Tag: Rick Steves

  • İstiklal Caddesi — Istanbul’s Leading Pedestrian Scene

    İstiklal Caddesi — Istanbul’s Leading Pedestrian Scene

    İstiklal Caddesi — Istanbul’s Leading Pedestrian Scene

    rick2

    Istanbul’s main street, İstiklal Caddesi, throbs with crowds all day and into the wee hours. I visit it almost every year, and it changes with each visit. As Turkey becomes more affluent and Western, the action here becomes more and more vibrant. This clip is actually a quieter part of the mile-long stroll. And it’s early in the evening. On weekdays the action peaks around 10 p.m., and on weekends it keeps building until about 2 a.m. The side streets are just as vibrant.

    via Rick Steves: Blog Gone Europe » Blog Archive » İstiklal Caddesi — Istanbul’s Leading Pedestrian Scene.

  • Rick Steves: Hearing The Call To Prayer In Istanbul (VIDEO)

    Rick Steves: Hearing The Call To Prayer In Istanbul (VIDEO)

    A favorite thing for me anywhere in the Islamic world is to hear the chaotic chorus of cheaply amplified voices erupting into song as they sing the call to prayer from mosque minarets all over town at the same time. Here, just outside Istanbul’s fabled Grand Bazaar, it’s that time. People seem to ignore it, but I can’t. It’s part of the audio track of any visit to this corner of our world. Mix the sounds with the people and you get Istanbul stew.

    rick1

    The warbling call to prayer used to unnerve me, and now I find it actually beautiful…even comforting. What happens to you when you hear this Muslim call to worship? When it wakes me early in the morning, I remember that that prayer has an extra line in it. It roughly translates, “It’s better to pray than to sleep.”

    via Rick Steves: Hearing The Call To Prayer In Istanbul (VIDEO).

  • Your guide for proper etiquette at sacred sites

    Your guide for proper etiquette at sacred sites

    By lisa schencker

    The Salt Lake Tribune

    First published Oct 14 2011 12:05PM

    rick

    Not everyone who visits Temple Square in Salt Lake City is Mormon. Catholics aren’t the only ones who trek to St. Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City. And the Blue Mosque in Istanbul, Turkey, draws tourists of all faiths.

    For most international travelers, visiting religious sites is inevitable. They are hubs of history, repositories of art and often skyline-dominating, cultural behemoths. But they also are often living places of worship that demand a certain level of respect and decorum. Sometimes tourists don’t know all the rules when visiting sites outside of their own faiths. And sometimes they forget to show proper respect in their zeal to sightsee.

    Travel expert Rick Steves, who has authored numerous travel guides, said visiting world religious sites is a worthwhile endeavor.

    “If we’re all God’s children,” Steves said, “it’s great to get to know the family.”

    But he emphasized it’s important for tourists to remember their place.

    “If you have a huge church,” Steves said, “that’s been there for 1,000 years, built to facilitate worship, and there’s two people sitting in one pew actually using the church for what it was built to do, their needs should trump everyone else’s needs who come as tourists and sightseers.”

    The Salt Lake Tribune asked Steves, a virtual staple on public television, and Stuart M. Matlins, co-editor of the book How to Be a Perfect Stranger: The Essential Religious Etiquette Handbook and publisher at SkyLight Paths Publishing, for their thoughts on visiting religious sites as a tourist.

    They both said whether visiting the gargoyle-topped Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris, the sacred Western Wall in Jerusalem or the stately Westminster Abbey in London, common rules of respectfulness apply.

    via Your guide for proper etiquette at sacred sites | The Salt Lake Tribune.

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