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Pamuk mourns the loss of Istanbul's greatness

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  • Pamuk mourns the loss of Istanbul's greatness

    The Gazette (Montreal)
    June 11, 2005 Saturday
    Final Edition

    Pamuk mourns the loss of Istanbul's greatness: Born at a time of
    transition, author sees a city the world has forgotten

    PAUL CARBRAY, The Gazette


    Merging a writer's life with a city isn't a new idea. It's been tried
    countless times, and a couple of publishers recently began series
    marrying a writer with a city or region.

    Orhan Pamuk is well-qualified to write about Istanbul. He has lived
    in the city for most of his life and is Turkey's most famous
    novelist, at least in the West.

    This is not a conventional guidebook. Rather, it is a moody,
    introspective look at a declining city that once ruled an empire and
    at the life of a young boy trapped in a family riven by squabbles.

    The Pamuk family, rich by Turkish standards, lives in the Pamuk
    Apartments, a five-storey block. "My mother, my father, my older
    brother, my grandmother, my uncles, and my aunts, we all lived on
    different floors," Pamuk writes.

    The house is ruled by his grandmother, who spends most of her time in
    bed, mourning while her sons squander the family fortune and the
    marriage of Orhan's father slowly disintegrates.

    The reader is led into the decaying Istanbul of the 1960s to 1980s, a
    city built on past glories and one that is trying to come to terms
    with its past while turning its eyes toward the West.

    Nineteenth-century wooden mansions called yalis are burning down
    along the Bosphorus, a symbol of the destruction of Istanbul's
    Ottoman past.

    "In my childhood, these Bosphorus villas had no attraction for the
    nouveau riche and the slowly growing bourgeoisie," Pamuk remembers.

    "Because the rich of the republican era were not as powerful as the
    Ottoman pashas, and because they felt more western sitting in their
    apartments ... viewing the Bosphorus from a distance, the old Ottoman
    families now weakened and brought low ... could find no takers for
    their old Bosphorus yalis."

    It became public entertainment to watch these yalis burn down, and
    Pamuk, his young girlfriend by his side, would watch with the crowds
    on the water's edge and draw his own conclusions about the loss of
    empire.

    Pamuk's book is suffused with huzun, the uniquely Turkish form of
    melancholy. He is saddened by what his once cosmopolitan city has
    become, its once vibrant minorities, like Greeks and Armenians,
    driven out by religious and secular strife, and the city transformed
    by massive migration from the countryside.

    The Turkish republic was 29 years old when Pamuk was born in 1952,
    but Istanbul, the Istanbullus (what residents call themselves) and
    the country were still in transition. Its script had been changed
    from Arabic to the Roman alphabet, new dress codes were instituted
    (at one point, wearing a fez was an offence), and the state was
    determined to be secular.

    Pamuk grows up to despise his compatriots' slavish imitation of the
    European west and misses the social cohesion of the old Turkish
    empire.

    Making the book more beguiling are its wonderful pictures, many of
    them by Ara Guler, which record the Istanbul of times past. "I
    relived much of the excitement and puzzlement of writing this book
    while choosing the photographs," Pamuk says.

    But casting a shadow over everything is Pamuk's sense of desolation,
    his huzun, at what has happened to his beloved city.

    "Gustave Flaubert, who visited Istanbul 102 years before my birth,
    was struck by the variety of life in its teeming streets; in one of
    his letters, he predicted that in a century's time it would be the
    capital of the world," Pamuk writes.

    "The reverse came true. After the Ottoman Empire collapsed, the world
    almost forgot that Istanbul existed. The city into which I was born
    was poorer, shabbier, and more isolated than it had ever been before
    in its 2,000-year history. For me, it has always been a city of ruins
    and of end-of-empire melancholy."

    Istanbul: Memories and the City

    Orhan Pamuk, Knopf, 384 pages. $34.95
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