An Anatolian Adventure

Today’s guest is gorgeous Kym who is the author of Turkeywithstuffin’s Blog and the pretty brain behind On the Ege, the monthly online magazine about Turkey’s Aegean coast.ย  Kym is married to dusky Murat, her hunky Turk. When veteran expat Kym wears a headscarf, she wants to look like Sophia Loren but thinks she looks more like Hilda Ogden. Personally, I think she resembles a darker version of Gynneth Paltrow in the Talented Mr Ripley.

Kym

Itโ€™s a Thursday in November 2008 and I am on my first road trip to Sanliurfa, my husbandโ€™s birth town. When we first arrived in Urfa late at night, the electricity was off and the city was in darkness. ย Perhaps because I was tired from the long journey, I felt uneasy and had commented more than once that Iโ€™d been kidnapped and taken to Beirut. I did for a moment consider taken a plane home the following day. As we stood in the dark alley I was moaning, but once the large iron gate opened things could not have looked more different. We walked into a beautiful stone courtyard with mosaic tiles, Ottoman seating, potted plants and a small fountain.

The Manager at the Beyzade Konak Hotel is Muratโ€™s cousinโ€™s husband, Omer. He shows us to our room and once I have the internet and some coffee (they have a generator), Iโ€™m quite happy to chuck Murat out for an hour or so to allow him to play with his cousin Mehmet. I have a boiling hot shower, get my pajamas on and send a few quick โ€œIโ€™ve landedโ€ emails. Then itโ€™s lights out and a sleep so deep I could be in the cemetery.

Urfa

Day breaks and I realise the hotel is between two mosques. I open my eyes to the dual call to prayer, one a heartbeat behind the other. I doze for a bit then remember Iโ€™m actually on holiday and there are shops out there.

After breakfast, I nip back to our room and cover my locks with a headscarf. Itโ€™s a simple gesture of respect while Iโ€™m here and among the more traditional rellies. Well, that and I donโ€™t really want to get stoned in the street! Mu of course thinks this is great and off we trot, out through the iron gate and onto the streets of Sanliurfa.

Once we leave the cobbled alley and get onto the main drag, its bustling; busses hog the road, cars fight for space beside them, scooters weave in and out of the traffic and pedestrians narrowly avoid being run over.ย  The air is filled with BBQ spices, pungent & smoky and the smell is everywhere. Small eateries and kebab houses jostle for space alongside clothes shops and jewelers who have 24 karat rays shining from their windows.

Stunning

There are a few glances my way naturally. It could be the pale skin and the green eyes, or it could be the flip flops and bright red toenails that donโ€™t quite go with the rest of my ensemble. Still, thatโ€™s a great excuse to buy shoes isnโ€™t it?

First things first, I need a new camera. We wander across to the maze of connecting alleyways that make up one of the eight covered bazars, to the collection of electronic shops. The salesman shows us his wares and converses with Murat: โ€œSenin Esin mฤฑ?โ€(your wife), ย โ€œYabanciโ€ (a foreigner), โ€œAlman?โ€ (German). ย Mu confirms the first two and I answer the last. โ€œEnglishโ€ I say, not realising at the time that we will have this conversation many times during our stay. I guess itโ€™s due to my height and build and of course, my great Grandparents, Mr & Mrs Shram!

I end up with an Olympus, a compact professional the man says. We will see.

Leaving the shop we are met by Cousin Mehmet and Hassan Amca. Their first words to me are โ€œKym, Beirut Nasil?โ€ Very funny! ย The four of us then continue around the bazaar which contains a veritable Aladdinโ€™s Cave full of treasure. There is even a street full of workshops where workmen batter copper and solder iron.

Heading into the Balikigol area toward the cay bache, we pass through the โ€˜Sipahi Bazarโ€™ and the โ€˜Kazzaz Bazaarโ€™, the oldest covered Bazaars of Urfa. These were built by the Ottoman Emperor, Suleiman the Magnificent in 1562. ย It really is like stepping back in time and I watch ancient shalvar wearing salesmen sitting cross legged in their little tented alcoves, bathed in rich colour and drinking tea while customers peruse their antique carpets, kilims and hand woven head dresses.

Feed Me!

During our small shopping excursion, Iโ€™d picked up some elastic hair bands that I needed and watched as three pairs of hands reach into theirpockets to pay for them. Oooooo I like shopping here. I wonder if it works in shoe shops? A few minutesโ€™ walk and we reach the cave of Abraham. Legend has it that the Babylonian King, Nemrud, had Abraham captured and thrown into fire. His crime? ย Calling upon the people to worship the real god and not the icons of celestial objects, as was the religion of the time. ย Of course, God was watching and on seeing this, he turned the fire into water, saving Abraham from certain death. Not content with that, he then turned the surrounding woods into the sacred fish, the ancestors of which we see today at the site of the โ€œHalil ur Rahmenโ€ Mosque in the centre of Urfa.

I buy a dish of fish pellets and watch the fat feisty fish fight each other for each tiny morsel, after which we take a rest in the cay bachesi. I sit sipping hot sweet tea and take a look at my photos so far. The photos are amazing; sneaky zoom shots of men at prayer and performing the abtest, plus the usual tourist shots of minarets and domes. Itโ€™s getting late now and as dusk settles over the city, we head back to the hotel.

Nemrud

So far so good, my first day in Urfa was wonderful and I am hungry for more. We have decided to use Urfa as a base for a few road trips. On my list are: Harran, Nemrut, and Hasenkeyf, then, a stop at Cappadocia on the way home.ย  I had no idea at the time but this journey would also encompass, Mardin, Midyat, Batman & Siirt. My Anatolian adventure continues.

7 thoughts on “An Anatolian Adventure

  1. From dualling muezzins to that amazing photo of one fish from Balikli Gol, this was an interesting post! I recall my trip to Urfa last year with my M. vis-a-vis the veiling issue. I was prepared to dress super-conservatively, but M.’s family (Istanbullus) insisted that my yabanci status would suffice as explanation for not being quite as conservative. I did, however, go with the original plan – and whilst I was at risk of boiling over most of the time (early June), many, many people thanked me for dressing respectfully BUT insisted it was fine for me to take off the scarf, the long sleeves, etc., even in the mosque. I did not, in my stubbornness, comply, I just could not bring myself to do so. What an interesting city Urfa is!

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  2. Interesting that we go straight into the dress debate here.
    I was in Urfa on a quick one day visit trip onwards to Nemrut and Diyarbakir , as & with backpackers back in 1991. While I had a scarf handy for mosques, it was Novermber and cold- so jeans and jumpers were enough. The great divide between us and only village women in their gorgeously colourful dresses under open cloaks seemdto mean there was no clothes issue -yes we were simply ‘yabanci’. I wonder if the modern women of Urfa debate this.
    Would like to see it again after 20 years!
    ChrisDB- Bodrum

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  3. Nice post that revived a lot of good memories from our trip around the SE a couple of years ago; dress was never an issue anywhere. Reading this I want to go back and soak it all up again. Thanks.

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  4. Thanks guys, for your comments ๐Ÿ™‚

    We always go in the winter so there are not really any tourists around. Out of the few Ive seen over the years, only one had a scarf loosely draped over her head. It is a little different for me as I am around family all the time and they are of the very traditional kind!. Sometimes, during the evenings when us girls sit together in a separate room, the headscarves come off and the girls say how lucky I am not to have to wear one all the time. It must be awful in the height of summer.

    I have to say though, I quite enjoy the freedom of not having to spend hours styling my hair and I also have fun co-ordinating the colours and styles with my chosen outfit of the day ๐Ÿ™‚

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