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ANKARA: Turkey Through A Traveler's Eyes: From Istanbul To Diyarbaki

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Through A Traveler's Eyes: From Istanbul To Diyarbaki

    TURKEY THROUGH A TRAVELER'S EYES: FROM ISTANBUL TO DIYARBAKIR WITH E. B. SOANE IN 1908 (2)

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 13 2014

    13 January 2014 /TERRY RICHARDSON, İSTANBUL

    Today Şanlıurfa is one of the high points of any visit to Turkey's
    Southeast. This fast-growing city, its economy buoyed by the vast
    irrigation project that is GAP (the Southeast Anatolian Project),
    has an ancient heart spruced-up over the past couple of decades to
    meet the demands of visitors.

    GALLERY

    They come here to experience Turkey's most authentically Middle
    Eastern bazaar, wander round the restored houses of the old quarter,
    clamber to the top of a fantastic citadel rock overlooking the lush
    gardens at its feet, and spend a night or two in a classy boutique
    hotel fashioned from a period, honey-hued stone mansion.

    The cave reputed to be the birthplace of the prophet Abraham is a
    major draw for pilgrims from all over the Islamic world, while the
    beautiful gardens at the foot of the citadel, incongruously green and
    manicured in this dry and torrid region, appeal to Muslim pilgrims
    and tourists alike. Here too are the still waters of the Pools of
    Abraham, filled with shoals of overfed carp whose ancestors were
    created when God rescued Abraham, hurled onto a pyre by the tyrant
    Nimrod (Nemrut), by miraculously transforming the flames into water,
    the burning branches into fish.

    Urfa's corner loafer efendis

    The Urfa discovered by Soane a little over a hundred years ago was
    rather different. Walls "of peculiar blackness," likely going back
    to the time of the city's re-foundation as Edessa (the old name for
    the city) in the Hellenistic period, still "stand everywhere." Today
    there are only scant remains. Gone too are the "families of sedentary
    Kurds" who inhabited the "innumerable cave-dwellings of the ancients"
    in the rocky outcrops around the citadel, as have the "enormous number
    of Armenians" whom Sloane reports as living in the "clustered houses
    upon the hummock forming the Armenian quarter."

    Like many a visitor today, Soane was captivated by Urfa, writing,
    "The water supply is plentiful, the scenery around beautiful in its
    ruggedness and the fantastic nature of its hills." In fact, for the
    anti-Turkish, London-born adventurer, Urfa's only major problem was
    the "Turks and their misrule," not least the gaggles of minor Ottoman
    officials, or "corner loafer efendis in uniform," as Soane called
    them, who "never appeared to have any kind of duties" bar cluttering
    up Urfa's cafes and eyeing travelers with suspicion.

    Soaked in Siverek

    After just two days in Urfa, where he stayed in a caravanserai, Soane
    headed northeast for Diyarbakır. The landscape around the mid-point of
    his journey, the town of Siverek, is a bleak one, a vast lava-encrusted
    plateau blasted by wind, rain and snow in winter, baked under a fierce
    sun in summer. Soane describes "[t]he prospect as always immense,
    always dreary" as he plodded across the plateau in April, with snow
    patches still clinging to the rocks and the "sullen, frowning masses
    of the Kurdistan mountains" to the north "half hidden in black clouds."

    Soane passed the night in Siverek in a "ruinous" Armenian-run
    caravanserai. The sole high-point of his visit to the "mean town"
    and its "peculiarly surly and ill-mannered" inhabitants was the
    friendliness of the local imam. Having established Soane's credentials
    as a genuine Muslim by having him "repeat the creed," he then helped
    him buy bread from "an earth-oven" for the bargain price of "ten flaps
    for two-pence." Having been rained on all night in his leaky cell in
    the caravanserai, Soane and his Muslim companions were outraged at the
    price they were charged for their sub-standard accommodation and left
    "cursing Christians and pagans in general and Armenians in particular."

    Few tourists venture to Siverek even today, though a handful do pass
    through en route to Diyarbakır from Urfa or Kahta (the base for Mt.

    Nemrut), unsurprisingly given its bleak location and lack of obvious
    historical remains. It's nowhere near so unlovely as the town described
    by Soane in 1908, however. Even his goal, though, was less than
    spectacular at first sight than he might have hoped. "Approaching from
    the west, Diarbekr is not beautiful nor remarkable ...(it) appears as
    a citadel of black stone without any green or vegetation." He bucked
    up as he got nearer, though, as "on slopes and the lands by the river
    banks, there are splendid gardens, which in this month of April were
    dressed in all the delicate hues of blossom and new leaf."

    Into the black city

    Panic mode set in as Soane crossed the Tigris (Dicle) and neared a city
    ringed by 6 kilometers of some of the finest Medieval city walls in
    the world, as he knew the travel documents he had obtained in İstanbul
    would be inspected at the gateway. And here he was, in the guise of
    a Kurdish Muslim haci returning to his home in Persia from Mecca --
    and known as such by his Muslim road companions -- travelling on a
    document "proclaiming [him] an English, British-born... Christian."

    At least he looked the part. "I was darkened by the wind and sun;
    nine days black beard scraped the chest left bare by a buttonless
    shirt. My trousers were muddy and torn, and I wore a long overcoat
    very much like the robes of any of the myriad Turkish subjects who
    adopt semi-European dress."

    Fortunately, the official was "utterly illiterate," holding his
    "passport... upside down" when inspecting it, and was satisfied
    with Soane's verbal assurances that he was a Persian-born British
    subject en route to Mosul. "[W]ith a polite good-day," Soane and his
    companions passed through the formidable black basalt walls into what
    was, and remains today, one of Turkey's most fascinating cities.

    Fortunately, the walled city of Diyarbakir has changed but little in
    terms of its physical appearance since the time of Soane's visit, its
    venerable black with contrasting white stone-built houses, mosques,
    churches, hans, caravanserais and the like still lining cobbled
    streets following its original late-Roman ground plan. Indeed, the city
    retains a fine caravanserai, the Deliler Hanı, now a boutique hotel.

    Coffee shops, Christians and conversations in Kurdish

    >From his description, however, it seems that Soane lodged at the Hasan
    Paşa Han. Today this beautifully restored building near Dağı Kapısı
    (Mountain Gate), built around an airy courtyard, is home to boutique
    shops selling old carpets, kilims and brassware, as well as to a
    coterie of cafes specializing in delicious Kurdish breakfast spreads.

    Soane was delighted that his upstairs room had "a board floor, another
    luxury this, in a country whose floors are of mud." Like many travelers
    to Turkey even now, once he had secured his lodgings for the night
    Soane "retired to a coffee house outside for a cup of tea."

    But unlike most contemporary foreigner visitors, Soane was able to
    converse with the cafe's customers in the Kurdish he had learned
    while working in Persia. One drawback, though, was that in his guise
    as a Muslim, he was unable to visit the churches of the Christian
    Armenians, Chaldeans (Keldani), Nestorians, Greeks and Syrian Orthodox
    (Suriyani) who, along with the Kurds, then made up the majority of
    the populous. Mind you, his view of the "Eastern" Christians was every
    bit as negative as his opinion of the Turks. "It is unfortunate that
    the Asiatic Christian is, as a rule, a very undesirable creature,
    more bigoted than the most fanatical Muhammadan, of a craft and an
    infidelity seldom witnessed in other lands, and of an attitude to
    his co-religionists of different tenets that can only be described
    as traitorous."

    By raft down the Tigris

    Soane's eventual goals were first Mosul, then Suleymaniya, in what
    is now Northern Iraq but was then still Ottoman territory. Today,
    in spite of the political turmoil in Iraq, it's easy enough to hop
    on a comfy air-conditioned coach in Diyarbakır and head for various
    cities in the relatively stable Kurdish enclave. The intrepid Sloane,
    by contrast, used the best method available to the traveler in 1908,
    a raft down the Tigris.

    The vessel on which he floated down one of the world's most evocative
    rivers was a kalak, formed "from two hundred inflated goat skins
    arranged in the form of ten by twenty ... bound to a few thin
    transverse poplar trunks above them." Soane shared this ingenious
    craft with an elderly Kurdish Haci he'd befriended in the caravanserai,
    an Arab merchant from Mosul, a "foul-mouthed, blasphemous" young man
    recently discharged from the Ottoman military and, last but not least,
    sack loads of dried apricots.

    All went well at first, as the raft drifted gently down a placid
    river under clear blue skies. The third day brought a "strong gale
    ... with torrential rain," soaking clothing, bedding and food alike,
    even the sacks of apricots the passengers tried to seek shelter behind
    were "slippery with the juice and wet that oozed from them." The next
    dawned fair, but with the river running high after the storm the raft
    "was flying along at express speed" through deep defiles and "running
    over submerged rocks."

    To Hasankeyf and Cizre

    Further downstream, as the current slowed, Soane was treated to "one
    of the most remarkable sights the Tigris has to offer." They had
    reached the soon-to-be-submerged ancient city of Hasankeyf, perched
    on a sheer bluff above the river. Soane noted of Hasankeyf that "most
    remarkable of all were the great piers of a once colossal bridge," but
    also mentions "cave dwellings," minarets "the dimensions of factory
    chimneys," "a staircase zig-zagging down the cliff-face to where the
    river laps the rocks wall." All this survives for the time being,
    but the waters of the Ilisu dam will soon destroy one of Turkey's
    most remarkable and beautiful sights.

    Surviving a number of shots fired by Kurdish bandits, Soane and his
    companions eventually reached Cizre, the last stop of his journey
    on what is today Turkish territory. Here he was treated to tea by
    curious locals before purchasing dates and rope for the remainder of
    his river journey to Mosul.

    Postcript: Soane made it to Mosul, then traveled onto Turkmen-dominated
    Kirkuk. From there he crossed dangerous bandit country by caravan to
    Suleymaniya. There he spent a considerable, making various forays to
    places such as Halabja, before finally ending up in Baghdad. Here,
    although he dispensed with his disguise, he was unable to adapt to his
    old life. The sight of the "European bread, milky tea and boiled eggs"
    served up in his hotel disgusted him and he "called for tea from a
    tea shop, milkless, and in a small glass, not a great footbath of a
    cup." Sitting in a chair, not cross-legged, was torture and, worse,
    he "felt a stranger and lonelier than (he) had ever done before." At
    journey's end, Soane pined for "the coffee house and the bazaar, of
    the multitudes of which I was one, and equal, and spoke and laughed,
    and fought and wrangled."

    For a brief biography of Soane, and to read more about his adventures,
    see Part 1 of this Today's Zaman feature.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/news-336460-turkey-through-a-travelers-eyes-from-istanbul-to-diyarbakir-with-e-b-soane-in-1908-2.html

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