Tag: Istanbul

  • Lost in Istanbul

    Lost in Istanbul

    Istanbul 11My first time in Turkey changed my perception of happenings in Turkey totally. Even though it might be not quite objective to try to comprehend Turkey based only on impressions from Istanbul and Ankara, I was amazed to find it so liberal and European-like! Another thing – I am truly astonished to find so many similarities between our cultures and my “native” dialect. Turkish people – just as Armenians – appeared to be exceptionally friendly, incredibly entrepreneurial, but at the same time somehow reserved, distrustful, and sad. Maybe it’s only my own subjective perception, but despite all the jolly looking crowds walking along the Istiklal and the recent economic achievements of the country, Turkey seems to be full of sadness and fear. I used to think that we – Armenians – have been and still are the victims of Turkish government and nationalistic policies. Now I believe that Turkish people too are among the victims of their own government!

    Then I discovered Hrant Dink! Quite differently than I knew him from the other side of the border! I used to think of him as an incredibly smart and brave Armenian-Turkish journalist, who fought for truth till the end. But in Turkey I came to know him as someone who shaped a new era – an era of culture of truth! Pro-government officials and opposition, NGOs and just ordinary people – everyone we met in Turkey divided time in two: before Hrant Dink and after Hrant Dink!

    I was lost in Istanbul. The city that I wholeheartedly love – the majestic multicultural architectural heritage, colorful streets, its warm and friendly people… the city that I hate for all the crimes it hosted… for all the violence it silently witnessed. I am lost.

    Go left… and then straight forward ..and then again straight – a boy with huge eyes tried to help me out. Straight forward? How do I go straight forward in a city of not a single straight street?

    Straight forward to opening borders between countries! Armenia will break out of the blockade! Turkey will stipulate development in Eastern regions! Straight forward to opening borders also between Turkish and Armenian people? Is there a way – even a twisted one through the mutual distrust, hatred and pain accumulated over so many years?

    “I am from Ermenistan” – I said cautiously smiling. “Welcome” – they cautiously smiled back.

    Back in Yerevan I keep asking myself, is there a way out of sadness and hopelessness for my exhausted heartbroken people, whose identity is tied to genocide? Is there a way out of silence for these cautiously smiling people on the other side of the border, living decades in a land of military rule and controlled freedom?

    via Lost in Istanbul.

  • 10 Things to Do in Istanbul

    10 Things to Do in Istanbul

    Posted by jbogdaneris on October 11, 2011 – 8:21 am

    Overwhelming is the operative word for the old capital of the Ottoman Empire. On the cobble-stoned streets masses of tourists shuffle their way through the remnants of old civilizations. Up above on the many terraces overlooking the city, are spectacular views of the aqua-colored Bosphorous and soaring minarets. And then several times a day the wailing melodic call to prayer echoes from the loudspeakers of the mosques pushing aside every other sound for a few moments.

    1. The Sultanahmet

    I spent nearly all my time in this historic neighborhood and still don’t feel like I saw half of it. The epicenter of tourist hotels and big important sightseeing destinations, it still manages to retain an air of mystery and discoverability despite being under a seemingly constant invasion of travelers. Much of the action occurs outdoors and everything is for sale from the delicious sesame-covered round bread known as simit to long-forgotten childhood toys. Orient Express is a centrally located hotel with a pool and a rooftop restaurant but the romantically named Poem Hotel (whose rooms are named after examples of famous Turkish verse) is on a cozier street with a sweeping view of the world’s narrowest shipping lane and a sprawling terrace populated with brazenly cute felines.

    2. Beyoglu

    If you leave the Sultanahmet and take a ride over the Galata Bridge (where fisherman cast their lines at all hours of the day and night) you’ll discover a more modern Turkey in this neighborhood. Headscarves are in shorter supply and a younger crowd of locals and visitors swells the main boulevard Istiklal Caddessi and the adjoining arteries teeming with bars, cafés and even late-night fruits stands. Newly resurrected tavern Cicek Pasaji is a traditional brasserie known as a meyhane and a great place to eat cheap food, sip beer and listen to impromptu live music.

    3. Hamdi Restaurant

    A local institution with sweeping views of the city, this is a good place to start your culinary journey of the city. Its famous for its kebap dishes but also has a devastatingly good haydari (a yoghurt, roasted eggplant and garlic dip) large puffy fresh bread, and the best humus I may have ever tasted. Enter through the ground floor baklava shop

    4. The Blue Mosque

    Built as an architectural response to the spectacular Aya Sofia, the Blue Mosque is generally considered the lesser of the two, but why choose? The six minarets rise high into the sky and act as a landmark for wayward tourists. Its profile is postcard perfect from every angle and the inside must be seen to be believed. Allow plenty of time for gazing heavenward at the tile work with mouth agape.

    5. Aya Sofia

    Originally built as a Byzantine church then later re-commissioned as a mosque it’s now a museum whose Christian mosaics of uncommon beauty were only recently uncovered with painstaking care. The many layers of history on view are an apt metaphor for the city outside its glorious domed ceiling.

    via 10 Things to Do in Istanbul. PART 1

  • 48 Hours: Istanbul

    48 Hours: Istanbul

    As the summer heat subsides, Turkey’s premier city buzzes with a host of autumn events.

    By Laura Holt

    5272707 655381s

    Rex Features

    Night vision: The Blue Mosque at dusk

    Travel essentials

    Why go now?

    Seven hills, four bodies of water and two continents meet in this sprawling maritime city, which mixes historic mosques and markets with rooftop bars for a city break with depth and dimension. As autumn falls, Turkey’s premier metropolis shakes off the heat of high summer with a season of festivals: starting with film (Filmekimi; 8-15 October; filmekimi.iksv.org), moving on to music (Akbank Jazz; 13-23 October; akbanksanat.com), and culminating in the celebration of Republic Day on 29 October, when a light display and fireworks will illuminate the Bosphorus Bridge (1).

    Touch down

    On arrival, British travellers must pay £10 (in cash) for a visa. Istanbul’s main airport, Ataturk, is 20km west of the centre on the European side. It is served by Turkish Airlines (020-7471 6666; turkishairlines.com) from Birmingham, Heathrow and Manchester; and British Airways (0844 493 0787; ba.com) from Heathrow. A train/tram combo gets you quickly and cheaply into town. Follow signs for the Hafif Metro; buy a 2 lira (YTL2/0.70p) token and take the train to Zeytinburnu station. Transfer to the tram bound for Kabatas (different token, same price) which heads first to Sultanahmet, before crossing to the newer parts of town.

    The city’s second airport, Sabiha Gokcen, is 50km west of the centre, across the Bosphorus on the Asian shore. Pegasus (0845 0848 980; flypgs.com) flies here from Stansted, as does easyJet (0843 104 5000; easyJet.com) from Luton and Gatwick. An airport bus (00 90 212 518 03 54; istanbulairportshuttle.com) travels to central hotels for €10, or less for groups of four or more.

    Get your bearings

    Istanbul is loosely divided into three. In the southern part of the European side, Sultanahmet marks the hub of the old town. Encircled by fortified walls, this area cradles a triumvirate of architectural jewels: the russet-hued beauty of Hagia Sophia (2); the Blue

    Mosque (3) with its six minarets; and the expansive hilltop pile of Topkapi Palace (4).

    Moving clockwise towards the north, the Golden Horn estuary bisects the older part of the European side, from the more modern section of bars, bistros and shopping precincts stretching from Galata Bridge (5) into the Beyoglu area, and up towards the main Taksim Square (6).

    Finally, to the east: the Bosphorus Strait cuts its path between Europe and the Asian bank, linking at its northernmost limit the Black Sea with the Sea of Marmara to the south.

    Check in

    For close proximity to the sights of Sultanahmet, the Hotel Amira (7) at Mustafa Pasa 79 (00 90 212 516 16 40; hotelamira.com) has suitably opulent rooms dressed in red and gold hues, with a roof terrace overlooking the Sea of Marmara. Doubles from €99, with breakfast.

    In Beyoglu, the Pera Palace Hotel (8) (00 90 212 377 40 00; perapalace.com), is a grande dame with a revived spring in her step. First opened in 1892 in the twilight years of the Ottoman Empire to serve European passengers of the Orient Express train, the hotel has recently been restored to its former glory after a £20m renovation. Doubles from €200, room only.

    High style is also evident at the new Istanbul Edition (9) (00 90 212 317 77 00; editionhotels.com), which opened in the business district of Levent, in April. It boasts a restaurant by Cipriani, a nightclub and doubles from €305, with breakfast.

    Day one

    Window shopping

    The Spice Market (10) is an excellent place to plunge into the frenzy of colour and commerce that comprises Istanbul. Your senses will be assailed by an atmospheric array of piled powders, colourful cubes of lokum (Turkish delight) and even “Sultan’s Aphrodisiac” for the more adventurous; 9am-7pm daily.

    Take a hike

    Start at the Eminonu ferry port (11), the main maritime intersection for boats across the Bosphorus. The hub is dominated by the Yeni Camii (12), an Ottoman imperial mosque built in 1597 with two elegant minarets. Cross Galata Bridge (5), with rows of fishermen casting their lines. Head north along Yuksek Kaldirim, with the handsome medieval spire of the Galata Tower (13) as your target (00 90 212 293 8180; galatatower.net; 9am-8pm daily; YTL11/£4). First erected in 528 by Emperor Justinian, before being rebuilt by the Genoese in 1348, this stone beacon stands 61 metres above ground, with exceptional views from its narrow platform at the top.

    Continue north to Istiklal Caddesi. This pedestrianised artery is the epitome of modern Istanbul: international chains, smart restaurants and a maze of side-streets, known as the Beyoglu passages, offering a traditional contrast. One of the most notable is found through the iron gate labelled “Balik Pazari” (fish market) (14) where you can finish the walk amid iced displays of whole turbot, while watching hawkers fry calamari on street-side stalls.

    Lunch on the run

    The final right-hand street at the end of Istiklal is the location for Haci Baba (15), hidden behind a modest door at number 39 (00 90 212 244 1886; hacibabarest.com; noon-midnight daily). Here, an Iskender kebab – lamb on a bed of flatbread, with tomato and yogurt sauce – costs YTL22 (£8). There’s also a peaceful terrace with views of the Greek Orthodox church, Aya Triada.

    Take a ride

    … to Asia. Hop aboard the Bosphorus Cruise (sehirhatlari.com.tr; YTL25/£9) which departs daily from Eminonu (11) at 1.35pm and takes you nearly the full length of the waterway: past shore-side mansions and enviable summer homes, underneath two soaring bridges, before the banks pull away to meet the mouth of the Black Sea. If you don’t have time for the full half-day tour, dozens of ferries cross to Asia for YTL2 (£0.70).

    An aperitif

    The jewel in the Eresin Crown (16), on Kucuk Ayasofya 40 (00 90 212 638 44 28; eresin.com.tr), is its impressive rooftop bar overlooking the Sea of Marmara. This boutique hotel welcomes non-guests daily between 10am-midnight and serves traditional raki cocktails for YTL15 (£5).

    Dining with the locals

    By nightfall, Akbiyik Avenue buzzes with meyhanes (traditional Turkish restaurants) and becomes one of Sultanahmet’s busiest thoroughfares. Albura Kathisma (17) at number 26 (00 90 212 517 90 31; alburakathisma.com) dishes up tender kebabs with tomatoes and flatbread for YTL23 (£8). What sets this venue apart though, is what lies beneath. Ask the waiters, and they will lead you through a maze of dimly lit vaults and dank underground tunnels which formed part of the Magnaura (senate building) during the Byzantine era.

    Day two

    Sunday morning: go to church

    The Blue Mosque (3) – so called for the coloured tiles adorning its interior – was built in 1609 for the teenage Sultan Ahmet I. It provoked resistance due to its six minarets, deemed to rival those of Mecca – the only other place to have as many at the time. Inside, the Iznik mosaics ornamenting its domed cupola are beguiling. The mosque is closed five times during the day for prayer. In the morning, the longest window is between 7am and 12.30pm; free. Female visitors must cover their heads and shoulders; men should wear trousers.

    A walk in the park

    Gulhane park (18) is a tranquil green park on the edge of Sultanahmet, with shaded lawns and views of the Bosphorus. On the left is Hagia Eirene church (19). Next, the Archaeology Museum (20), with a collection of terracotta artefacts, Ottoman coins and ancient tombs (00 90 212 527 27 00; istanbularkeoloji.gov.tr; 9am-5pm, except Monday; YTL10/£3.50).

    At the northern edge is Topkapi Palace (4) (00 90 212 512 0480; topkapipalace.com), built at the top of the ancient acropolis in 1459 as a retreat for the Sultans. It holds three open courtyards, surrounded by exhibition rooms, containing bejewelled robes, encrusted chests and elaborate gifts bestowed on the Ottoman rulers by visiting dignitaries (YTL20/£7). Inside, buy a ticket for the Harem section (YTL15/£5), which allows you to roam through the cool tiled rooms where successive Sultans housed their wives and mistresses. Open 9am-5pm daily except Tuesday.

    Out to brunch

    Turkish meze is on offer at the Balikci Sabahattin (21) on Cankurtaran Caddesi (00 90 212 458 18 24; balikcisabahattin.com), near the Blue Mosque (3). Here, trays of octopus salad and marinated seabass are served within a crumbling courtyard for around YTL10 per dish (£3.50). Open daily from noon.

    Cultural afternoon

    Head underground to the Basilica Cistern (22) or “Sunken Palace” (00 90 212 522 12 59; yerebatan.com), near Sultanahmet Square. This impressive system of subterranean aqueducts was built in 532 to service the water requirements of the Byzantine Emperor Justinian and his people. It boasts 336 marble columns, enhanced today by modern lighting (open daily 9am-6.30pm; YTL10/£3.50).

    Emerge and make your way to Hagia Sophia (2): one of the oldest extant symbols of the Byzantine period, dating back to the sixth century. Built as a church and transformed into a mosque a millennium later, it has served as a bastion for two of the world’s leading religions, and now displays a mix of Christian murals and Islamic calligraphy across its soaring dome and upper galleries. Open daily 9am-7pm; YTL20 (£7).

    The icing on the cake

    Take the tram north to Kabatas, which stops near to Dolmabahce Palace (23) (00 90 212 327 26 26; dolmabahcepalace.com). This 19th-century mansion was the residence of choice for Sultans of the late-Ottoman period after they stopped living in Topkapi. Visitors must take guided tours around its two main sections, the Harem and palace (YTL20/£7; 9am-4.30pm; closed Mon/Thur).

    After General Ataturk, the founding father of the Turkish Republic, exiled the last Sultans, he used this as his base in Istanbul. He died here in Room 71 on 10 November 1938 at 9.05am: all the clocks are stopped in remembrance.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/48-hours-in/48-hours-istanbul-2367150.html

  • A Tight Wide-open Space: Finding love in a Muslim land

    A Tight Wide-open Space: Finding love in a Muslim land

    wide open spaceIn 2003, when the shockwaves of 9/11 still echoed through the US and the country was fighting two wars in Muslim countries, Matt met a beautiful woman on an airplane and decided to follow her to Turkey. This is the story of what happened there.

    BUY THE BOOK: Paperback

    Book trailer from Matt Krause on Vimeo.

  • Morgan Freeman Treated To Special Turkey Tour

    Morgan Freeman Treated To Special Turkey Tour

    morgan freeman 3518752Morgan Freeman Treated To Special Turkey Tour

    Morgan Freeman was given a sightseeing tour of Istanbul by one of Turkey’s top ministers on Thursday (06Oct11).

    The veteran actor is on vacation in Europe following a whirlwind promotional tour for his new movie Dolphin Tale, and Freeman made the most of his free time.

    He was spotted visiting several landmarks in the city with friends, and the group was shown around by Mustafa Demir, the Minister of Public Works and Settlement.

    via Morgan Freeman | Morgan Freeman Treated To Special Turkey Tour | Contactmusic.

  • Colin Thubron on Istanbul

    Colin Thubron on Istanbul

    Colin Thubron reflects on a place where empires flourish and crumble.

    At the confluence of three strategic waters—the Bosporus, the Marmara, and the Golden Horn—the center of Istanbul occupies the skyline like an oriental Manhattan. Its gray-blue stone touches it with a steely glamour. The old palace of the sultans crouches on its promontory’s edge; nearby rises the cupola of Hagia Sophia, the greatest church of Orthodox Christendom; and over all ascend the pencil minarets of the city’s first mosques.

    As Istanbul has mushroomed in modern times, the old elite have flowed out and a rougher, sturdier population has bustled in., Alex Webb / Magnum
    As Istanbul has mushroomed in modern times, the old elite have flowed out and a rougher, sturdier population has bustled in., Alex Webb / Magnum

    Wander these streets beyond the usual tourist trail and you are often in the labyrinth of a gently deteriorating past. Window grilles look onto imperial cemeteries; wooden mansions survive among the concrete; Byzantine walls crumble on the periphery. This, perhaps—the survival into modernity of a decaying splendor—is what imbues Istanbul with its pervasive melancholy. As Constantinople it presided over two of the longest-lasting empires in history: the Byzantine and the Ottoman. Both, in their prolonged old age, became bywords for decadence; and the feel of a long, heartsick twilight is never far away. This is the mournful hüzün of Orhan Pamuk, the country’s foremost writer: almost a quality in the air. The weather, indeed, may have something to do with it: in summer a drowsy and debilitating humidity sets in.

    It was this soporific past from which Kemal Atatürk, the country’s 20th-century modernizer, removed the capital to the bracing Anatolian plateau of Ankara. Istanbul was not only the power base of his enemies. It was, in a sense, scarcely Turkish at all. For centuries the elite of the Ottoman administration (and its odalisques, too) had been ethnic Greeks, Slavs, Circassians, recruited as children from conquered peoples. Within a few generations the entire aristocracy, including the sultans, owned scarcely a drop of Turkish blood.

    Fifty years ago, when I first knew the city, its population—little more than one and a half million—was an ancient, cosmopolitan mélange of Turks, Greeks, Jews, Armenians, Assyrian Christians, even Russians. But now the population has mushroomed to 17 million. Rural immigrants from Asia Minor have flooded into the city, seeking the proverbial gold that paves its streets. They find jobs where they can and sometimes erect their dwellings overnight on any patch of land. (An intact roof makes a home near-legal, and these gecekondular—“night-built dwellings”—are still one of the strange phenomena of the suburbs.)

    In the past half century the outflow of Greeks has escalated, their numbers dwindled now to a mere 2,000. The Armenians and Jews only nervously continue. The city’s streets and alleys bustle with a rougher, sturdier people. Satellite towns have sprung up on nearby hills; new suburbs clutter the Marmara shore, and the two bridges spanning the Bosporus bring traffic to a stupefying halt at rush hour. The change is provocative. Where is the city going? Will it absorb and temper today’s people, as it has all previous inhabitants?

    Alone among cities, Istanbul bridges two continents—Europe and Asia—and this bipolar status is its pride and dilemma. If Turkey is a no man’s land between Islam and the West—its government secular, its culture Islamic—Istanbul may be its site of resolution. It may be Europe’s bridge into Islam, or Islam’s into Europe. If Turkey wants to join the European Union, Istanbul is its flagship.

    At its heart the great basilica of Hagia Sophia, completed by the emperor Justinian in 537, marks the apogee of early Christian culture. In its soaring spaces—turned into a mosque by Turkish conquest in 1453, then into a museum in 1931—the tour groups dwindle to centipedes and the stupendous dome, so shallow that it seems to hang in space, drains away all sound. Beneath the semi-domes eight giant roundels proclaim the names of Allah, Mahomet and the first caliphs and heroes of Islam. They are the only obtrusive sign that this was once a mosque.

    To Western sightseers, these are gaudy disruptions of the Byzantine basilica, but there are others who gaze up in wonder at the calligraphy—gold on jade green—and murmur the names inscribed there. For Istanbul, of course, is not a no man’s land at all. Despite the brutalities of past warfare, the city is home to a people whose Islam is stout but restrained, and the invocations to prayer, echoing from the loudspeakers of countless mosques, float here like familiar music.

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    Thubron is a travel writer and novelist, whose To a Mountain in Tibet was published in April.

    For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.

    via Colin Thubron on Istanbul – The Daily Beast.