Tag: christmas

  • Turkey this Christmas

    Turkey this Christmas

    From the Newspaper | Asha’ar Rehman

    IT is so fascinating how phases are formed by the threading together of occurrences, one quickly following the other as if by design to build a whole.

    This one began a few months ago with a novel by Elif Shafak. Forty Rules of Love came highly recommended. It was a great read. It was to mark the start of a Turkish spell.

    Soon afterwards the mayor of Istanbul was greeted in Lahore by a very warm Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif and the prospects of doing business here. Lahorites were promised Istanbul’s bridges complete with the trademark Istanbul buses to move them around.

    All of a sudden, a school set up in partnership with the Turks was mentioned as the best available option for children. It was hailed for combining new education with the right kind of discipline.

    It was an ideal choice for parents who had no escape but to ensure modern education to their children but who had a duty to guard the impressionable minds against the evils which can — which do — generally accompany education these days.

    Then, if somewhat differently tasked than in Shafak’s engaging story, the venerable Maulana Jalaluddin Rumi emerged on the scene. The Maulana graced Lahore on the occasion of a conference organised in his name, to help guide the depressingly confused locals out of the quagmire they have been unable to wiggle out of on their own.

    This Rumi was assigned with reconciling modernity with traditional Islam — one objective that has routinely found Pakistani remedy-seekers to court the company of the Sufis.

    If this were not enough evidence of the increasing Turkish presence in the surroundings here, not too long afterwards, a friend proudly revealed he was joining a media organisation to be financed by Turkish money. Turkish buses, Turkish bridges, the much-needed Sufism in this case with a Turkish tinge to it, Turkish schools, Turkish newspaper.

    Not to speak of the occasional bucking-up visits here by senior Turkish officials cast in a vital role because of their country’s important positioning in Nato and the war on terrorism and the resultant similarities between Turkey and Pakistan.

    The pace at which the ‘Turkisation’ of Pakistan was taking place, the country, or at least some more developed parts of it such as Lahore, looked all set to qualify for inclusion in the European Union. There was no cause for complaint as yet. The real drama was to follow.

    The preceding imports were received without too many complaints and they set the stage nicely for Bahlul, Bihter & Co to join the growing Turkish party here.

    As this chronology of events indicates, Ishq-i-Mamnu was by no means the beginning of an invasion of our space — this time by a brotherly country. It was part of a steady expansion, a part whose potential was first brought out when the culture reporter suddenly asked to go to Istanbul, to interview Bihter, he readily confessed.

    The full impact was realised when some newspapers condemned the content of Mamnu as being alien to Pakistani culture and when local showbiz people objected to the Pakistani channels’ rush to buy the Turkish plays for screening here following Mamnu’s huge success.

    The argument against the import of foreign plays that could hurt local interests is similar to the one where certain Pakistani manufacturers are asking for a protection regime before trade with India is opened. This is a point relevant to all areas — bridges etc — where the Pakistani brand is available but is being overlooked in favour of the foreign in the name of quality.

    Yet, this is a whole package where users cannot pick and choose. The borders are set to dissolve between friendly countries faster than between two old hostile neighbours. Unless the reasons are as acrimonious as the ones cited by Difa-i-Pakistan Council to hold an anti-India march in Lahore on Sunday, the business or the cultural argument cannot quite stall imports.

    This has already been proven by the screening of Indian films in Pakistan after pressure from Pakistani distributors and cinema owners. This came about in the face of patriotic protests by local filmmakers who sometimes tried to block outside competitors by resorting to branding their fare as obscene and unfit for consumption here.

    This is a dangerous line for performers to take, especially in a country where art, regardless of its source, can so easily be scandalised.

    As Turkey insists on playing a teacher in all these areas, its imports and influence in Pakistan are set to increase and this will only augment a presence that has always been there.

    The Regional Cooperation Development that grouped Pakistan, Iran and Turkey was overtaken by the promise and resourcefulness of the Middle Eastern model. The acronym lost its relevance when the RCD folded in 1979, aged 15, but Turkey continued to be looked upon in Pakistan as a prime source that could at least inspire certain modifications here if not outright reform.

    Mustafa Kamal Ataturk was forever at hand to fuel political discussions in a Pakistan badly and always in need of a saviour. That saviour was presented to us latest in Gen Pervez Musharraf, only soon into his term, the general and his image-builders found the comparison incompatible with their realities, leaving plenty of room for Maulana Rumi to try and reconcile two opposing Pakistans with an effort more than a decade later.

    Turkey as a legacy of Ataturk has always engaged the Pakistanis. Groups of wise men have always advised the people of this country to adopt the Turkish model of giving the military a constitutional role in the government. That route politicians here have found hard to break and they have broken it at their peril.

    Principally and effectively the Turkish power-sharing rule sustains the government in Islamabad even when Istanbul itself has moved to empower the politicians. This is one Turkey that has left Turkey but remains in Pakistan.

    The writer is Dawn’s resident editor in Lahore.

  • Decorating Pine Tree was a Turkish Ritual

    Decorating Pine Tree was a Turkish Ritual

    Famous all around world Sumerian specialist Dr. Muazzez İlmiye Çığ said pine tree which used Christmas tree was a Turkish ritual. Pine tree which used Christmas tree spreads to Christian world at century 16. And Turks had been celebrated new year at 22 December when the longest night of year. They had been celebrated new year while decorate pine tree.
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    Sumerian specialist Dr. Muazzez İlmiye Çığ talk about a tree which named “Akçam’. It is a kind of pine tree. Akçam just used to grew at Turkistan. Turks used to bring Akçam to homes and they used to put some gifts for God under that tree. They used to bind some doeks to boughs. They used to give thanks to God because of God had been given them a good life at pass year. Families used to wear good clothes and visit each one of them and elders. “This ritual reached to Europe. Pine tree isn’t about Noel. Christians accepted as Jesus birth the pine tree at İznik Concile. But Christians didn’t decorate pine tree. This ritual has begun in Germany century 16. It reached to France and spread all around world” said Dr. Çığ.

    Turks still have been featured to tree. They decorate with some doeks not only pine but some others trees too. They make some vows. Some Turks perceives the making vow means paganism. This tradition attends with local people. More High-educated, high-income and city people see this tradition at some movies, stories or ads. Some of city people buy noel tree and decorate them at Turkey. All these appear that Dr. Çığ’s claims may be right. Turks left all Shamanist totems after adopt Islam. I think decorating pine tree and putting some gift under that were perceived against Islam. And they began to celebrating the New Year according to Islam. They left celebrating December 22. And noel tree turned back Turkish high-level people as Europe and American ritual after centuries.

  • Turkish teen learns about Christmas

    Turkish teen learns about Christmas

    By Gary Tomlin

    GALESBURG —

    g12c000000000000000579b2610a858eca713759c29417a77f975f265b8As a young Turk in America, Batu Ekineigoly (e-kin-jo-la), 15, is comfortable with the similarities of the two cultures and courageous in understanding the differences. Batu is an exchange student from Istanbul and a sophomore at Galesburg High School.

    “Christmas in Turkey is like New Year’s. We have Santa Claus and give gifts and do all those things, but I never knew that we celebrate it because it is Jesus’ birthday,” he said.

    Ekineigoly’s host parents are the Rev. Jake and Rachel Chastain of Galesburg. Jake is youth minister at First Church of the Nazarene. Rachel is a nurse at Galesburg Cottage Hospital.

    Ekineigoly has a passion for the performing and visual arts. He is on the swim team and performs or plays the piano whenever there is an opportunity. He has to decide if he wants to do the spring musical or go out for tennis.

    In swimming he competes in the freestyle and backstroke and hopes to get his 50-yard freestyle time to under 30 seconds. His best time in the event is 37 seconds.

    Academically, he said, “I’m good in math. I did pretty well in physics in Turkey but haven’t taken it here yet. I’m good at art and am taking drawing from Ms. Blakewell.”

    His English is excellent, but it comes with a lot of work. He studied the language for seven years before coming to America and his family provided him with tutors along the way. “I watch English movies with subtitles in Turkish. That helps me understand the language.”

    He cites American Studies with Mr. Bennewitz as an influential teacher. “I’ve read three novels and he taught so well that was interesting.”

    Jake said Ekineigoly would read the work then go through the Sparks Notes on the Internet to get the synopsis to pull the meaning together.

    He is interested in the American west and can speak about the westward expansion. “We learned about the Civil War. I like to watch cowboy movies with horses and bank robbers,” he said. “I learned that they are called Indians because Columbus thought he was in India when he discovered America.

    “I learned about Jessie James and did a presentation on him. I dressed up like him and Jake and Rachel came and played and sang ‘The Ballad of Jessie James.’ ”

    He also has done a study and presentation on Amelia Earhart in which his partner was Austin Strader.

    “I’m really proud of collaborating with Austin on that project. I have a lot of knowledge of her childhood.”

    Ekineigoly is also proud of his Turkish heritage and has learned well his history – from Genghis Khan’s conquest from the east to Constantine’s conquest from the west and more recently Mustafa Ataturk’s successful revolution against the Allied powers following World War I. He sees Ataturk as a great hero and founder of the Republic of Turkey and who brought democracy to the people in the early part of the 20h century.

    “Ataturk could have declared himself King but he said, ‘our war is now,’ and he worked to modernize Turkey. He changed the language from Arabic to Turkish. He separated the public and business things from religious things.”

    Ekineigoly’s father is a mechanical engineer with the German company Mann, and his mother is in the landscaping business that her father started. “We sell plants and design gardens.”

    “My mother raised me freely and I hate people who try to restrict me,” he said.

    The Chastains are from Green Bay, and while he doesn’t understand American football, he is being exposed to it.

    “One of the first things we taught him was to say, ‘Go Pack Go,’ ” Rachel said.

    Other differences he notes between Istanbul and Galesburg are the homes are in order and so proper. “It is so organized and flat. In Turkey, nothing is organized or planned and it’s not flat. The cars are pretty much the same.”

    He will finish his studies on June 6, and return home.

    “He’s a good kid. We love him. He has come a long way,” Rachel said.

    via Turkish teen learns about Christmas – Galesburg, IL – The Register-Mail.