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School is going well. I know I won’t get any sympathy for saying this: but this class is really a lot of work (which is a good thing), during the week its just like been a full time student.
Saç (hair):
I got a haircut today, my hair was much to long for this weather, and it looks great. The guy spent at least 45 minutes on it, like it was in a salon, not a barbershop. And it cost 7 Tl!
Stereotypes:
First of all I should make an observation about how I talk about Izmir, Istanbul, and western Turkey; it is like someone visiting San Francisco, Napa, and Portland in the USA. Just as one should not conclude that people in San Francisco and Portland are representative of people in the rest of America, neither should one conclude Istanbul and Izmir are representative of all of Turkey.
So Sunday at the coffeehouse listening to live music I thought about something my Ottoman history professor said about the introduction of Coffeehouses in the Ottoman Empire: he argued that the coffeehouses was a revolutionary institution in the Ottoman Empire. This was because they were a place were men (sorry history is rather sexists, a women in a coffeehouse or tavern in the pre-modern world was a prostitutes or considered a fallen women) of different social classes and identities sat around drinking, coffee, tea, and beer and discuses things while playing games, listening to music, and watching puppet shows, instead of working. Moreover, the coffeehouse was a new place for men to gather, and unlike a mosque, their conversations and actives were not under the moral roof of religion, or in a home with set traditions and customs. Which was why coffeehouse were so unpopular with conservative religious authorities. On a related note, I just read a chapter in Orhan Pumuk’s historical novel My name is Red, where one of the charters sits in an 16th century Istanbul coffeehouse fearing that it will be attacked by the followers of a conservative preacher who denounced coffeehouses as dens of iniquity.
I had long understood and agreed with this argument on an intellectually level, but it really hit me as I sat Sunday, drink tea listening to music, and looking at all of the other people, men and women (let us be thankful we were born in the modern era), sitting around talking and drinking tea and beer, not doing anything productive just chilling out. And then I though about all the cafes in Turkey, and there are tons, more than you can possible imagine, where people sit around and drink and play backgammon and cards doing nothing “productive” just hanging out. And how revolutionary this most have been at the time, and why conservatives tried to ban coffeehouse in the Ottoman Empire. They were successfully a few times, however public popularity always overruled religious concerns in the long run. So think about it, it almost seems absurd, but café culture was a major social revolution in its day, today it so ordinary that we never stop to think about it.
When coffee first came to the Ottoman Empire, from Yemen, some of the ulama (religious scholar, judges: the religious establishment) claimed that coffee should be banned. They reasoned that coffee was an intoxicant, and since intoxicants, wine, was forbidden by the Qur’an (the Qur’an was written before humans drank coffee) so to should coffee be forbidden. However, coffee was so popular with the masses, including less conservative ulama, that the opinions of religious scholars were ignored in favor the will of the people. With the advent of coffee came another institution, the coffeehouse.






Marble columns are so classic, here is a close up.

I am going to Bergama tomorrow and I am not bring my computer, so there will not be any new posts till Wednesday. I am bring my camera so hopefully there will be lots of pictures of Greek and Roman ruins on Wednesday. If you did not know Bergama is modern day Pergamon. Now that I have seen all of the stuff which was looted from Pergamon in Berlin, I can see where it came from.
Hope everyone is doing well,
Take care,
Joshua
P.S. I appreciate all of your e-mails, so don’t me shy!
So I got to the airport absurdly early, my flight does not leave for more then two hours, the bus was faster then I thought. Moreover I think Turks do the same thing I do in America for a domestic flight: get to the airport 50 min before the flight leaves. On the plus side I got a seat on an exit row. O well, so while I am here I guess I rant about a few things.
A few stereotypes to dispense with:
The small one first: safety
I left much safer in Istanbul then I did in Paris, Madrid, and especially Brussels. And I say that as a man a few years older, wiser (maybe), and more conservative then when I traveled in the above-mentioned cities. I found people to be warm and friendly. Now if you walk down any street, which is lined with restaurants, you will be hassled by the guys trying to get you to sit down at their restaurant. However, a dismissive gesture, or a hayir or tamam (no, ok / alright) and they will leave you alone. If there is anything to be afraid of in Istanbul it is the cars, trucks and bus, who understand the laws of physics very well and expect you to get of the way, because they don’t want to stop.
The elephant in the room: Turkey is an Islamic country, therefore: no one drinks, everyone is very religious and women dress conservatively right? Saying Turkey is an Islamic country is like saying that America is a Christian country, what does that statement really mean? Legally speaking both statements are false as both nations are constitutionally secular. If such a statement means that a majority of the people of the nation are Muslim or Christian then we can evaluate it.So a number of people said to me that I would have a hard time finding alcohol since Turkey is a Muslim country. There is certain logic to such a statement, the Qu’an forbids alcohol, therefore in Muslim county it should be hard to find. Ok, by this same reasoning it should be hard to find overweight people in America because the Bible forbids sloth. There should be few rich people as they gave their wealth to help the poor, few murders, and in America we sell our daughters into slavery and stone idolaters, yes?





