perceptions – Sue's Turkish Adventures https://suesturkishadventures.com Tue, 28 Jan 2020 14:21:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.6 Is My Stereotype of Germans Fair? https://suesturkishadventures.com/is-my-stereotype-of-germans-fair/ https://suesturkishadventures.com/is-my-stereotype-of-germans-fair/#comments Tue, 28 Jan 2020 14:21:06 +0000 https://suesturkishadventures.com/?p=2193 Berlin was at a disadvantage. That’s where we were heading after four surprisingly sunny, whirlwind days in London. I feared that the Germany half of our December trip, organized to use soon-to-expire hotel points, would be a disappointment. And I knew that part of the problem was my stereotype of Germans. In London we ate pappadums and paisam with Sankar’s cousin and family. We strolled along the Thames with old…

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Berlin was at a disadvantage. That’s where we were heading after four surprisingly sunny, whirlwind days in London. I feared that the Germany half of our December trip, organized to use soon-to-expire hotel points, would be a disappointment. And I knew that part of the problem was my stereotype of Germans.

In London we ate pappadums and paisam with Sankar’s cousin and family. We strolled along the Thames with old friends, Matthew and Louise, photographing landmarks such as, “the walkie talkie,” “the cheese grater,” and “the London Eye.” At the British Library, we peered at manuscripts ranging from the Magna Carta to Paul McCartney’s jotted Yesterday lyrics.

I thought ahead to Berlin. I’d long perceived German people as stern and humorless. Exacting, and demanding. Waiting for an Agatha Christie play to start on our last evening, I commented to our friends, with only a bit of hyperbole, “I’m afraid I’m going to do something wrong in Germany. I’ll break a rule or something, and people will yell at me.”

“I don’t think so,” Matthew replied

As we carried our suitcases through Paddington Station the next day, I felt the kind of fatigue that indicated a cold was coming on.

My Stereotype of Germans Goes Way Back

I’d spent just one day in Germany over twenty years ago, and had no significant interactions with Germans. But back in the eighties I’d spent a year working for a German boss who was temperamental and disapproving. I’d found German foods—sauerkraut, dumplings, pickles—lacking.

I also have a kind of psychological back story with Germany. I guess every American does. Although the country has done an admirable job of reconciling its 20th century history, how can it counteract the near-continuous onslaught of Holocaust-related books, films, and television programs? It can’t. I’d been saddened and horrified more times than I could count.  

Thus, my perception of Germans. I had actually been known to proclaim that I had no interest in visiting Germany. It’s not difficult to make that kind of statement at age 64, because there are so many countries to visit and so little time.

One thing I never did, however, was connect my proclamations about Germany with my irritation over the question, “Aren’t you afraid to visit Turkey?” that Sankar and I receive whenever we travel to that country.

So why, then, did Sankar and I choose Berlin over, say, Bruge or Amsterdam? Well, we felt Berlin was a cosmopolitan “world city,” with fascinating Cold War and World War II sights. A place we really should see. We also knew Berlin had a Turkish neighborhood that might evoke the wonderful years we spent in Turkey. And I think a tiny part of me knew that my stereotype of Germans was ridiculous, and that it was time to challenge it.

A Rainy Start

It was drizzling when our plane landed in Berlin. We caught an Uber to our hotel, just three blocks from the Reichstag. The city appeared spread out, almost suburban. The Tiergarten, adjacent to our hotel, looked more like a forest. Aside from the regal Brandenburg Gate, most buildings appeared modern and undistinguished. They reminded me, disappointingly, of downtown Minneapolis. War—and the Soviet emphasis on functionality—had apparently erased most of Berlin’s charm.

A Worldly New Friend

We checked into a comfortable hotel room at the Marriott. There was a coffeemaker on the side table, but no water bottles, a nice nod to the environment. When we visited the lobby for information, the concierge, to our surprise, was a slim, neatly groomed Turk named Oğuzhan. We were so happy to meet someone from Turkey that we greeted him like an old friend.

Oğuzhan told us he had grown up in Germany, his parents Gastarbeiters, guest workers, who arrived over fifty years ago. When we lived in Turkey, I met several offspring of Gastarbeiters. My elegant supervisor, Dilek, fluent in Turkish, German, and English. Several 3M Turkey wives, well-educated and secularly inclined; their mothers had worn the headscarf, but they did not. One, an engineer, worked for a German company that sold chemicals to Iran, which she told us was the makeup capital of the world. “I go there every month.”

Oğuzhan was warm and eager to help, hardly my stereotype of Germans, and I realized with some envy that growing up trilingual would make a person quite cosmopolitan. He smiled when we told him we had, several years ago, spent a night in his ancestral town of Afyonkarahisar.

photo of Turkish concierge
Our concierge

Oğuzhan gave us a map of a dozen or so Berlin Christmas markets, and we walked to the nearest one, in Gendarmenmarkt Square. Gendarmenmarkt contains the 19th century Berlin concert hall and the 18th century French and German churches, all of which, I later read, were restored after the Second World War. In the center of the square stood several dozen holiday shops in white tents with pointed tops. Some had open sides, but many were enclosed by clear plastic, and even heated. Shopping delights beckoned.

Gendarmenmarkt Christmas market

Christmas Galore 

Gendarmenmarkt stores were bursting with colorful ornaments, wooden candle carousels of all sizes, leather wallets and purses, hats, gloves, scarves, and hard candies in long, pointed cellophane bags. Close to a dozen establishments offered refreshments: glühwein, various bratwursts including “currywurst,” which sounded slightly alarming, and dishes involving noodles, potatoes, and pork. I was curious, but not quite ready to dig in.

History Lessons

Over the next two days, we walked through the extensive and up-to-date German History Museum. We learned that Germany prior to unification under “Iron Chancellor” Otto von Bismarck, wasn’t much more than a disparate collection of provinces, each with its own ruler. After an hour and a half, which brought us up to the twentieth century, we sat down for tea in its formal, but somehow cozy café.

Cafe, German History Museum

The next day we visited the Pergamon museum, located on an island in the Spree river. It was a dazzling (but shameful) collection of artifacts from other lands, including the gates of Babylon and the market gate from Miletus, a Roman site in western Turkey.

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Babylon gate

 

Gate of Miletus

Nearby was “Pergamon Museum. The Panorama.” This new site featured a three-story, multimedia diorama that put viewers in the middle of the ancient Roman city. With dramatic background music and evocative lighting, we watched Romans emerge from their homes at sunrise, worship at temples, shop at agoras, and gather to view performances in the evening.  It was a don’t-miss experience. 

Pergamon diorama
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Pergamon diorama

On our last day, we toured the Berlin Wall Memorial, a sober, informative remembrance strung out along a quarter mile stretch of former Wall.

Visiting the Berlin wall supported my stereotypes of Germans
Berlin Wall bleakness

Tall, sometimes slightly plump, but rarely fat, Germans dressed in earth tones, wearing sensible shoes and warm-looking jackets. They appeared casual, confident, and unpretentious. I felt the comfort of looking similar in appearance, something I’ve missed in our travels to Latin America, southern Europe, and Asia, where Sankar has blended in.

It was odd, but as soon as I arrived in Germany, I got so caught up observing and interacting that my stereotype, alive for years, seemed to exit my mind. It was like when you imagine a place, but find that when you get there, the old image becomes difficult to recall. New impressions were quickly writing over my old ones.

Patriotic Immigrants Were Not my Stereotype of Germans

We climbed into an Uber early one day with, “Good morning,” only to hear an emphatic “Guten tag,” from the driver. This was the one and only reprimand we received in Berlin, and it was given by a Turk. A recent arrival, he told us in Turkish that he liked Berlin, particularly its manageable size and ease of getting around, and jotted down for us the name of a popular restaurant in Kreutzberg, the Turkish neighborhood.

A-a-a-choo!

The rain kept falling and my cold kept getting worse. Sankar and I both felt tired, and with no social engagements, we found ourselves dozing off in mid-evening and sleeping late in the morning. That felt good, but we were wasting precious sightseeing time.

We had forgotten to bring decongestants, so we stopped at a pharmacy. The woman at the counter was the pharmacist herself, and to my surprise, I had her attention for more than five minutes. “How much congestion do you have?” “Do you have a cough?” “Would you describe it as a lot, a little or not at all?” “Do you want to take something dissolved in water, or would you prefer a pill?” Again, not my stereotype of Germans. The Grippostad she sold me for less than $10 made me feel a bit better, though I longed for Sudafed.

A Splurge

The night after our Gendarmenmarkt visit, I woke several times, thinking about a small black purse I’d seen there. The leather on one of its sides had been worked into a lovely flower shape. We went back to the market and ended up buying it. The vendor was also the artist, one Karin Scholz, from Dusseldorf, her card read, perhaps fifty years of age. After we finished the transaction, to my astonishment, she came out of her booth and gave me a long, tight hug.

Karin Scholz and her leather work

Seeking a light lunch, we sat down at a picnic table in a market café warmed by heating lamps, and ordered noodle soup. We were surprised to find ourselves beside four travelers from Guatemala, and enjoyed a lengthy Spanish conversation.

We returned to the market another day, this time for chocolates and candle holders. After making our purchases, we sat down in another café, whose menu highlighted goose products, and ordered potato soup. It came full of various herbs and weiner slices, delicious, but not overly fatty. It was only 2:00 pm, but daylight was fading. We lingered in the warmth of the cafe, feeling a glow of companionship with the other patrons.

Christmas market cafe menu
A cozy market cafe

Unexpected Kindness

The Marriott charged thirty Euros for breakfast, so each morning we headed to a coffee shop across the street from our hotel, whose counter displayed a tantalizing array of pastries. I can say that German croissants are every bit as good as French ones. On our second morning, with no hint of their availability. Sankar asked if they had eggs. I was a little surprised he’d asked (but it didn’t occur to me to wonder that he—or we—would get yelled at). The young clerk admitted that they did have eggs. In just a few minutes a plump, beaming Fraulein emerged from the back kitchen and placed in front of him a generous plate of scrambled eggs topped by herbs and accompanied by a green salad. 

It was pouring the afternoon of the weekly market in Kreutzberg so, sadly, we gave up on visiting the Turkish neighborhood. Late that afternoon, the sky still dark, we were resting in our hotel room. We had 5:30 Reichstag reservations, made online back home, which had generated official-looking confirming paperwork. But we couldn’t motivate ourselves to put on our rain gear and venture out.

We didn’t even want to leave our hotel, so for dinner we decided to splurge at our hotel’s “American-style Steakhouse.” The menu was limited and expensive, and the waiters a bit snooty, but I was able to order barbecued pork ribs (I think pork is on every menu at every meal in Germany) and Sankar a ribeye. After our food was served, we were surprised by a visit from another smiling Fraulein, whose job seemed to be to make her way around the restaurant asking every diner how they liked their food. She was delighted when we told her we were pleased.

Debriefing

Our Berlin guidebook opens with the phrase, “Berlin is a city of leafy boulevards.” It goes on to say that, “Berliners love to hang out in parks and along riverbanks, as if enjoying a continuous open-air party.” Clearly, the city is at its best in warmer weather, and I don’t really recommend it in the winter. For Christmas markets, we might have chosen a smaller, more picturesque German city or town, although we probably would have experienced rain there as well.

Back home, my cold lingering and combining with jet lag, I slowly completed my Christmas shopping and house decorating. I didn’t download my photos for a couple of weeks, nor did I reflect on my travels. But then a friend asked, “How was Berlin?” and my quick answer, “Fine. The people were really nice, friendly and helpful,” made me realize that my perceptions had changed.

Immersion—even one as brief and lackluster as our four rainy, half-sick days—had produced positive emotions—gratefulness, warmth, feelings of connection and inclusion. And these emotions had replaced my stereotype!

Everything, it seems, boils down to emotions. And now I began to understand “Aren’t you afraid to go to Turkey?”  It’s a stand-in for emotions surrounding decades of sad and horrifying news from the Middle East. But it is also changeable.

Over our three years in Turkey, we hosted 26 visitors. Some hesitated to make the trip. But as they left, they all had the same comment. “Wow! What a great place!”

 

For additional reading about Berlin, go to: https://www.fodors.com/world/europe/germany

For more on unexpected kindness, go to: https://suesturkishadventures.com/unexpected-kindness/

For more on stereotypes, go to: https://suesturkishadventures.com/perceptions-and-illusions/

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Not a Trivial Pursuit: How to Make Friends Overseas https://suesturkishadventures.com/not-a-trivial-pursuit-how-to-make-friends-overseas/ https://suesturkishadventures.com/not-a-trivial-pursuit-how-to-make-friends-overseas/#respond Tue, 07 Apr 2015 13:02:05 +0000 https://suesturkishadventures.com/?p=1352 Dear readers, A bunch of you have asked me where I am currently. I’m home in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Through this site I am blogging about the years I lived in Istanbul: 2010 through 2013.   Three months had passed. Ninety days. They had been much like those I’d spent in other foreign countries: an initial flood of challenges combined with periodic waves of loss. Thanks to the company’s help, we had settled…

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Dear readers,

A bunch of you have asked me where I am currently. I’m home in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Through this site I am blogging about the years I lived in Istanbul: 2010 through 2013.

 

Three months had passed. Ninety days. They had been much like those I’d spent in other foreign countries: an initial flood of challenges combined with periodic waves of loss.

Thanks to the company’s help, we had settled in fairly quickly. So quickly, in fact, that I was beginning to feel complacent. As often happens when somebody else does things for you, I had become dependent on Ümit for transport around the city, and rarely ventured out alone.

One sunny afternoon, I decided to change that. I gathered my courage, walked down to the Bosphorus, and hopped on a city bus to Taksim Square. It would be my first ride alone here. My destination: historic Istiklal Avenue.

A century ago, Istiklal Caddesi had been the main thoroughfare of the city’s glamorous Pera District, an avenue lined with embassies and diplomatic residences. Although only a scattering of consulates remained, embassies having moved to the Republic’s new capital, Ankara, in 1923, the avenue was still cosmopolitan, a pedestrian-only social and shopping venue.

As the bus made its way south along the Sea Road, it passed the hotel, where the company had put us up on our initial visit in January, and I felt a surge of accomplishment. Just eight months ago I’d been a complete stranger here, only daring to venture two blocks from my hotel. Now I was out navigating on my own.

The bus turned away from the sea and ascended a long hill. Soon we were up at Taksim Square in the heart of the city. There, Istiklal Avenue originates, winding a mile to the Tünel funicular, which drops passengers down to the waters of the Golden Horn.

stock-footage-istanbul-jun-a-festival-atmosphere-prevailed-monday-in-taksim-square-on-fourth-day-june
Taksim Square

 

IMG_4167
Istiklal!

 

I got off the bus and began to walk. First, I passed the charming, diminutive French Consulate with its art gallery and café. I browsed in Mango’s three-story flagship department store, and walked into an upscale women’s shoe shop called Hotiç, full of slim leather boots, despite the fact that Istanbulus rarely trudged through snow. I peeked into the arched, frescoed Çiçek Pasajı (Flower Passage), full of restaurants; and peered under a decorative arch at the Balık Pazarı (Fish Bazaar). Finally, I gazed through a tall iron fence at the hundred-year-old neo-Gothic St. Anthony of Padua Church.

IMG_0377

 

Balik

 

St Anthony;s church Istiklal

When I reached the Galata Mevlevihanesi, a museum dedicated to Turkey’s whirling dervishes, I turned and headed back toward Taksim.

search

After querying several people, “Kabataş otobüs nerede?” I located the bus back to Kabataş, a major hub along the Sea Road. Once there, however, I realized I didn’t know which bus continued on up the Bosphorus to Arnavutköy and home. I didn’t see anyone to ask and it was too far to walk, so I switched to a taxi, vowing this would be the last time. “From now on,” I told myself, “it will be a game to come and go solely by public transport. Giving up and taking a taxi will be considered cheating!”

Exhausted that evening, I stretched out on our trusty green tweed American couch. A bout of homesickness washed over me. Why, I wondered, when my day had been so successful?

I missed American foods, particularly comfort items like cookies, sweet rolls and donuts; baking was the only area in which Turkish cooks didn’t seem to excel. I missed losing myself in movies—the only American movies Turkish theatres showed were blockbusters—and I missed having books at my fingertips. I missed reading a morning newspaper with my coffee. Oh, for the Sunday New York Times! I had taken to printing out the articles I wanted to read each weekend, then heading to the couch with a thick 8 x 11 stack of paper. It was the closest I could approximate to sitting down with actual newsprint.

I missed American television. We got CNN International here, as well as the BBC, and theoretically I could download American programs, but my laptop “knew” I was in Turkey and displayed a stern message about international copyrights every time I tried. To get around this, I had tried consorting with sketchy websites like gorillavid and vidxden, but that only made me worry about viruses.

I missed getting in my own car and zipping around, although I had to admit that riding with Ümit often lifted my spirits. I ended up smiling because I’d had to be pleasant to someone else, and we’d found things to laugh about.

“You have helped me a lot,” Ümit told me just the other day, taking me completely by surprise. It was a few moments before I realized that he was referring to his English capabilities, improved through our daily talks. Apparently my stumbling and bumbling first months here had been at least somewhat productive. Ümit’s words made my day, and I vowed to keep them in mind.

Food items and sources of information aside, what made me most homesick here were people: I missed both friends and family. Quite a few were making plans to visit, but these visits were months—even years—away. I was lonely. That was the real reason for my malaise

 

Thankfully, now that September was here, with schools in session and foreign families back in town, I could begin to connect with the expatriate network, and hopefully make some new friends. The International Women of Istanbul (IWI)’s opening meeting was scheduled for September 23, just a few days hence. The 23rd was Angela’s birthday; hopefully the meeting would distract me from the fact that she had chosen Minnesota for graduate school in part to be closer to Sankar and me. “You’re not going anywhere, are you?” she had asked us less than a year ago.

An enticing welcome message was now up on the IWI website, proclaiming its “over 600 members representing 56 different countries” and promising an “e-newsletter . . . a monthly program calendar which has a wide range of social activities . . . cultural tours. . . interest group meetings. . .”

IWI 2014 OM Group
Current IWI leaders

 

My attitude toward friendships with expatriates was different now than it had been other times I’d lived abroad. In Costa Rica I didn’t think I needed other foreigners. This was partly, “I don’t want to belong to any group that would accept me,” but also a result of my experiences in Yemen. There, I’d had what I felt was an authentic overseas experience, holding a job and spending much of my time with locals. In Costa Rica, I had intended to do the same, socializing mainly with Ticos and absorbing their customs. I figured that would be easy. I already spoke Spanish, and had worked with Latin Americans. I dismissed the idea of getting to know other North American women, believing they would be focused on little other than lunching, shopping, and decorating their homes.

But things hadn’t gone the way I’d expected. First, I hadn’t held a job in Costa Rica, and second, the Latin women I’d met—neighbors, mothers of my kids’ classmates—had seemed decidedly uninterested in friendship. Gradually, their reasons had dawned on me. Not confined to their homes as were the bored, underutilized Yemeni women, Costa Rican women were busy with jobs and extensive family obligations. And their tiny country had long been host to thousands of North American sun-seekers and tax-evaders, taking any thrill out of the arrival of yet another gringo.

When I lamented my lack of Tico friends to a U.S. Embassy wife, she told me that the Embassy advises its employees not to expect friendships with locals. “If it happens, that’s great,” she told me. “But they’re busy with their work and their families. They aren’t looking for new friends, especially ones who are here only temporarily.”

When I finally dropped my quest for authenticity, I met an interesting—and yes, authentic— group of expatriates in Costa Rica. And even in Yemen, although I had spent a great deal of time in local homes, I had to admit I’d depended on other foreigners for evening and weekend socializing.

Expatriate friends were, I now realized, essential. They provided a crucial respite from the stress of navigating a foreign culture. They nodded in sympathy over daily mistakes and misunderstandings without hearing blame, as a spouse might. They provided relief from constant, awkward attempts to communicate in the local language. And “older” expatriates—those with more time in-country—were a valuable source of advice, as they had already learned from their newcomer mistakes.

This time around I was aware that, if I failed to find friends in Turkey—and it was I who typically brought friends into the marriage—neither Sankar nor I would have a social life here. If we didn’t have a social life, we would both be unhappy. Our time in Turkey would be a failure.

 

The morning of the IWI meeting, I put on black slacks and a new top, and thought about the steps I’d taken toward embracing my current role. I was older and wiser now, and I had less trouble admitting that I was a non-working, trailing spouse. Although I could gripe that I’d been forced into that role when I moved here, I’d actually placed myself on the road to it years ago when I gave up full-time work.

I had accepted my role, and I wanted what today’s meeting promised—but still, I didn’t look forward to attending it. To accomplish this important task, I’d have to socialize with people I didn’t know, and I was far more skilled in riding buses around town anonymously than introducing myself in a room full of strangers.

The problem was that I had never been good at keeping small talk small. Perennially impatient, I wanted to go deeper than surface chitchat and often did, offering commentary that sometimes ended up sounding snarky. I longed for the sly nod of agreement that would shortcut the process and identify a potential friend. But most often, I suspected, my words simply proclaimed me as impolite.

Beggars cannot be choosers, however, and today I planned to be as positive and light-hearted as possible. And thereafter I vowed to try my best to attend a variety of IWI events, even if I feared I’d have little in common with the women attending them.

That approach had actually worked for me when I’d finally tried it in Costa Rica. I had endured a tiresome, all-day cooking class attended mostly by women whose children went to a school across town. They had seemed cliquey, their conversation hard to follow. But there had been one friendly face, belonging to Denise, whose husband worked for the Canadian Embassy. Denise had three daughters whose ages were similar to those of my kids, and a few days after the class, she surprised me with a call and a dinner invitation (this was expatriate performance at its best). Our husbands hit it off, our kids played well together, and fifteen years later, we are still friends with her family. This was how friendships were made overseas: large, trivial events full of shallow conversation winnowed down to satisfying personal friendships.

 

At 10 am on September 23, Ümit drove me up to Taksim Square and deposited me at the Hilton Hotel, a ten-story, newish concrete building. We agreed that he would pick me up in an hour and a half.

The hotel’s vast lobby gave little clue it was in Istanbul, save a display case containing a quilted Ottoman caftan and some patterned ceramic bowls. A sign pointed IWI members to the lower level and, arranging a smile on my face, I descended a wide, curved staircase. At the bottom, groups of well-dressed women—why hadn’t I put on a scarf or necklace?—massed around several long tables. I had already paid my dues online, so I located my nametag and headed into the meeting.

To my surprise, I found myself not at a sit-down event, but a ballroom filled with numerous individual tables, each staffed by two or three women. All over the room, people were walking around and signing up for activities that interested them. It wasn’t a meeting at all. It was more like an exhibition or a fair.

I stood for a moment, considering the situation. Around me swirled a multitude of women who looked to be from all over the earth. Petite East Asians wearing silky, brightly colored clothing. Women from India, wearing selvar kamizes. Women speaking Spanish—at one table I would talk briefly with a woman from Bolivia. Women whose no-nonsense haircuts and chunky shoes gave them away as northern European. Bescarfed Arab women with large, gold jewelry and thick eyeliner. The room had a floral scent and buzzed with modulated conversation, women talking and laughing, seeming much more at ease than I.

If I had been able to forget myself for a moment, I would have marveled at the sheer quantity of cultural adjustments these women were in the process of making. And I would have seen forced smiles and uncertain glances just like my own, recognizing the same disorientation I myself felt. Instead, I felt alone and conspicuous. But I didn’t give up.

I started around the room. First I stopped at a booth promoting a high-end English-language magazine about Turkey called Cornucopia. Next a booth recruiting volunteers to help with an annual Christmas bazaar. I took a flyer. Then a booth run by Irish nuns asking for volunteers to pay regular visits to a retirement home. A French-speaking booth and a Dutch-speaking booth, recruiting their own nationals for social activities.

The far end of the room was given over to all the different private schools, preschools, daycares and playgroups in town. I was relieved I didn’t need to examine these, didn’t have the task of trying to keep children happy and adjusted and well educated here. But I also felt wistful, as I knew the women at these booths would make friends almost instantly. I was also reminded that at age 55, I might not be a prime friendship candidate, at least not for women younger than me.

I noticed a booth with a sign that read PAWI. This, a volunteer explained, stood for Professional American Women of Istanbul. The group, she said, offered monthly networking meetings with speakers from Turkish and international organizations. I signed up to be a PAWI member and forked over 35 Turkish lira ($20) for annual dues.

Adjoining the PAWI table was a sign for a book group and there I met a pretty, gregarious woman named Felicia. She told me she had come to Istanbul from Washington, D.C. two years ago, when her husband got a teaching job at Robert College, Turkey’s top high school. Felicia was practically a neighbor, as she—and the college—were located just down the Bosphorus from me. I looked at the list of books the group planned to read (The Help, Room, Cutting for Stone), signed up, and Felicia and I exchanged contact information. I was pleased to connect with a familiar activity in this new place.

I headed to the refreshment table in the center of the room, and picked up a cup of tea, reminding myself to keep smiling, as if “the friends I’d come with” had just stepped away. My shoes were beginning to pinch and my face felt stiff. But looking at my watch, I realized I hadn’t even been at the meeting an hour. If I’d had my own car, I might have cut out at this point, but I didn’t, so I stayed, grabbing a crumbly cookie and then struggling to balance it with my cup and saucer and the pieces of literature I’d picked up.

In a corner back near the ballroom’s entrance, a diminutive gray-haired woman stood behind a table that had no visitors at all. A half dozen enlarged photographs were spread out on her table, and I walked over to look at them. I saw an ancient-looking arched bridge, the interior of a mosque that looked as if it was made of wood, and a group of people smiling in front of some Roman columns. I asked the woman about her organization.

“It’s called ARIT,” she told me, speaking in what sounded like a British accent. “American Research Institute in Turkey.” She went on. “We help fund scholars who do research in Turkey, giving them stipends and a place to stay. The money comes from the fees ARIT members pay for guided trips all over Turkey.”

I wasn’t quite certain I understood, but, remembering my vow to be positive, I nodded. Drawn by the possibility of travel around Turkey, I found myself signing up to be an ARIT member and paying the annual dues, 90 Turkish Lira, about $60.00. Back at the apartment I would chide myself for springing for something so expensive that I knew so little about. My forced positivity seemed to have brought out the spendthrift in me.

After stopping at a few more tables, I gave myself permission to leave. I knew I should try to make more connections, but I could only push my temperament so far. For all my awareness of the importance of expatriate friends, I look back and see myself mired in my own inadequacies,and still treating blithely a crucial first meeting of expatriates. What would have happened had I approached ten tables and carried on ten conversations, getting contact information and feigning interest in ten different activities?

But I had tried. I had made a few contacts. It wasn’t a great performance, but it was okay.

On my way out, I picked up a swag bag full of products companies wanted us expatriate ladies to try. There was a boxed mix for the brightly-colored macaron cookies I had seen at upscale bakeries here; a tube of Nivea hand cream; a box of Lipton Iced Tea mix, which seemed optimistic in a country in which tea is prepared strictly and elaborately; and a copy of Lale, Tulip, the most recent issue of the IWI magazine.

I walked back up the staircase and out into the noon sunshine. With relief, the first thing I saw was our blue car and Ümit leaning against it, ready to take me back to safety.

 

The first meeting of the PAWI book group was scheduled for the following week. The group would consider members’ suggestions at that time and decide on a reading list for the upcoming year. After some internal back and forth with myself: “Should I contact someone I barely know and ask a favor?” I forced myself to dig up Felicia’s email and send her a message asking if I could accompany her.

Felicia agreed, and we set a time to meet outside her apartment and catch a bus to the meeting. I was still so unfamiliar, even with my own neighborhood, that the directions she gave me sounded daunting.

I left home plenty early on Tuesday and walked carefully down to the bus stop alongside Felicia’s seaside apartment (Robert College provided excellent accommodations for its teachers). When she emerged, she advised me to keep my purse shut against pickpockets, and we hopped on the first bus up to Taksim.

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Felicia was shorter than I, and about ten years younger, but like me, she had thick reddish hair and blue-green eyes. There, the resemblance stopped as, due to her Greek and Italian heritage, she had lovely olive skin. As we rode, I was aware of the contrast between my fumbling, lonely self of the previous week and this new me, following Felicia’s experienced lead so that I’d also appear in the know.

The two of us began chatting about the trips around Turkey she had taken. Felicia had hosted numerous visitors and had shown them around the entire perimeter of western Turkey, visiting beaches, hidden coves and Roman ruins, and staying in wonderful little Aegean hotels. Oblivious to others on the bus, I began peppering her with questions, trying to memorize the names of places she’d found particularly enjoyable.

As more and more people got on the bus, we moved further down the aisle, still deep in conversation, grabbing overhead handles to steady ourselves. After a half-mile, passengers were wedged against each other. Finally two seats opened up toward the back of the bus, and we went to sit down. But when Felicia pulled her purse, a tan canvas envelope, onto her lap, she realized it was almost weightless and noticed a neat, eight-inch incision on the bottom edge. Everything in it had been removed.

“Oh, my God,” she said. “I’ve been robbed!”

I checked my purse, but it was intact.

Felicia immediately got up and pulled the string to let the bus driver know to stop. Then we both got off the bus. She explained that she’d only had a few lira in her purse and a debit card that wouldn’t work without a PIN, but also a couple of sentimental items. “The guy probably threw the bag away after he realized he wasn’t going to get any money. Let’s walk back the way we came from. We can look for it in dumpsters and along the sides of the road.”

We were both upset about the loss—and alarmed that a thief had operated so close to us without our realizing it. The thought of a sharp knife being employed inches from our midsections on a jolting vehicle made me shudder.

It was about 6 pm, the weather balmy. Turks were out in droves, walking home from work. Felicia and I walked quickly along, peering into mostly-empty dumpsters, covering the mile and a half back to her apartment. We talked about the crime most of the way. She had lost a pillbox filled with rosary beads that had been gifts, a change purse containing the few lira (less than a dollar) and the useless credit card.

Felicia phoned the book group chair to tell her we wouldn’t be coming to the meeting. I apologized to her for distracting her with such intense conversation; it had been unwise on both our parts. We didn’t find the purse and, an hour later, parted ways in front of Robert College, the evening truncated. But that was okay. Although I was upset for Felicia, part of me was pleased to have spent some time with another expatriate. The mishap would be my only encounter with crime in Turkey, and would also prove an opportunity: Felicia would become one of my best friends in Istanbul.

 

Back home that night, I thought about the challenges of the past weeks and months. Then, somehow, I thought back fifteen years to when my son, Greg, then a third grader, had started a new school.

“I want to start on the second day,” he had told Sankar and me several times. When we asked what he meant, he had replied that the second day would be better because he would already know the other kids’ names.

Sankar and I had laughed at his eight-year-old logic, but now I realized that, because of my apprehension about meeting new people, I had also wanted to “start on the second day.”

Of course that is never possible. You have to show up, you have to start on the first day. You have to do the difficult work of presenting yourself in person, with a smile and a mouthful of trivial small talk. Many of life’s inefficiencies can be brushed aside, but first encounters, during which you might chat with ten people, nine of whom you’ll barely see again, cannot. During first days you turn over a lot of soil that is fallow, but you often encounter some that is fertile.

And after that? Well, after the first day, anything can happen.

 

 

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Three Christians, Two Hindus, A Muslim and a Jew . . . https://suesturkishadventures.com/perceptions-and-illusions/ https://suesturkishadventures.com/perceptions-and-illusions/#comments Mon, 05 Dec 2011 17:37:00 +0000 https://suesturkishadventures.com/perceptions-and-illusions/                            Turkish pumpkins are as hard as a rock on the outside, but the same as American pumpkins inside (top: choir robes at Catholic monastery in Mardin)   Three Christians, two Hindus, a Jew and a Muslim sit down for a meal . . .   Sounds like the start of a joke, but it isn’t. It was…

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                   Turkish pumpkins are as hard as a rock on the outside, but the same as American pumpkins inside (top: choir robes at Catholic monastery in Mardin)
 
Three Christians, two Hindus, a Jew and a Muslim sit down for a meal . . .
 
Sounds like the start of a joke, but it isn’t. It was my Thanksgiving.  I threw the guest list together just days before the event, inviting a professor from Penn State here on a Fulbright scholarship; a South African woman and her daughter here on a 3M transfer (the 3M employee/husband/father was away on business); an American teaching colleague; and Cem, her Turkish boyfriend.
 
The conversation at the table ranged from childrearing rules to traveling in Pakistan to Turkish politics. Perhaps the most interesting moment came as we discussed Turkey’s current president. The Western press refers to Prime Minister Erdogan as a “mild Islamist,” but most of us foreigners see little, if anything, alarming about his leadership. But with Iran right next door, many Turks feel differently. Their worst nightmare is that one day their country will turn into Iran—and they seem to have that nightmare every night. Thus, as the professor and I were insisting that life in Turkey appears to be governed by moderation, Cem, the lone Muslim at the table, insisted that we didn’t understand, that “Islam is like a virus.” 
 
                                                Teacher’s Day was the same day as Thanksgiving, and one of my 
                                                       colleagues received this chocolate-carrot cake bouquet
 
There are now two Turkish teachers at work who have ties to Alabama. One has a daughter who attended Northern Alabama University, and the other is married to an Alabaman. One day recently, the two guys began rhapsodizing about country-western music and the delights of the Cracker Barrel Restaurant. A fellow Midwesterner and I gave them dubious looks and, okay, we might have snickered. The next day we saw them exchanging country-western CDs. As we walked by, they gave us baleful glances.
 
                                               Another Teacher’s Day gift: cookie lollipops
 
Our university has officially been diversified. First, let me back up. Although Turkey is historically diverse, its citizens hailing from both the east and the west; it is now essentially a country of white people. It is rare to see anyone of color here.  But now we have five Somali students at our university, part of a larger group of refugees that Turkey accepted recently.
 
It has been interesting to observe these young men, and to note Turkish reactions to them. I have one of the Somalis, Abdi, in my class, and on the first day, he asked me if he could come five minutes late to class on Fridays because that is the Islamic day of prayer. He told me he planned to use the prayer room in the basement of our building, but the week before several Somalis had skipped classes to catch a bus to the mosque.
 
I have never been asked that question from Turkish students, even the headscarfed female students who are considered  religiously conservative. I told Abdi yes, but when I informed my Turkish supervisor, she rolled her eyes and said, “it will be more than five minutes.” “Don’t let him take advantage of this,” a Turkish colleague warned.
 
It is unusual and interesting to be around Muslims whose ideas differ — and run counter to — my stereotypes. But these incidents keep me on my toes, thinking and stretching my brain and always, always, adjusting my perceptions.

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