Monday, November 11, 2019

EPILOG AND LAST THOUGHTS

Monday, June 9, 2008


THE SUN WAS RISING, WHEN I DROVE FROM THE AIRPORT TO MY HOME IN GAVEA. THE FAMILIAR URBAN LANDSCAPE WAS BATHED IN A WARM GLOW.

When I got into the plane in Paris I fell asleep almost immediately after the 11.15 PM departure. When I woke up, surprisingly refreshed, it was dark around me and everybody was asleep or shifting resignedly in their seats. The time was 12.30 AM Brazilian time - 5 hours flight time left. I got my computer out and finished my last entries, feeling very content working all alone there in the dark. I was wondering why it had been so special to write down all these experiences. For one thing, I hadn’t written anything in a long time, so just to feel the rush of words waiting to come out was very pleasing, but also, I think it has to do with aging and values. It so happened that  “Shine a light” - the Martin Scorcese documentary was showing on the television screen in front of me. The Stones were giving a concert in NY and it was amazing to see their energy and complicity throughout the long show. They are well into their sixties, and, although wrinkled and skinny, they have youthful expressions and seem to thoroughly enjoy playing together and being on stage. They don’t have to do this any more, but possibly they continue to play because that is what makes them feel alive and happy. At least I would like to think so.
It had struck me during our trip that the most special moments are those that happen in an instant. One minute you’re having a wonderful experience, the next, it is over - like our balloon ride. One way to hold on to the shadow of that memory is to write it down - and thus the writer become a collector of happy, sad, or significant moments. 
The thought stayed with me for a long time as I drove home through the light of the rising sun, which made the normally ugly and violent urban landscape seem fresh and calm: thrill or happiness is evanescent, and all we can do is to find it around us and commit it to memory.

LAST DAY IN ISTANBUL

Sunday, June 8, 2008


THIS IS HOW YOU LOOK WHEN YOU HAVE JUST HAD TWO SCOOPS OF FABULOUS MADO ICE CREAM - ORANGE AND RASPBERRY.

In spite of having gone to sleep after 1am I wake up in our hideous room just before 6am. The one very nice thing is that the internet works perfectly, and I can upload my photos and fuss around with my blog, with which I have been obsessed throughout the whole trip (thank you Lilian for all your comments - I wonder if anybody else read it as faithfully). My curiosity is spiked by sunlight slanted in on the building so close in front of our window. If I twist my head out the window, I can see the sea. When eventually we get up and hurry through the smoke-smelling corridor to our breakfast, we see a pleasant yacht harbor and park scenery right outside. On go our walking shoes and we stroll in the sun all along the pier and beach - where we see weather-tanned men scoring out artichokes bottoms incredibly quickly, interesting public exercise equipment next to the jogging path, and more restaurants than we can count setting up for the Sunday crowd, with the odd sheep or rooster thrown in as an added family attraction. We meander through a very upscale residential area in search of the Mado ice cream place, we saw from the shuttle yesterday, and which I tasted in Ankara. It is a bit of a challenge to order, since the menu is in Turkish and the waiter speaks no English. After some  more random walking we head back to the hotel for a rest in the air conditioning and final packing. Before leaving in the same ‘shuttle’, we have a couple of fresh artichoke bottoms in a vinaigrette sauce, salad and fresh white cheese, accompanied by a couple of very cold Efes beers. We also (shhh) have some French fries (they were out of eggs). Back in the old Renault we go and quickly reach the airport. As I write this I am sitting midway between Turkey and France, delighted to have had this lovely trip and excited about going home to hug my son and the waiting animals.

THE BALLOON RIDE & LAST DAY IN CAPPADOCIA

Saturday, June 7, 2008


THE BEAUTY OF FLOATING SILENTLY THROUGH THE FRESH MORNING AIR AND WATCHING THE SUN HEAT THE MAGICAL LANDSCAPE IS SOMETHING SO SPECIAL THAT YOU FALL SILENT TOO.
We had a 5am pick -up time for our incredibly expensive balloon ride. We were stuffed into a van quickly filling to beyond capacity with people from all over the world. When we got to the site we were excited to see a multitude of vividly colored slack balloons quickly being filled with hot air (they use less flammable propane). Our balloon held 20 people in a rectangular cage divided into 4 compartments with the captain in the middle with his GPS, levers, tanks, and so on. The cage was very fancy, quite new with leather trimming and sturdy wicker sides. Suddenly we lifted up and started to float through the awakening landscape. Wherever you looked, balloons hung in the air, and as the sun began to rise above the surrounding mountains, their shadows accompanied us on the ground. There was no sound except for the occasional jet of hot air being blasted into the canvas above. We took pictures incessantly, and there was joy and excitement on all faces as we floated though the lovely scenery. The ride took an hour and we realized that landing was highly wind-dependent, when the accompanying trailer and van, which were trying to position themselves on our landing site, had to change direction several times. But we landed, and were tied down with not a hitch, and had to wait nicely in our compartments, as they were emptied and filled with the new group one by one. Then we had a champagne toast and received a certificate. 

We were happy and excited, when we drove home to have the delicious Kelebek breakfast, which, as I now knew, included the natural honey colored dried apricots. Mehmet explained that in September the apricots are laid out to dry on all the roofs, acquiring that rich color. The yellow version that we know has been soaked in sulfur for export.  

Later the same day:

LAST DAY WITH OUR GUIDE MEHMET, OF WHOM WE HAVE BECOME QUITE FOND. I AM THINKING EAST TURKEY NEXT TIME - AND MAYBE THE SOUTH....


Our last day in Cappadocia. The complicated packing for the one-suitcase limit for the domestic flight, we will catch later back to Istanbul, where we will spend a night before taking Air France to Rio via Paris. The usual remonstrations: Why do we always take too much stuff?
Mehmet takes us to a landscape of caves that were inhabited until sometime in the 1980s, when it became illegal to live in the caves. We visit one, complete with rug adorned living room and enjoy a ‘medium’ Turkish coffee, meaning with just a little sugar. Then we move up through the former dwelling, noting that the ‘Bride’s room’ has a cradle, a double bed, a WC, and a big shotgun on the wall. At the very top are the pigeon coops. These we have seen everywhere. The pigeons were kept for the guana - fertilizer they produced, but as the caves were gradually vacated, nobody took care of the birds any more, and by now you see very few.

After another spectacular lookout we are dropped in Ürgüp, so that we can go haggle with Ali Baba and his nice wife, Then Mehmet finds us another lovely spot for lunch, almost a private house, where we can see the pot with the stew slow-cooking in a deep hole, much like the one used by the monks. As we eat yet another delicious meal, we observe a gallant rooster patrolling his area, where five or six placid chickens are huddled under an old cart. This is necessary, because across the valley another black rooster is crowing in a challenging manner.

The clouds have been getting darker and we have heard distant thunder. When Mehmet drops us in a little village to take a look around, we are surprised by lashing rain. Fortunately, he returns quickly to rescue us, and we return to the hotel to relax and wait for the shuttle. We are sad to say good-bye to Mehmet. He was a lot of fun to be with, and quickly figured out what would be our preferences.
Much too soon a van filling with international tourists, including, incredibly, a young woman Wharton School student, is whisking us away from all this beauty, traveling through an increasingly industrial landscape to the Kayseri airport, where we go through security a record 4 times. 
Back in Istanbul we are met by the airport hotel shuttle, wthe driver of which again seems surprised that we are 2 couples and not 2 persons. We split up, the Lehrer's in a cab with one guy, and us in the shuttle, an ancient red Renault sedan. The driver doesn’t speak English, but even I can tell he gets lost several times. Thus, it is very late when we reach the hotel, supposed to be less than 4km from the airport, and we are horrified when we are let into a dingy room with twin beds and a view of an apartment a few meters away. Everything smells of smoke, towels, sheets - everything. But it is late, we are exhausted and too tired to argue. We go to sleep sad that our beautiful trip should end this way.

GOREME OPEN AIR MUSEUM AND THE FAIRY CHIMNEYS

Friday, June 6, 2008


THESE VOLCANIC ASH FORMATIONS ARE NOT LIKE ANYTHING ELSE WE HAVE SEEN. WE ARE AS IF SURROUNDED BY MODERN SCULPTURES. SEEN HERE IS THE ‘MOTHER, FATHER, AND DAUGHTER FORMATION

We are the first for breakfast. We wake up very early every day in spite of the 6-hour time difference, and thus are the first to appreciate the morning view and the wonderful dishes set out for us. The Turkish breakfast is healthy and plentiful and includes cereal, fresh and dried fruits, milk, yogurt, eggs, sliced tomatoes, cucumbers and meats, a kind of pound cake and, the best of all, a thin pancake, similar to the Arabian version, folded over and grilled with cheese filling. It is cut into crispy little squares when served. With all these healthy ingredients I always wonder why the only bread is a white crusty loaf. My system yearns for whole-wheat, which would seem natural with this combination.  This is not to say that I don’t eat more than my share. There will most certainly be a moment of reckoning, when I get back to the bathroom scales. Traveling seems to have this effect of opening all your senses. Soon we are joined by the fluffy white cat that Adrienne made friends with and combed yesterday. She is hungry and makes this very clear, so we furtively feed her cheese with slices of the local summer sausage. 

Back with Mehmet in the van we decide to start the day with the important Goreme Open Air Museum. We arrive together with many other tourists in landscape like the moon, except with sun and trees. The volcanic rock formations form the surface of a warren of tunnels and caves, many of them converted into churches around the 8th century, when Christians lived here. You can still see the frescoes on the wall - each church seems to have its own color palette - from chalky orange and green to deep lapis lazuli, and even black. We visit the Apple Tree church, the Dark church, the church of the Sandals, the Tokali church....and outside it is growing hotter and brighter by the minute, as we go from the darkness of the caves to the sun, much like the monks who lived here. Their dining table was hewn out of the rock - a long slab in the middle with a lower bench on each side and a deeper groove for the feet. The stove was a deep hole in the ground shaped like a frying pan, and they had a barbecue with a groove for putting the spit at an angle over the embers.
Our next stop is on a high point overlooking a cluster of Fairy chimney, like a petrified forest from a...yes.. fairy tale, Down the road we spot our first camel, who stands in a dignified manner waiting for his next task.

On to Ürgüp, a bustling market town, where we wander around looking at the many shops. We manage to extricate ourselves from an otherwise promising carpet shop, where the owner goes into that long routine they have of telling a roundabout story of, for example, a destitute Kurdish woman from whom he bought this carpet basically to help her out, only to arrive much later at the price, which is invariably startling. Our time is nearly up when Oswaldo and I spot the fascinating Ali Baba shop, which sells beautiful antique silver jewelry, for us reminiscent of the many wonderful things Nanda in NY has collected from her trips. But we have to leave for lunch, the lovely and secluded Dimkit restaurant, which we to our surprise recognize from a photo in an October 2007 Globo travel article. 
After the lunch we get to walk around amidst the fairy chimneys and take many, many pictures. Finally, exhausted by the heat and light, Oswaldo and I find a spot in the shade of a big rock, where we can look at a dromedary and a camel tethered nearby right in the sun (the owner explains they prefer the sun) chewing slowly on something like old men with loose dentures. We buy lemon ice-creams from the friendly owner, which turn out to cost a surprising $4 in that desolate spot. Ah well, but he gave us a chair, sprinkled water on the dust and there were those camels... On our way out we observe two peasant women making those delicious thin pancakes. We finish the day with a visit to a ceramic and pottery factory, built partly in caves, where we observe how both clay and pottery are made and buy a couple of pieces after fierce bargaining, which my father would have been proud of.
It is time to return to the hotel for an early night, since we have to be up at 4:30am for our balloon ride. I have, however, two final observations: one is that it is better to be a man in Turkey than a woman - even Mehmet says so. Everywhere we go we see the men in friendly clusters sitting outside the bars smoking, chatting and playing backgammon The women can be found, swathed in many cloths, for example rump in the air hoeing her (his?) field or plastering a wall. The other - and maybe there is a connection here - is that the door to the women’s WC’s never seems to either close or lock properly. Just imagine trying to negotiate the non-western toilet, sweaty and tense (in shorts), at the same time as pressing the door shut. Not easy.

THE IHLARA VALLEY AND THE UNDERGROUND CITY

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Mehmet picks us up for another busy day. Our first stop is a steep climb to a marvelous view of an ancient and still partly used Güzelyurt cave village, originally populated by the Greeks, until they were forcibly repatriated in 1924. We see a small unprepossessing church entrance, which turns out to reveal Christian frescos, partly defaced by Moslems when Christianity was outlawed. In the village we visit the former church of St. Gregory, now serving as a mosque with whitewash over the ancient frescoes. Above the former pulpit is a balcony reserved for the women, who are expected to go to the mosque only at Ramadam, the rest of the time only the men go there. In the course of our conversation Mehmet shows us a photo of his family, where he appears to be, as he says, ‘the king’ (or ‘sultan’, if you wish). He is a non-practicing Moslem, although his wife prays the required 5 times a day. She does not cover her head, and their daughter is just finishing her education to be a math teacher.

We proceed to the Ihlara valley, which is a 15km long gorge, probably created by an earthquake, with a stream running through it. We descend the many stairs and Mehmet leaves us to move the van to the other end, but not before showing us another Byzantine church, The Church of St. Daniels (or “Under the Tree Church - referring to the hidden entry) deep in a cave with the most beautifully colored frescos in lighter tones of orange, yellow, green, and blue. 

We continue down into the valley. The sound of water running, bees and songbirds is most lovely - really, we couldn’t be happier. We have an hour’s walk though this paradise, stopping to rest and take pictures every now and again. We are intrigued by a very loud noise, like a flock of geese fighting or so, and after much searching we find that the source is a large green and blue frog, maybe two. Mehmet meets us halfway when we have just found a little forest snack bar, where we enjoy a cold drink sitting in the shade on tree stumps. Then Mehmet leads us at a fairly fast clip to our lunch restaurant, Belisima, which turns out to have floating decks in the middle of the river, where we lounge on low sofas flung with colorful carpets and, as usual, make friends with some cats and a duck swimming hard against the stream to get at our bread. Even an intrepid sparrow flies on to our deck and demands food. 

Mehmet herds his dazed group out of there and on to a very different scene: the Derinkuyu underground city. Descending hundreds of steps though dark, damp caves, we discover how little man needs to survive. We shudder at their security system, which involved rolling millstones in front and in the back of the enemy, thus trapping them there until they would die. We are glad to be up in the sun again. Mehmet takes us to another stupendous view and then to the lovely Kelebek hotel, where we are installed in an exotic suite, part cave (or cave-like) with a rose garden out front, where we are promised (and find, sort-of) wireless internet.

Before leaving for our Turkish night program, we lounge in the rooftop bar of the hotel and chat with two young American women, one of whom graduated from Rochester University, where Keith taught, and the other from Berkeley, where Oswaldo also studied. Small world.
Two bottles of wine later, around 9pm, Mehmet takes us to a ‘cave’ show house, where we are herded in with many other (elderly) tourists from all over the place. Drinks are included, so unspeakable wine is produced in great jugs, as well as delicious nuts, cheese pastries and fruit. We opt for Raki, the local Pernod like drink. The show starts with some pretty lame Whirling Dervishes and is followed by an energetic group of youths in national costume, who dance around, and show, for example, a red-veiled maiden rejecting many suitors, who prance and jump to entice her. At the end we are all invited to dance and Mehmet gets me on the floor with Oswaldo. We dance in a long snaking ring out into a courtyard where a huge bonfire is burning, and there is a distinct heathen feel about it all. When we get in I am chosen to be ‘the maiden’ and sat in the middle of the suddenly vacated floor, on a little stool next to the former bride. I get to wear the red veil and she instructs me how to pout and shrug my shoulders rhythmically to indicate my disdain for the many athletic suitors and their antics. Finally I am marched around, arms linked with one of the young dancers. I get to choose a suitor. I choose Oswaldo of course, who has to dance enticingly for me holding a red and a white handkerchief, but refuses to do the push-ups. I think we show that we are very good sports. That whole Angra training worked.
The main attraction is still to come. Everything gets dark and from the ceiling descends a red-lit cage with a swaying woman in it. This is the long-awaited belly dancer. She languidly dances around a bit, swaying those rather generous hips, shoulders, breasts, the whole thing, separately and together. Then she looks around for volunteer men, all of whom have protruding bellies. She makes them lift up their shirts and ties a little gaily colored veil around their hips, hung with shiny golden coins, and proceeds to teach them her sinuous movements. They dance together and then each does a solo. This is something very special, and they actually steal the show. Incredibly good sports, bless them.

Sunday, November 10, 2019

THE ETHNOGRAPHY MUSEUM AND CAPPADOCIA

Wednesday, June 4, 2008


CAPPADOCIA IS STUPENDOUS. WE HAVE NEVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE THIS - WE ARE IN ANOTHER WORLD.
Our new driver, Mehmet Gük, picks us up from ‘Lojmans’ 6 and 11 (probably derived from the French!). He is a little dubious when I ask to be taken to the Ethnography Museum, where he has never been (he is from Cappadocia), but ventures out in the traffic - and after a few wrong turns we do get there. Turns out to a good idea, the place is, as the guidebook says, a little gem, showing the beautiful Turkish embroidery, woodwork, carpet-making, and pottery. One life-size tableau shows a woman getting ready for her wedding ceremony, another the womanly activity around a sleeping boy about to undergo circumcision.

Then we are off again, driving south-east in the direction of Cappadocia. We are impressed with the flat landscape that surrounds us with not a single tree in sight. We stop at a salt-water lake, bordered by rough salt so bright that you lose the sensation of where the salt ends and the water begins. 

Three hours later we see our first cave dwellings. We are so excited that we can barely wait to get out of the car. In the scorching heat we climb up narrow passageways and over boulders until we stand in the caves and churches used by humans thousands of years of years ago. We cannot stop taking photos. We are as if surrounded by sculptures. 
Our next stop is a lookout, with a spectacular view of a castle set by a lake and with snowcapped volcano, Mt. Erciyes, in the distance. 

Then we go to see the Kizil Kilise (Red Church) made of large blocks of red stones. It stands by itself in grassy hills reminding me of western Ireland. 

On another hill we see a group of large transparent tents. 3 guys, who have arrived while we are looking at the church, and who are now talking with Mehmet, inform us that they are part of the group of 70 or so forest workers living in those tents for some months now, working on the reforestation of the smooth slopes surrounding us.
The best it yet to some. When from the car Keith spots a little village with cave dwelling that looks like they might be in use, we stop to take a look. Mehmet is an expansive friendly type, who makes friends wherever he goes, so he quickly gets talking to some of the woman wearing white cotton scarves around their tanned weather-beaten faces and big skirts to the ground. 

There are children of various ages, but they are dressed like western children. The caves now are mostly used as storage rooms, but not so long ago served as hiding places when there was danger from invading troops. When I have to cross though a recently dumped mound of manure (picking my way gingerly along the side) and exclaim: WEOW! I hear giggling from behind a wall where 3 women are working. I see a cow moving around inside a little rickety house, three fierce (tied-up, thank God) dogs barking crazily, and a black donkey with a contemplative look, also tied up in a little patch of grass. On a nearby hill an elderly white-scarved woman in a long skirt follows and talks to a cow walking slowly in front of her in search of a good spot. 3 other cows are grazing steadily in the school grounds next to us. It is utterly peaceful with a pleasant smell of animals, sun and grass in the air. Mehmet takes us to an ancient little mosque, where we meet the 23-year-old imam. 

He agrees to sing for us, so puts on his ceremonial hat, turns towards Mecca cradling his face in his hands so as to direct the sound, and then starts his prayer :Allah.... His voice in so beautiful and clear, and the surroundings so true and humble that we are all deeply moved. Only 23 years old and living there with his own little family serving 26 families. Just amazing. On our way out the women have cleared away the dirt, and we meet an old man on a donkey, who cannot sell his walking stick to Keith, because he needs it himself. We cast a last look at the village and on a lone cow who has strayed over to another hill, wondering how she will get down. From the car I see the old woman and her cow have reached a brook, where the cow is drinking with the woman looking on in the afternoon sun.
So many impressions. It is time to find the converted 19th century monastery Karballa Hotel in the village of Güzelyurt (stress on second syllable), where we will have an early night in a pretty and cool room.

Friday, November 8, 2019

SIGHTSEEING IN ANKARA



TO SEE THE ATATURK MAUSOLEUM IS TO UNDERSTAND SOMETHING OF 20TH CENTURY TURKISH HISTORY AND THE FIERCE PRIDE OF THE TURKS FOR THEIR COUNTRY
This morning, after the now familiar shuttle ride, we split up to see different things. The Lehrers went with Hilmi to see modern paintings, whereas Leslie took us to see the Anit Kabir - the mausoleum built between 1944 and 1953 by the Turks for their revered leader Atatürk - after he died prematurely at 57 in 1938. It stands as a modern (and complete) version of the many temples, we have seen. We are impressed with the number of Turkish groups visiting: children of all ages with their teachers, women with headscarves, young athletes in club outfits - not many tourists at all. 

Whereas the building is impressive and photogenic, it is the museum dedicated to Atatürk’s military feats and his personal effects that are the most interesting. The most important battle scenes have been recreated dramatically in long tableaux with sound effects, and by the end of the third you feel utterly depressed with the carnage of it all. It is almost a relief to consider Atatürk’s slender and elegant shoes, his silk pajamas suits and coats. He was a very handsome man with brilliant blue eyes, which we see represented in the many paintings and wax figures. He was also an avid reader with a huge personal library. Before leaving we take a look at his cars and his boat, housed in a different part of the mausoleum.

After admiring the meticulous gardening (the whole place is run by the military) in the surrounding area we grab a taxi to the Citadel area where we meet the Lehrers and Hilmi for lunch, in my case a crispy thin pancake (made by an peasant woman sitting on the floor next to a heated stone) filled with a slightly salty and gritty cheese accompanied by hot black tea served in a glass; others have Turkish ravioli.
We let the Hilmis go - we should be able to manage eventually to catch a taxi back home - and head into the acclaimed Museum of Anatolian Civilizations. We spend a hour or so walking amongst the many beautiful artifacts - pots, bowls, glass objects, jewelry, an exhibition on MIdas...there is just so much to see. A handsome Hermes statue stands next to a photographical explanation of his discovery and excavation. It is thrilling to see that ancient white marble emerge from the dirt - and the archaeologists do indeed look very happy.

After a refreshing Turkish coffee we head steeply uphill to the citadel, an ancient dwelling area constructed around and inside the walls of the castle there. After passing through a street fair we sit on a high-up balcony enjoying a beautiful view of the city and a cold glass of Efes. We notice many hillside slum areas reminiscent of Rio. Apparently, Leslie had explained earlier, there is a law (“gecekondu”) that will give you right to occupation of land, if you can construct a house overnight. Thus teams of needy friends and relatives have become experts at rapid construction in the poor areas. We ‘cariocas’ know only too well how this goes...

We finish off the night with a stately dinner in a private hotel dining room. As we step outside to find a cab, Hilmi reaches for his cigarettes and announces this is his 2nd last cigarette. We document this important moment and - with the experience of having quit ourselves many years ago - wish him good luck! 

FIRST DAY IN ANKARA

Monday, June 2, 2008

 THIS HAS TO BE ONE OF THE BEST ICE CREAMS I HAVE EVER TASTED. BLACKBERRY (AMORA) AND VANILLA WITH LITTLE CHEWY BITS OF DRIED FRUIT AND CRUNCHY PISTACHIO NUTS

Downtime at Bilkent University
Waking up in our own spacious apartment after a series of rather small hotel rooms was heavenly. Outside the sun was shining in a cloudless bright blue sky, signalling another day of perfect weather. And soon Hilmi Demir, who is the young philosopher who has arranged everything for us, and his American wife, Leslie, were waiting outside, to take us all for breakfast at a nearby student café, where we sat outside and had queijo quentes (cheese toasts), peach juice and coffee. It was the day of the men’s conferences, so we women stayed chatting with another cup of coffee and then went to stock up at a campus supermarket. Back in the apartment I loaded up the washing machine, and then we met up again to catch the free shuttle to downtown Ankara, which lies 1/2 hour away. When we got off I immediately lost all sense of direction. It is very confusing when you really have no idea of where you are and cannot understand a single word of the written, nor indeed the spoken language. We have heard from various ex-pats how incredibly difficult it is to learn Turkish - almost all remain resignedly at a somewhat rudimentary level after a couple of years. There are no prepositions, for example, just a very large number of suffixes, which all change the meaning of a word. 
Leslie took us through a warren of streets displaying a busy Turkish city life, very far removed from the throngs of tourists at the ancient ruins of the last three days. We had delicious ice creams at Mado, a restaurant with pretty mosaic decorations on the walls. At some point in our trip Güray had shown us an artichoke field and explained that the Turkish variety is too tough to eat the leaves - you only use the bottom. I was lucky to spot a big basket of artichokes with a couple of guys sitting patiently scooping out the bottoms, which were floating in salt water waiting for customers to buy. 


Our walk finished with a goblet of cold draught Efes beer before we caught the shuttle back to the university. There was no air-conditioning in the packed bus, and I promptly feel asleep.

At night it had cooled off considerably and the Demirs led us to a beautiful club on campus with a panoramic view of the city, where we had dinner with a merry group of philosophers.

BERGAMA AND ON TO ANKARA

Sunday, June 1st, 2008



HERE IS SYDNEY. THE PHOTOS FINALLY ARRIVED. WHAT A BEAUTIFUL BABY. CONGRATULATIONS TO THE HAPPY PARENTS!
THE HOTTEST DAY
We have an extra early start: have to be ready for departure at 8am WITH our packed suitcases, since last stop is the Izmir airport. When the guide and van eventually turn up almost half an hour later people are a bit grumpy, but off we go.  We break for coffee at a shady roadside cafe, where we watch a mom ‘n dad team of swallows work hard to feed their young. Our drive takes us through Izmir, ancient Smyrna, which is a depressing mix of slums, randomly scattered apartment buildings and construction. Somehow I had thought something more beautiful, but maybe further towards the sea - we don’t see it from the van. As we enter Bergama we pick up a cheerful Australian couple and I learn how to say “GeDay”, which all the other Crocodile Dundee fans out there would also find exciting.


We first visit the Acropolis and stop in the shade of a big tree to take in the sight of the remains of a great temple to Zeus, most of which was quietly shipped to Berlin by the first archaeologists to work the site. Our walk takes us to the theatre, which is so steep that you feel you’ll take flight any minute. The view of the surrounding farmland is spectacular and very peaceful. What is left of the marble is particularly white and also gives you an idea of how ingenious was the construction of the tall slender columns and their great triangular overlying pediments. 


We then stop briefly at the gigantic Red Basilica before lunching at a huge touristy restaurant hall together with the contents of many tour-buses to the surprising musical background of Abba and the like.
Our next stop, the Asclepion, was an ancient world renowned medical center, where Galen, physician to the gladiators worked. It had a very high success rate, according to Güray due to the fact they only let healthy people in - or at least patients with a good attitude. If you thought you were going to die, well - this hospital was not for you. Treatment included dream therapy and mud-baths. The location is quite stunning, I befriend a large white dog with funny little round ears, who wags her tail quietly, looking shyly to the side as I talk to her. 

When I move off to our next lecture-stop beneath the next big tree, she follows and lies down close to us. She is so quiet and discrete that I actually pet her. There is a little stream of healing water running through a pipe and we put our hands into it, wash our hot faces, wet our necks, and take little sips. It is so cold and good - and, if they used it more 2000 years ago as part of the treatment, it can’t be all bad! We end up in the patients’ quarters where they slept and had the dreams for the doctors to interpret. This is a fitting place for us to end, because the heat has almost done us in, although the ruins were spectacular and the stories fascinating; (it is also good because I am simply running out of superlative adjectives). 
Throughout our wanderings I have admired the deep-red poppies nodding in the slight breeze all over the ground. They figure in Birds Without Wings (the novel I was reading for background) as a symbol of Turkey’s blood drenched history, but are also exactly the color of the Turkish flag hoisted just about everywhere. I notice this because it has the same colors as the Danish flag - and Danes REALLY like their flag. Also I mustn't forget the trees full of ripe mulberries. We have the purple type (amora) in Brazil, but I have never tasted the greenish/yellow one, and Güray is an excellent spotter of mulberry trees wherever we have gone.
Back in the van we doze fitfully as we drive the two hours or so to Izmir Airport, where our flight is leaving two hours later than we thought. When the Lehrers are penalized - and have to pay for - luggage in excess of an unheard 15 kilos per suitcase, we decide the best course of action is a hefty gin and tonic. They turn out to cost $12 each - so we have another one - just for the hell of it!
We reach Ankara in the dark and rain and are met by a trim and grim driver who was expecting two distinguished professors and not 2 dirty and sweaty couples with 4 suitcases and assorted bags. We do fit in the car, though, and hurtle through that aggressive Turkish traffic to Bilkent University, the entrance of which in the dark and rain looks like crossing into East Berlin in the 70s. Oswaldo and I are surprised when we are assigned a HUGE apartment with everything you could want (except food), and, in particular, a washing machine and of course that hot shower that we both need so badly.

Thursday, November 7, 2019

SEVERAL LESSONS IN ONE DAY

Saturday, May 31, 2008


YOU HAVEN’T LEARNT WHAT HOT AND DRY IS, UNTIL YOU’VE WALKED IN THE BRIGHT MIDDAY JUNE SUN OF AN ANCIENT ARCHEOLOGICAL SITE IN SOUTHERN TURKEY

9:30 am pick up by Güray and Mustafa and we were off to Ephesus, once the provincial capital of the Roman empire. Hundreds of tourists descended from vans and buses together with us, ranging from brightly red-burned and scantily clad Nordic tourists to the Japanese ladies wearing slacks, long-sleeves shirts, thick black gloves, hats, scarves holding the hats in place, and, in many cases, a final scarf covering the nose and mouth. With so many people milling about you actually got a lively feeling of a city, except of course in ancient times, they would not all have stopped to take pictures of the ruins and of each other in front of them. Our contemplation of the site was interrupted when a cute little red cat appeared with a live lizard in the mouth. 

Oswaldo, who is very firm about these matters, set about to save the lizard. This involved distracting the cat, who was too young to know better, and then grab the many-colored lizard in his fingers and set it down somewhere safe. Those who know and love Oswaldo will recognize his expression of satisfaction in the photo here.

The Celsus library was most impressive, preserved in two stories and looking like a 17th century opera house. We were told an interesting story: the local brothel was located across the street and the library thoughtfully provided a secret tunnel to that establishment, giving a new meaning to (in Güray’s words): “Honey, I’m just going to the library...”

The theatre was the biggest I have ever seen, holding 24,500 spectators. Apparently, it is still used for performances or special celebrations. Güray mentioned Elton John, Sting, and Diana Ross.
We lunched on homemade food under a big green tent in the garden of Ege, a carpet teaching center and co-op. After the lunch we saw how the local double-knotted carpets are made, how the tread was extracted from the silk-worm cocoons, and were given a show of wool, silk and wool/cotton carpets. When you consider carpets you walk on them barefoot, and it was a particular luxurious sensation to sink your toes into piles of brilliantly colored new carpets. It quickly became clear that the show should be followed by a purchase. Oswaldo and I had not thought to buy anything, but we both liked the small silk hanging shown here. 

When we heard that the price was $35,000, we congratulated ourselves on invariably finding the most expensive thing, but stood firm in our resolve not to buy anything. In the end the Lehrers found a very nice carpet, which for them will have this whole memory attached to it.
We stopped then at the Ephesus Museum, one of the most unpretentious and well arranged museums I have seen in a long time. A white marble head of Eros caught an expression of innocence and sadness around the mouth, which was irresistible (and which could not be photographed, sorry). Artemis was depicted with many eggs, or breasts - we couldn’t get a consensus on this - but certainly a most beautiful fertility goddess. Finally the museum had arranged a detailed and illustrated mini-exhibition of gladiators, which explained how it was considered an honor to face death and how in fact there were many volunteer gladiators. On our way back to Selçuk we stopped briefly at the shrine to the Virgin Mary, Mary’s House, where we ran into a team from Globo Reporter and unfortunately could not come up with the name of the famous interviewer (Later note: Edney Silvestre), who was standing in front of the cameras, and with whom we had a pleasant conversation.
It’s not over yet. When I heard there was a street fair that day in town I hopped off the van and wandered amongst the many stalls, which had an intensely relaxing local flavor. 

On my way home I stopped briefly at a shop hung with beautiful textiles and with a fabulous headdress. When the owner, a young Kurd named Marco, as I would learn, saw my interest he said I would get a prize if I guessed what it was for. I considered this and said: A young country girl dressed for her wedding?” Bingo! I got a small purse, and, of course, a long chat with Marco, which resulted in an after dinner purchase of a small rug, not least because he had 4 white Van (a lake in Eastern Turkey, near Mt. Ararat) cats - two of them kittens - famous for having one yellow and one blue eye. Who could resist this?

AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL DAY

Friday, May 30, 2019


Didyma, Miletus and Priene

After breakfast taken with several cats in attendance, including the 18yr old Lulu, who OWNS the place, we left the brightly colored SU Otel in the company of our new guide Güray and groovy-looking (long wavy hair gelled and combed back, bright blue eyes, cool mid-calf pants with loose shirt) driver Mustafa. We set off in the direction of our first stop, Didyma, and discovered then that Güray, although incredibly well informed, speaks the kind of English best understood by an English speaking Turk. He speaks with passion about the mythological characters (“They make-a LOVE each other”) - this about Artemis, who in this region is also called Selena, Goddess of the Moon, and whose husband was a shepherd Andemyan, who worked in the majestic Five Finger Mountains. They had an impressive 50 children, and it was said that when they made-a that love, there was an especially beautiful sunset. Güray learns that he will have to adjust to this particular group, when he turns in the van and says (rhetorically): “Do you know famous Aristotle sentence?” From his position of possible comfort in the van Keith drawls: “Yeah - man is a rational animal” and then laughs that big happy laugh of his, while Güray looks goofy for a moment.

The approach to Didyma was through modern and hastily erected apartment houses reminiscent of the scene in Ireland when we were there in 2004. Suddenly the construction sites opened to reveal the stunning Apollo temple, where we could walk freely amongst the ruins. Behind the temple was a modern mosque, from which we suddenly heard one of the 5 daily chanted prayers, creating an interesting contrast between the grandiose heathen antiquity in front of us and modern day Islam.

After a traditional Turkish lunch with ‘mezzes’, some hot dishes and fruits, we were off to the ancient Miletus, birthplace of Thales and philosophy. In order to get there we walked on a dirt path along an olive orchard, where cows were taking a siesta in the midday hour or lazily chewing on some low-hanging branches. 


I spotted a stork nest on an ancient mosque, not only with a stork in it, but also baby storks. “It’s a sign!” I shouted to Keith walking in front of me, since we have been waiting for Sydney, their new granddaughter, to be born for the whole week. We had the site almost to ourselves and in the hot sun it was so quiet that we could hear the bees humming, as we explored what was left to see of the Miletus civilization. Once the sea reached to the gates of this ancient community, creating the lively trade they depended on, but when silt filled up and effectively isolated the entire area, along with introducing malaria to the region, the population basically abandoned the city. 
We still had Priene to go which we reached after a stiff hike up the mountain side in the afternoon sun. Above the lovely theatre, the columns and the tumbled jig-saw puzzle of pieces tossed as if by a giant hand in the grass around us, we could see the rough mountain side from which the local blue, gray marble had been cut to create all of this. Güray handed me a slender wild asparagus stalk to chew on, and then a stalk of wild oregano, which fitted perfectly with the surroundings.

Back at the hotel for a dip in the pool we decided on stronger measures: we shared 2 bottles of local sparkling wine and toasted Sydney as best we could. And indeed, she was born in California that night. Welcome Sydney!