Showing posts with label Erdoğan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Erdoğan. Show all posts

Friday, 2 September 2016

Turkey 2016 and 1981



The coup attempt of 15 July failed, as we all know, and though predictably enough President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has used the fallout to persecute many more than just the infiltrating faithful of Fethullah Gülen's religious movement which launched it, my liberal friends in Turkey persuade me that the Gülenists' success, having infiltrated every institution in Turkey, would have been much worse.

Travelling on Turkish Airlines last week, it was impossible to escape the triumphal literature both in the brochures (pictured above) and on the screen. On the return journey I was drawn back to the time of the last major coup in 1980. Arriving at Bodrum's domestic airport on Sunday, having been discharged from the Acibadem Hospital, I picked up a copy of Orhan Pamuk's Silent House, chiefly because it was set in those days. I suppose four of us had not been so very stupid to travel to Turkey by Interrail the following July; the curfews and the heavy army presence meant we were quite safe (though, terrorists apart, I'm convinced Turkey still is a safe country, and has always been a hospitable one). Friends were more worried that we might be arrested for having drugs planted on us; Midnight Express was then very fresh in most people's minds. Anyway, we were fearless and probably unthinking, but nothing adverse happened to us beyond the clearly malevolent intentions of soldiers around the ancient site of Pergamum.


Dug through the old pics and found some to pepper this entry with - above are my travelling pals Lottie, Christopher and Clive, at Eminönü Harbour shortly after disembarking the train from Thessaloniki at Sirkeci Central Station. All was not entirely well then; I had a massively swollen foot, infected from a cut I'd aquired falling down some steps on the Folkestone-Calais ferry - three days sleeping rough on two trains and one railway platform meant that I hadn't tended to it. Shortly after this, having found a very cheap hotel near Sultan Ahmet Mosque, we walked, or rather I hobbled, across the Galata Bridge, up and along Istiklal Caddesi to the German Hospital (now, I'm told, no more), where I got treatment for next to nothing. Two days mostly resting on the San Hotel's roof saw the foot return to its normal size. So hospital visits have framed my many visits to Turkey to date.

As then, this August trip to the D-Marin Festival was not affected by coup or coup-failure fallout. Once in the relaxed coastal strip around Bodrum, you would hardly have known it had happened, superficially at least. I asked young cellist Cansin Kara, now studying in Munich and kicking off my festival experience at 7am last Thursday morning with Bach's First Cello Suite in a park by the sea, how it had affected him. Apart from postponing his summer return, he said, only in the sensing that people were more anxious. Cansin pictured below on the right at the end of a blissful hilltop early supper above Turgutreis with his contemporary, the equally brilliant violinist Emre Engin.


Fortunately Erdoğan, for all his growing authoritarianism, is no Putin, and there will (inshallah) always be a strong opposition in a country still divided 50/50 between the forces of progress and those of religious conservatism. Just how complicated it all is finds expression in this superb long article by Christopher de Bellaigue in The Guardian. If you don't immediately have time to read it all, this is good for clarification:

Erdoğan trumpets his adherence to the will of his people, but he does not blindly pursue its whims. Having oscillated between Europhilia and Islamic fervour, universalism and isolationism, war and peace, it is clear that his political trajectory is that of a pragmatist who likes to keep his options open. His failure to pursue a ban on alcohol, despite the fact that it would please the base, is another instance of his pragmatism. That he regards secularism as useful - perhaps as a means of averting sectarian conflict - was demonstrated when he urged Mohamed Morsi to build a secular state after coming to power in Egypt in 2011.

I first realised it wasn't all black and white around the coup when my Istanbul friend Serhan Bali, editor and publisher of the Turkish-language classical music magazine Andante, sent me what he'd written on Facebook shortly after the failed coup. No fan of Erdoğan, he pointed out what a disaster it would have been had Gülen come to power. I excerpt:

Why this coup now? The biggest prosecutions for this (Gülen's) movement were to be put into operation in the coming days and when these devotees learned this they wanted to seize power as quickly as possible. As you may guess that was their intention from the beginning, but when they learned that the government intended to close in for the kill, they accelerated their agenda. Thank God they couldn't succeed because it was a half-baked plan, If successful they would have grasped all the power in Turkey, closed the Parliament and invited Fethullah Gülen to the country. He would have descended the stairs of the plane like Ayatollah Khomeini did after the Iranian Revolution.

Erdoğan and Gülen were close collaborators in the early 2000s. Because of this gang hundreds of high-ranking officials in the arms were put on trial because of a pseudo coup attempt. They forged the documents and because of this many generals and colonels were put in jail, accused of having attempted the coup against the Erdoğan government. It was a huge lie. But this partnership deteriorated after Erdoğan felt Gülen's overwhelming presence as a threat to himself and to the country. Gülen had become too powerful a personality. After the war between these two powerhouses increased, attacks from the government began against the Gülenists’ presence in the state and the enormous wealth that they possess in the country.


So much for now; as for then, the atmosphere leading up to the generals' coup of 1980 is well captured in Pamuk's second novel, a polyphony of voices centring on the visit of three grandchildren to a bitter and manipulative 90-year-old woman in the crumbling 'silent house' of the title by the sea near Istanbul. The confused adolescent longing for action in that violent climate is represented by a cousin of the siblings who joins the Nationalists and persecutes the brightest voice in the book, the rather distant one of the intelligent young Nilgün, mostly because he thinks he's in love with her and that she's out of his league.

The characters of the feckless young Metin, who hangs with a vacuous fast set, the bitter grandmother and the compassionate dwarf Recep who runs the household are compellingly drawn. But perhaps the most fascinating figures are the alcoholic historian grandson Faruk, who also gets to speak in the first person, and his grandfather Selâhattin, whose tirades and disquisitions appear through the mouth of his unloving, and unloved, wife. Both, like the invisible figure in between the generations, Faruk's father, are obsessed with trying to pin down the evasiveness of their city and their country through facts and 'true stories'.


Their real-life counterpart, so brilliantly portrayed in Pamuk's Istanbul: Memories and the City, is one of four Istanbullu writers poised, like Pamuk himself, between the influence of western (especially 19th century French) literature on their country and the attempt to find out what it really means to them. They are all in thrall to hüzün, a Turkish word with an Arabic root which Pamuk sets out to define, before devoting an entire chapter to its complexities, as 'a melancholy that is communal rather than private. Offering no clarity; veiling reality instead, hüzün brings us comfort, softening the view like the condensation on a window when a tea kettle has been spouting steam on a winter's day'.

There are so many poetic passages conveying this peculiar state throughout Istanbul, but let's stick to the subject: Reşat Ekrem Koçu, author of the Istanbul Encyclopedia of fascinating facts and unexpected focuses, begun in 1944 but abandoned in 1951 'on page 1000, at volume four, while still on the letter B'.


In just the same way Lonely House's chronicler is destined to fail, to be sidetracked, to have most of his achievement destroyed, and his historian grandson is also destined not to get very far with his amassing of local stories; similarly his notebook is wantonly chucked aside by the negative spirit of 1980. A little of Pamuk on his real-life Don Quixote:

Koçu was one of those hüzün-drenched souls who helped create an image of a twentieth-century Istanbul as a half-finished city afflicted with melancholy. Hüzün is what defines his life, gives his work its hidden logic, and sets him on a lonely course that can only be his final defeat, but - as with other writers working in a similar vein - he did not see it as central and certainly did not give it much thought.

And later:

The real subject [of the far from finished Encyclopedia] is Koçu's failure to explain Istanbul using western 'scientific' methods of classification. He failed in part because Istanbul is so unmanageably varied, so very much stranger than western cities; its disorder resists classification. But this otherness we complain about - it begins, after we have talked for a while, to look like a virtue, and we remember why it is we treasure Koçu's Encyclopedia - because it allows us to indulge in a certain chauvinism.

Koçu was also gay, and Turkish society has always had an ambiguity towards homosexuality when it was not absolutely welcoming of it. I digress to give you a song from one of the greatest singers ever, Zeki Müren, who so amused us back in 1980 (I still have a cassette with treasurable photographic artwork). We didn't appreciate then that he was a great performer of the sanat (classical) repertoire who made it popular with millions. 'Zeki Müren NOT homosexual,' Turks would exclaim in simulated outrage. But he did less to conceal it than his western counterpart, Liberace. And everyone seems to have known that the other great singer of the time. Bülent Ersoy (now 64 - Zeki died in 1996), was a transexual. Take a look at this. Shame, as always, there's no translation, but the hands speak as eloquently as the voice.


My last wish on the Bodrum trip was to visit the Zeki Müren Museum in the town he loved so much. That should have happened before I went to the airport. But the emergency hospitalisation intervened.

Back to hüzun. In Istanbul, Pamuk hints at it before he writes about it, in a wonderfully evocative passage in the fifth chapter of Istanbul.

I love the overwhelming melancholy when I look at the walls of old apartment buildings and the dark surfaces of neglected, unpainted, fallen-down wooden mansions: only in Istanbul have I seen this texture, this shading. When I watch the black-and-white crowds rushing through the darkening streets on a winter's evening, I feel a deep sense of fellowship, almost as if the night has cloaked our lives, our streets, our every belonging in a blanket of darkness, as if once we're safe in our houses, our bedrooms, our beds, we can return to dreams of our long-gone riches, our legendary past. And likewise, as I watch dusk descend like a poem in the pale light of the street-lamps to engulf the city's poor neighbourhoods, it comforts me to know that for the night at least we are safe from western eyes, that the shameful poverty of our city is cloaked from foreign view.

Pamuk finds a kindred spirit to capture the private and public strangeness of Istanbul in photographer Ara Güler, whose archive-library of images from the 1950s and 60s he spent many hours inspecting for images he used in the book.


I ordered this up for J's birthday. Most of the black and white photographs are haunting in one way or another for their street scenes and their panoramas of the Bosphorus and the Golden Horn with the smoke of ships and boats hovering above. Something of this remained in 1981, when Christopher took this photo as we emerged from the station.


If I had to choose one image from the bigger book of Güler's photos it would be this one of Sirkeci in 1956

not least because Pamuk writes about it so eloquently in his introduction. He described it as 'the perfect incarnation of the Istanbul of my childhood,' not for the evocative outward details but because of this:

The way the driver has tilted his head forward, the confusion of the horse as it accommodates this gesture, the clumsy manner in which the cart has strayed onto the tramlines and the way the tram in the background sits waiting, perhaps patiently, perhaps not...what we see here is modernity set against tradition, the ideals of order, discipline and authority set against the disordered helplessness of poverty and technical inadequacy. These are elements at the heart of so many of Güler's Istanbul photographs, and they generate such delightful tensions.

I was surprised, during this June's visit, that so many traces of the old way of life remained - not least those porters carrying such heavy loads on their backs, which first struck me as we headed towards the Grand Bazaar in 1981. There's a fuzzy photo of an overloaded worker in the old album, but this street scene with my three pals at the centre of it is better. It makes a nice counterpoint to my post laden with June photos of Istanbullus.


Did we sense the melancholy then? I think not - youth is too keen to savour what it sees as exuberant exoticism. Soon we were off around the south-west, hitching lifts like this from Didim via Aphrodisias to Pamukkale


and greeted with a friendly curiosity and hospitality wherever we went, not least during an unforgettable evening at a family party during ramadan in Bergama. Fond shot of boys and sheep (soon to be a bairam victim?) in the ruins there to conclude. Those kids will be middle-aged men now.

Monday, 13 June 2016

Süleymaniye the magnificent




The epithet was actually applied to the Ottoman Sultan Süleymān who ruled from 1520 to 1566 and who ordered the building of this beautiful mosque complex, but the credit really goes to the mighty architect Sinan. On my four visits to Istanbul to date, the Süleymaniye has always struck me as the finest of all Istanbul's mosques for its position on the third of the Second Rome's seven hills, with splendid views over the Golden Horn and the Bosphorus (this from the roof of our Pera hotel);


for the grand scheme which embraces the many buildings around it, in as perfect a symmetry as possible; and for the two mausoleums or türbes I hadn't been able to get inside before this trip, which came courtesy of the Istanbul Classical Music Festival. I've written about the musical side of my experience over on The Arts Desk.

Let the introduction be given by the authors who guided me this time, Hilary Sumner-Boyd and John Freely, celebrated professors at Bosphorus University (the beautiful waterside grounds of which, more like Harvard or Princeton than anywhere in Turkey, I saw for the first time on this visit, courtesy of Idil Biret's recital in the Henry Long Hall. A digressive image, for I can't think of where else I could use it and I like the idea that if you asked most people to guess where, they'd not say Istanbul. Well, it seems that this essentially left-wing set-up is under threat, like so much else, from Erdoğan's ever more alarming government* No headscarves here that I saw, and only a couple in the concerts.


The one hour 20 minute drive through thick traffic from the centre was certainly worth it). Back to Sumner-Boyd's and Freely's summary in Strolling Through Istanbul:

The Süleymaniye is the second largest but by far the finest and most magnificent of the mosque complexes in the city [quick switch to the Blue Guide for a list; 'it consists of a mosque, medreses, a hamam, a library (currently under restoration), a junior school, an imaret (public kitchen), a hospital and mental asylum, and several türbe)'].  It is a fitting monument to its founder....and a masterwork of the greatest of Ottoman architects, the incomparable Sinan. The mosque itself, the largest of Sinan's works, is perhaps inferior in perfection of design to that master's Selimiye at Edirne [not been there, alas, except passing through on the train Interrailing in 1981], but it is incontestably the most important Ottoman building in Istanbul. For four and a half centuries it has attracted the wonder and enthusiasm of all travellers to the city.


This time I approached the complex from the south-east, climbing up from the Rüstem Paşa mosque (closed to worshipper and tourists alike for restoration, but I saw its Iznik glories in 1986). The first thing that amazed me was the pristine quality of the Süleymaniye's wide open spaces, the greenness of its grass (no need for human watering; storms were frequent), both from beyond the wall of the cemetery where the important türbes are located (pictured above) and on the north-east terrace, with its trees for slumbering and picnicking under and its superb views over the Bosphorus and the Golden Horn




The second and third of the above images are taken from the second visit on this trip when I brought J and our not very mosque-interested guide Basana, after a terrific thunderstorm during our visit to the Chora Church (in the middle shot's distance is an enormous new mosque on the Asian side of the Bosphorus). Happy on the first visit to be on my own; that way you're the outsider, rather than one of a group commenting on the strangeness or 'exoticism'. Of course the Süleymaniye operates very much like our own great cathedrals and their precincts, though the worshippers are more prolific.


I first visited the türbes which I hadn't seen on other visits; maybe they'd been shut or under restoration.


Süleymān's octagonal resting-place with its columned porch and double dome is crowded with other cenotaphs alongside the big cheese's (centre)


but still they don't take the eyes away for long from the inner dome, still in its original colours of 'wine-red, black and gold'


nor the abundance of Iznik tiles between and below all the marble, granite and porphyry - 'twice as many in this small room as in all the vastness of the mosque itself'.




To the east lies Süleymān's 'powerful and sinister' chief wife, Haseki Hürrem, known in the west as Roxelana and infamous for getting him to kill his eldest son on false premises so that her own would succeed to the throne. The mausoleum has an inscription around the cylindrical dome on the outside, set back slightly from the octagonal cornice.


Roxelana has a better cenotaph than she deserves


and an even more substantial array of Iznik tiles on the walls than in Süleyman's türbe.




I shared both türbes with only a handful of pious visitors until a horde of noisy but pleasantly spirited schoolchildren arrived,


tearing down the cordons and charging around. The guard was absent.

Took a pleasant walk around the cemetery and its rose garden



before heading for the mosque along its handsome north-west flank


and more shady green space


and entering the courtyard via the western portal.


Rumour has it that the four great minarets banded near the top with turquoise


represent Süleymān as fourth sultan of Turkey, and 10 balconies denote that he was the tenth sultan of Osman's line. The courtyard was all the more overwhelming for being well-nigh deserted in the mid-afternoon heat, both in shadow and out. It was fresher after the storm two days later.



Around the infidels' entrance to the nearly-square room, though, many were clustered - though western tourists seemed remarkably few everywhere up on this third hill; J told me the Aya Sophia and Sultan Ahmet Mosque experience was very different.

Polite girls were on hand at the bar between the public walking space and the area of worship 'to answer any questions you might have'. I joined a trio of Indian Hindus and we three religions - you can call me a nominal Christian - engaged in a dialogue on what (so much) we all have in common. Wasn't sure whether the girls really wanted to proselytise or not, but I took their leaflets and a Quran from the stand of free literature (time I read it all rather than the selected wisdom quoted by Karen Armstrong in her excellent A Short History of Islam).


At any rate I was delighted that we were welcome and we talked about how some Muslim countries welcomed visitors to their mosques (Syria when I went there, Lebanon, Iran up to a point) while others were exclusive and hostile (I remember a bad experience in Hyderabad, in Mali you're expected to pay quite a lot to see inside the Djenne Mosque and the Maghreb, surprisingly, tends to keep its mosques out of bounds).

No point in regurgitating all the facts and figures, let alone some interesting stuff on Sinan's buttress-masking, in Strolling Through Istanbul; you can get some sense of the size, the light and the interaction of the main dome with lesser curves (not least up top), very beautiful.




I strolled back out to the main front,


envied the families picnicking and/or snoozing under the trees - notice the difference in generational activity here -


and so was delighted to find that the Imaret across the cobbled street, another caravansaray type construction in a line of three, was now run as a cafe and restaurant, the Darüzziyafe, complete with bad art on the walls. Its welcoming space is the icing on the cake of a a visit to the Süleymaniye.


Thus it had returned to the more exclusive of its original catering purposes: built as a kind of soup kitchen offering sustenance not only to poor pilgrims but also to several thousand people dependent on the Sülemaniye, it had served as a banqueting hall in the last years of the Ottoman Empire. Then it was turned into an Islamic and Turkish art museum, then nothing, until 1992 when it became a plush centre for Turkish cuisine. The menu didn't seem expensive; but all I wanted at 3pm were a rice-and-onion stuffed aubergine, water and a Turkish coffee


which I enjoyed so much sitting in the arcade looking across to the fountain and main entrance. I brought J and Basana here on the day after my visit, and we had a similarly easeful time among the trees and the domes.


Then, on the initial visit, I passed Sinan's tomb in a triangular space



and descended the hill to make my way back to Pera. We'd crossed the Galata Bridge, of course, earlier in the day - J had to start there, and the fishermen did not disappoint -


and I returned via the new bridge with its rather handsome pedestrian walkway by the metro line. looking towards Pera and Galata.


Cormorants were sitting by the water's edge on the Süleymaniye side


and at the midpoint, feeling the space and light in what is often a crowded and traffic-choked city with an ever ballooning population, I heard all the muezzins commence their polyphony. The whole of the northern shore of the old city stretched ahead, terminating in a last view of the Süleymaniye.


And so to a very short rest before the drive to the Bosphorus University and the revelations of the great Idil Biret.

*I couldn't think of anything valid to add to the horror of the Orlando shootings, but preparing this article I came across a headline declaring that a Turkish right-wing newspaper with links to Erdoğan had celebrated the killing of '50 perverts'. Please remember that this great city has as wide a range of opinions and as strong an intelligentsia as any of the other great capitals, and note how popular the rainbow umbrella is. J bought one in the Chora Church during the storm and we'd earlier walked through a street in the Fener district where that Byzantine glory is to be found where the brollies were rife. Of course I'm not claiming that the sellers are aware of what it means to many of us, but let this be used as a mark of colourful solidarity in grief.


14/5 And just when you thought all this couldn't get more hateful, there's news from The Interpreter that two men laying flowers outside the American Embassy in Moscow to show their solidarity with Orlando were arrested and are to be charged for 'holding a public action without a permit'. The police were summoned by an ultra-Orthodox group,  Bozhaya Volya (God's Will, what a joke), attacking the mourners with mockery and jeers.