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ANKARA: Out and about in the backyard of Trabzon

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  • ANKARA: Out and about in the backyard of Trabzon

    Today's Zaman, Turkey

    26 October 2008, Sunday

    Out and about in the backyard of Trabzon

    The Sümela Monastery

    Trabzon, in Turkey's remote northeastern corner, may be a fascinating,
    vibrant city, but the sad truth is that for most visitors it's merely
    a stepping stone on the way to their real target: Sümela, an
    extraordinary monastery that clings to the mountainside, seemingly
    defying gravity, southeast of the small town of Maçka.

    Even if you've never heard of Sümela you will almost certainly
    know what it looks like, because it's one of those images, like those
    of Pamukkale and Cappadocia, that tourist offices love to display as
    bait for their guests. Remember a picture of a crumbling ruin high up
    above the pine trees with no obvious means of access? Yes, that's
    Sümela.

    You can hardly help but ask how it came to be there, and the answer
    lies in a story that tracks right back to the fourth century when
    Sts. Barnabas and Sophronius came to the area in search of an icon of
    Mary, the mother of Jesus (Meryamana in Turkish), supposedly painted
    by St. Luke. Unlikely as it may seem, they finally found the icon way
    up on the mountain, where they established a shelter to protect
    it. Over time, word of the discovery spread and the shelter swelled
    into a shrine, complete with beautiful frescoes on its rock-cut
    ceiling. By the time the Ottomans came roaring into Trabzon its fame
    was so great that they too took an interest in the shrine, paying for
    more frescoes to be painted on the outside walls of a monastic church
    that had been painstakingly built onto the rock face.

    But of course, there was no happy ending to the story. As the
    centuries wore on, so the number of monks prepared to live in such a
    remote location dwindled to a handful. Then in 1924 came the
    Greek-Turkish population exchange at the end of the Turkish War of
    Independence, which meant that the few remaining Christian monks were
    required to leave the country.

    One might have thought that the monastery's remote location would have
    protected it from damage once it had been abandoned, but unfortunately
    graffiti artists were unable to resist leaving their tags on the
    frescoes, while some "art-lovers" went so far as to chisel away whole
    sections of the paintwork for themselves. Finally, a decision was made
    to rebuild the entire complex on the mountainside, a process which is
    now virtually complete. Some purists will probably dislike the end
    result, with its distinctive new roofs, but it's far from being the
    worst restoration in Turkey, and certainly makes it easier for the
    average layperson to envisage how life might have been lived up here
    among the birds.

    Although there are many organized tours to Sümela, it's
    perfectly easy to get there under your own steam, either by car or
    using a local minibus. The ride out there takes some time to break
    free of the ugly Trabzon overspill, but once you reach Maçka
    the scenery bucks up considerably, until finally you reach the
    Altındere National Park which protects the monastery and its
    surroundings. The zigzag walk up the rock face is a stiff one which
    requires sturdy footwear -- and coming down again can be especially
    treacherous, especially after rain when the wet leaves on the path are
    more slippery than banana skins.

    Sümela may be the most obvious excursion destination from
    Trabzon, but its sheer popularity sometimes overshadows all the other
    possibilities. Local travel agents are usually most enthusiastic about
    Uzungöl, a popular picnic spot on the banks of the long lake
    from which it took its name. The trouble is that Westerners who go
    there probably anticipate finding the same sort of pristine scenery
    and inviting log chalets as seen in the Alps. But this is Turkey, and
    more specifically the eastern end of the Black Sea, which means that
    concrete structures have insinuated their way even onto the shores of
    the sea. Much better, perhaps, to get out of the eastward-heading bus
    as it leaves the small town of Sürmene where, on the inland
    side of the road, you will be able to visit the Kastell, one of the
    finest surviving examples of the sort of fortified house once favored
    by the "derebeys," the local lords who held sway around here during
    the late Ottoman period.

    Not a great deal is definitely known about the Kastell (now signposted
    as MemiÅ? AÄ?a KonaÄ?ı), although it probably
    dates from the middle of the nineteenth century when it was built for
    a member of the YakupoÄ?lu family. Externally, it's an imposing
    building, its stone-built ground floor supporting a distinctively
    half-timbered upper storey, but really it's the lovely woodwork of the
    interior that you've come to see, along with the frescoes of local
    fruits that adorn the walls of the selamlık (the men's room),
    the fine stone-built fireplaces, and the curious private hamam that
    provided central heating for the house.

    Across the road from the Kastell is another fine house, apparently
    also due for restoration. Hard though it is to believe it now, these
    two houses once looked straight out onto the sea. Now they have the
    newly completed (or almost completed) Black Sea highway in front of
    them. As you return to the center of Sürmene, look towards the
    inland side of the road to see a cluster of Ottoman houses with so
    many windows that the walls could almost be made of glass. These are
    thought to have been a later development from the architecture of the
    Kastell, designed at a time when life was more stable, and homes no
    longer needed to be semi-fortified.

    One other day-trip destination from Trabzon is likely to be much less
    obvious. If you don't turn off the road towards Maçka but
    instead keep heading south you will come eventually to
    GümüÅ?hane, a small town whose name means "Silver
    House", a clue to a past far more illustrious than the dreary modern
    settlement might suggest. The secret here is to head inland
    immediately for what the locals call the Süleymaniye Mahallesi
    but which is also known as Eski GümüÅ?hane (Old
    GümüÅ?hane). It's a lovely drive up into the hills
    to a virtually abandoned settlement where just five or six families
    still hang on amid the ruins of a ghost town that grew rich on the
    proceeds of silver-mining, which kept going here until the nineteenth
    century. The authorities seem to have exhausted their enthusiasm for
    advertising the site with the huge pictures in the bus terminal, but
    if you pick the right taxi driver, he should be able to point out the
    ruins of the old Greek church, the old Armenian church, and the
    original school. A once magnificent Ottoman house with paintings on
    its facades is still just about standing, and you will be able to pick
    out many other anonymous ruins amid the rosehips and apple orchards.

    Afterwards, you will feel more than justified in returning to modern
    GümüÅ?hane to stock up on pestil (fruit leather)
    and köme (fruit sausage), the two sweet delicacies stocked by
    every other local shop.

    WHERE TO STAY: Most people will stay in Trabzon but the following
    accommodation is in Maçka.

    CoÅ?andere Pansiyon Tel: 0462-531 1190

    Hotel Büyük Sümela Tel: 0462-512 3540

    Maçkam Hotel Tel: 0462-512 3640

    HOW TO GET THERE: There are daily flights from Ä°stanbul and
    Ankara to Trabzon, and buses from all local towns including Erzurum
    and IÄ?dır. Minibuses for Sümela, Uzungöl
    and Sürmene leave from the minibus terminal facing the harbor,
    buses to GümüÅ?hane from the main bus terminal.


    26 October 2008, Sunday
    PAT YALE TRABZON
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