Welcome Aboard!

Keep up with me from afar as I chronicle the thoughts, observations, and insights of a year abroad, starting at GU's McGhee Center in Alanya, Turkey for the fall semester of 2010 and continuing on to the National University of Ireland, Galway in Galway, Ireland for spring 2011. Enjoy!

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Moving On

Sunset Cruising, Highway Dreaming

All good things must come to an end. And so closes the very good thing that we've had going here in the 2010 Culture Capital of Europe over the past week and a half, a.k.a. forever. Our group has done and seen more than I ever thought possible in that amount of time, and the last two days have imprinted themselves in my mind for what I'm sure will be a long time and may very well be forever. Like the rest of the group, I'm excited to see what the next four days in the capital city of Ankara will bring, as well as our move to our official home in Alanya after that, but none of us feels ready to leave Istanbul.

The past few days, it's been hitting me over and over again: how crazy is it that I can now navigate "my" little corner of Istanbul, whether by foot, taksi, Tramvay, or group bus.  Less than a year ago, this city wasn't even remotely on my radar screen; by tonight I'm the only person I know in my friend group outside of the other people on this trip who can lay claim to a corner of it.  While it's true that I primarily encounter the city as a tourist, living here for this time and with the combination of structured activity and unstructured exploration time (never walk the same street twice), I do feel that I've got a better handle on it than your average tour group sheep fresh off the cruise ship from wherever.  A big part of that is language training: with an unsightly but utilitarian patois of English, Turkish, German, and body language (in my roommate's case, swipe hand under armpit in pharmacy = "Where's the deodorant, please?"), I can order a meal, say please and thank you (but not "you're welcome"), and generally hack my way through a day here in a place, language, and culture that I might never have known if an email about this program hadn't piqued my interest in the right way at the right time last fall.  Full disclosure: I didn't even make it to the info session the email was advertising, but this is waaay better than any advertisement.

We've toured.  We've eaten.  We've clubbed.  We've Tramvay'd.  We've spoken horrendous Turkish and been laughed at.  We've nasally Americanized our way through an honest-to-goodness four-sentence, call-and-response "good morning" exchange.  We've waited for hours in the police station for residence permits.  We've seen our first couple of cases of GI distress (new cuisine washed down with drinkable yogurt does not a particularly solid waste product make).  We've done all that and more, but as I mentioned, I'm sure it will be the last 36 hours that I look back on the most when I think about my time in this city.

It started yesterday morning, when we spent two hours exploring a fascinating exhibition called "8,000 Years of Istanbul," in which we saw the history of the city evolve from the earliest known Paleolithic settlements to the modern day city that spans two continents and is angling to become the eastern anchor of the European Union.  On our first day of touring the city, our guide, Günhan, called it a "city of layers"—the modern over top of the Ottoman over the Roman over the Byzantine…—and nowhere was that made clearer than in seeing that exhibition that exhibited different archeological "slices" of the city, demonstrating the evolving technologies, religions, aesthetics, and art forms of its successive rulers.

After lunch, we went to the police station to pick up our residency permits, which was scheduled to take no more than a half-hour but turned out to be memorable for all the wrong reasons.  Ten of the permits were ready when we got there, but five of them weren't—guess who got to be one of the lucky few to spend two hours sitting on the floor in the waiting room of the über-efficient Turkish police?  At least I can now cross "nap sitting against wall in Aksaray waiting room" off my list of things to do here…

Then things got good.  At 7pm, we gathered again for the supper of a lifetime.  Me being me (i.e. casual to begin with and spartanly packed), I went with my usual Mellencamp look: white polo, jeans, Chaco flips.  The other guys were in about the same mode, but our 11 companions of the fairer sex decided to make it special.  I'll set the scene and leave the rest to your imagination: four guys, 11 American girls dressed for a night on the town, 10-minute walk down the sidewalks of Istanbul to meet the bus that would take us to dinner.  Massallah!

Dinner itself was, by unanimous group consensus, easily in the top three if not the best of our lives.  We met up with a few other professors who are friends of our group's professors, a handful of program alumni who have returned to Istanbul after graduation (!), and three other American students whom we'd met when we toured the Turkish Cultural foundation where they're interns.  The location was the Galata Restaurant and Bar in the happening Taksim district, and the four-hour event consisted of course after course of unbelievable Turkish food (stuffed grape leaves, eggplant in yogurt, spiced bulgur, grape leaf-wrapped sea bass entrée, etc., etc.), traditional fasıl music played by a live band, and plenty of dancing fuel in the form of Efes Pilsen (Turkey's Miller Genuine Draft) and rakı (the country's 90-proof social energy drink).

How fun was it?  Enough so that even your loyal scribe's notoriously stiff, white self was out there shake-shake-shakin' his booty with the rest of 'em.  Not for all four hours, but I did make two trips to the dance floor.  That was my first taste of the Euro-evening culture of long, loud meals; drink; and the special camaraderie of establishments in which twenty or so of our people can dance around everyone else's tables and another customer can get up and take a turn as lead singer for 20 minutes to the delight of everyone there.

Naturally, the Euro-evening didn't stop there: by 11:30, we'd been at dinner for four hours and the twentysomethings were getting restless.  Leaving the older folk behind, students, alum, and interns hit the streets of Taksim for some Euroclubbing.  Again, a whole new nightlife experience for me; I'd say it will take some getting used to, but by the time I wrap this thing up at the end of May I'll probably have a handle on it.  After two hours or so of club-hopping, one of the girls in the group started to feel badly and needed to go home.  Two hours of Euroclubbing was starting to feel like about enough for a first time anyway, so I grabbed a water from the bar for her and got us in a taksi back to the hotel.

After making sure that Melinda was safely back in her room, I headed up to the rooftop terrace in search of water.  I found water, but unexpectedly also found our Turkish program director, Kahraman.  "Kahraman-bey," I greeted him, and he told me to grab a beer out of the hotel fridge—his treat—and pull up a seat.  We talked life, the universe, and everything until just after 4am—about 45 minutes before the first call to prayer.

The next morning, I rolled out of bed at 0830 or so to answer nature's rather insistent call, but lay in bed till after 1000, just reading, thinking, and grinning.  Finally, I made it up to the rooftop again for breakfast.  As I ate with some of my friends (fellow early-riser/recoverers) we tried to buy tickets to a FIBA international basketball playoff game that night.  Sadly, they were sold out, but that left us absolutely free to plan our last day in Istanbul as we chose.  As you can imagine, we did good.

Once we'd mobilized around 1100, the first stop was the Museum of Islamic and Turkish Art off of the old Hippodrome area across from the Hagia Sophia.  That proved to be 10 TL and a couple of hours well-spent; the four of us who went were happy to see (and make up stories about) the ancient art of the region and get our daily dose of culture.  Hungry again, we crossed the main street to grab some pide (pita bread) sandwiches at a Turkish fast-food joint, where we met up with another member of the group, with whom we decided to take one last tramvay ride to parts previously unseen.  After a quick freshening-up at the hotel, we met once more in the lobby to begin our adventure.

The tramvay trip itself was actually pretty uneventful; even the station where we got off didn't seem to have that much new to offer us after we'd walked about 20 minutes up the hill further into the city.  Unimpressed, we headed back towards the tramvay to grab some Mado ice cream cones (best in town), eventually deciding to walk back to the hotel rather than take another crowded tramvay ride and wind up with too much time to kill.  That decision produced a hour-long promenade of what appeared to be Istanbul's Little Bulgaristan; though we were only a block or three south of the main (tramvay) road, we got to see a completely different and not even necessarily Turkish-speaking face of the city than we'd seen before.

Back at the hotel, we refilled water bottles and emptied bladders once more, then headed out to the free exhibition of 1001 İcat (ee-JAHT; inventions) two blocks away.  We spent about an hour exploring a fascinating if somewhat politically slanted exhibit of all the great discoveries and advances in science, technology, and knowledge made in the Muslim world while Europe was in the depths of the Dark Ages.  (I'm not trying to take away from the validity or importance of these icats, but the editorial tone of the British-sponsored exhibition felt a little haughty.)

Finally, we did the best thing of all, a sunset cruise of the Bosporus on a ludicrously small and unstable boat.  We'd gone to the docks hoping to take a sunset cruise from the same company that we'd sailed with on our third day in town (the subject of my last entry), but we hadn't read the fine print that said it ended on 9 August.  Whoops!  Turning around, we saw the little boat rolling wildly alongside the docks with a loudspeaker blaring "Bosporus!  Bosporus!  Komm komm komm komm!"  Hey, it was only 10 TL (half what we'd expected) and it was right there, so what the hell?  We piled on, slipping and sliding across the pitching upper deck and falling into place along the rails, glad we'd decided to dine after cruising.  Luckily, we seemed to gain a little more equilibrium once we'd set out from the dock, and we wound up spending an enchanting hour on the water, watching the sun set over the Sultanahmet and Taksim neighborhoods behind us, the moon and stars come out in front of us, and the changing-colored lights of the "Bridge to Asia" come on right after we'd sailed under it and began turning around.

By 8:30 or so, we were docked back on the waterfront from which we'd left, happy and hungry once again.  Wanting a memorable change of pace, we headed to a fish restaurant under the bridge from the Golden Horn area to the old Genoese district where we were promised a 10 percent discount and free çay and coffee after dinner when the host pegged us as the "student peoples" we were.  Sure enough, they brought the show-and-tell platter of fish offerings to the table, which produced some interesting reactions among the more squeamish/less seafood-oriented among us.  I went for the grilled calamari and Efes, which was quite good, but one of the other guys opted for a whole snapper so we got to do another dissection dinner.

By 10pm or so, it was time to head back: Kahraman had texted us all that afternoon to tell us that we needed to be packed, fed, and in the lobby with our luggage by 0730 the next morning.  Unsurprisingly, we all had a fair amount of packing to do, so we took one last stroll up the hill to the hotel to take care of business.  Not wanting to break the spell just yet, we all headed up to the rooftop once more to play a little backgammon and enjoy our spectacular view of the city at night once more, but by 11 or so the four hours of sleep we were all operating on finally caught up to us and we drifted downstairs in ones and twos to pack up, brush our teeth, and try to grab a little sleep before our early wake-up call.

***

And now we're on the road to Ankara, with Europe three hours behind us and going deeper into Asia at 100 km/h.  (Turks don't make such a big deal out of the continental thing, but it's still a novelty for most of us so I thought I'd mention it.)  We've traded the sprawl of the city for the rolling hills and pastoral Spaghetti Western landscapes of Anatolia, rolling down the highway on our bus packed to the gills with sleeping students and our luggage past fields and cows and trucks.  We've just stopped at a Turkish rest station for Sunday brunch (oh, wow!) and the ever-popular dash to the WC.

It turns out that the stop for food/use the bathroom experience is remarkably similar to the one I'm used to, but there are some differences: we're in the culinary capital of Turkey right now so we got some of the best food around even at the side of the highway—a big upgrade over BK and Starbucks, let me tell you—and tuvaletler are the usual hole-the-ground/pail-on-the-side jobs we're starting to accustom ourselves to over here.  Thanks to NOLS, I can assume the position and take care of business with aplomb—and the coping strategies necessary to keep my pants out of the line of fire—but woe betide he who forgets his wet wipes: there normally isn't even a Hurriyet or Sears, Roebuck within reach.  (Something to practice if you plan to visit.)

On the road again; we should be in Ankara in about two hours.  The next four days will be full of the usual capital city things: a visit to Atatürk's tomb this afternoon, visits to government officials and ambassadors in the coming days, etc.  The New York City/Washington, D.C. comparison is apt here between Istanbul and Ankara, but apparently the difference is even starker—perhaps on the order of NYC-Albany, with a huge, vibrant port city vs. an administrative inland city.  Whereas D.C. is a big-enough city with a personality and fairly obvious divisions amongst its neighborhoods and activities, Ankara is supposedly quite small and administrative.  It's just been rated the most livable city in Turkey, and we're told that we should be able to navigate it comfortably after an afternoon of exploration.

All in due time; for now, the bus ride backgammon tournament is starting up so it's time to close down the computer and participate.  One of these days I'll settle down and start sharing some pictures and second-level insights instead of observations out the window.  In the meantime, it's a wonderful thing to be among friends on a bus, laughing and napping and talking and dreaming: when you're 20 and life stretches out ahead of you like the highway under our wheels, over the horizon and into the unknown, it's a good time to plan our roaring twenties of backpacking trips across Europe, sails around the globe, and being the generation that finally changes the world.  What can we do but smile and dream and say evet (yes) to everything?

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