and overpower the lives of educated, intelligent, fiercely
    independent and slightly crazy women unfold rather strikingly in
    Shafak's writing. After all, all of us have our crazy side, don't we?
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