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Sparring over baklava spills over to Doha

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  • Sparring over baklava spills over to Doha

    Peninsula On-line, Qatar
    May 21 2006

    Sparring over baklava spills over to Doha


    By Ayse Alibeyoglu


    DOHA - The battle over the famous traditional sweet dish baklava
    between Turkish and Greek Cypriots in Europe has spread to the local
    pastry shops in Doha, owned by baklava makers from Istanbul and
    Lebanon.

    Historically, baklava was baked only on special occasions, and
    considered a food for the rich in Turkey, the top choice of pastry
    amongst the Turkish Sultans. It is made with layers of thin dough,
    with chopped pistachio in between those layers, added with honey
    syrup, various spices, baked and cut into diamond shapes.

    At the celebrations marking "Europe Day" last week, baklava, which is
    itself a Turkish word, was asserted by the Greek Cypriots as theirs
    and introduced as a Greek Cypriot pastry in a European Union (EU)
    poster presenting this traditional sweet as the national dish of
    ethnically Greek Cyprus alongside the flag of Cyprus.

    As a result, the baklava war between Turkey and Southern Cyprus
    intensified. Turkish baklava producers are protesting Greek Cypriot
    claims that the pastry is their own national creation, with support
    for their protest coming from State Minister and EU Chief Negotiator,
    Ali Babacan, in the EU General Secretariat.

    The owner of renowned baklava producer Haci Sayid Baklava, Halil
    Dincerler, commented at a recent press conference on the situation:
    "Baklava is Turkish, what the Greek Cypriots are presenting is just a
    copy. We will go all the way to Brussels, and we will let the EU
    Ministers taste real baklava," reported a Turkish newspaper.

    The President of the Baklava and Dessert Producers Foundation, Mehmet
    Yildirim, also present at the conference, gave his opinion on the
    international food fight, "it is time for Turkey to stand up and
    claim its national treasures, Turkey brought baklava with them all
    the way from Central Asia, there are official documents proving that
    baklava rightfully belongs to Turkey."

    These comments were shared with the owners of a Turkish Pastry store,
    recently opened in Doha. The baklava makers from Istanbul, told The
    Peninsula: "Baklava is definitely more Turkish than Cypriot, the
    Greek Cypriot version of the baklava does not taste or look anything
    like the original.

    `Their version of the Turkish delight, calling it Cyprus Delight, is
    another factor that just adds to the increasingly sticky war. Our
    Pashas and Viziers (rulers) owned the recipe, though it is made
    differently throughout the region, in Lebanon, Jordan and Syria no
    one can claim sole rights for baklava."

    A Lebanese "baklava" maker; told The Peninsula: "We had enough wars
    in Lebanon and we do not want to start another one with Turkey and
    Greece.

    `However the Greeks stole our recipe, but even they cannot match the
    Lebanese baklava, I support Turkey, they should showcase their
    baklava to the EU and the rest of the world before it is hijacked by
    others. However our pronunciation of the word baklava is the correct
    one." An Armenian baklava maker working on behalf of the Lebanese
    pastry shop added "the Armenians invented and improved the recipe."

    The sticky and rather complicated 'Baklava' battle has ensued,
    yesterday. Two hundred baklava makers demonstrated in Istanbul's
    historic Sultannahmet district, with banners proclaiming "Baklava is
    Turkish" whilst others read "Baklava should unify us, not divide us."
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