Slow Food Turkey: Wheat Rites

SLOW FOOD TURKEY: WHEAT RITES

Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso
July 26 2012
Italy

Francesco Martino

A few kilometres off the coast of Istanbul, in the Sea of Marmara,
the Princes’ Islands are the tourist destination for those who want
to leave behind, at least for a few hours, the frenzy of the immense
metropolis on the Bosporus. These islands have been for millennia
a laboratory of cultural contamination, as testified by recipes,
smells, tastes, and words – suspended between memory and oblivion

Kinaliada, Burgazada, Heybeliada, and finally Buyukada, the largest
of Princes’ Islands – the foaming wake of the ferry departed from
KabataÅ~_, on the European shore of the Bosporus, slips them one by
one, like beads on a long necklace surrounded by the sparkling blue
of the Marmara Sea. Here the ship, rocked by the wind, docks at the
unadorned pier and hundreds of tourists descend along the battered,
yet still elegant “Iskele”, the maritime station, decorated with
turquoise tiles.

The Princes’ Islands, or simply “the islands” (Adalar), are a small
archipelago located an hour of boat from Istanbul, across its Asian
shore. Their long history is intimately linked to that of the city
of Constantine, who later became the capital of the sultans. Over
time, as in the rest of the Ottoman Empire, the islands have become a
melting pot of different ethnicities, cultures, and religions: Greek,
Turkish, Armenian, Alevi, Jewish. Over the centuries, that meeting
stemmed a unique synthesis, as varied as the colourful bazaars (Carsi)
that still stun and fascinate millions of visitors. A mix of beliefs
and traditions, but also languages, flavours, and fragrances.

With the collapse of the Sublime Porte, that multicoloured world,
made of contamination and eclecticism, largely disappeared, except
for a few small pockets. The most vital one, that miraculously
survived up to the present day, is precisely that of the Princes’
Islands, where sounds and flavours of a fragile and precious past
now face a new challenge, that of globalised modernity. In recent
decades Istanbul has literally exploded, rising from two million
inhabitants in 1970 to over 13 million in 2010. A real earthquake,
capable of shaking balances and erasing centuries-old heritages.

“Starting with food. And language. The idea is simple and true. Food
and language are the deep connections that bind people to the earth,
to their identity. To preserve the unique heritage of the Princes’
Islands, this is the key. Also because the language-food pairing
is the thread that binds all the islanders, regardless of religion
and ethnicity”.

Aylin Oney Tan, a long-time architect specialising in historic
monuments, is now one of the best-known experts in culinary culture
of Turkey and lives in Ankara, where she chairs the local Convivium,
and the Princes’ Islands. She is the soul of a community of educators
and promoters of multicultural food traditions of the Islands, created
to protect flavours and words that are likely to disappear forever.

“When the municipality built a museum on Buyukada, we took the plunge
and worked to create a section on food and language. We reconstructed
the cycle of religious holidays – Muslim, Orthodox, Catholic, Jewish,
and Alevi – and the dishes that characterise them. What has emerged
is an extraordinary picture of ties and syncretism”.

The most striking example involves the most simple and basic element
you can find on your plate: wheat. Dishes based on wheat mark rites
of passage and seasonal rites in all cultures of the islands. The
dis bugdayı, sweet corn boiled and sweetened with sugar or honey or
grape molasses, sprinkled with cinnamon and chopped nuts, is used in
the Turkish-Muslim tradition to celebrate a child’s first tooth.

A very similar pie, koliva, is prepared by the Greeks to mark
another, sadder passage – it is cooked for Ton Psihon, the Day of the
Dead. The Armenian community has its own sweet corn, the ‘anus abur,
decorated with pomegranate seeds and scented with essence of roses,
that accompanies any celebration of Christmas or the New Year. The
Jewish Sephardic version, called t Koco line, is served for the feast
of the trees of Tu Bishvat along with dried fruits, nuts, dried figs,
dates, and olives.

The very Sephardic community, arrived to Istanbul with the expulsion
of Jews from Spain in 1492, gave birth to some of the most amazing
and delicious fusions. “My people brought with them only two things,
the language of the fathers and the recipes of the mothers, that
mingled here with local ones”, says Selin Rozanes, Slow Food member
and founder of the Turkish Flavours. From the recipes that Selin
shows me, peep unique creations like dulse de kayesi (sweet kayısı
– Turkish for “apricot”) or burekos de igo, a delicacy made of figs
stuffed with walnut, where the Turkish word borek (used to indicate
savoury fillings) meets with the Hebrew-Spanish igo (fig).

Even the plots between Armenian and Turkish traditions run deep,
with unexpected twists. “The most important community cookbook,
the “AÅ~_cının Kitabı” (1914), was written in Turkish, but using
Armenian characters”, says Takuhi Tovmasyan in her office crammed
with books.

Takuhi is the author of a book in which family memories are interwoven
with Armenian recipes in Istanbul and its surroundings. “Meat,
eggplant, green peppers, onions, garlic, lentils, beans, tomatoes,
spices. In the memories of my childhood all the ingredients and smells
in my grandmother’s kitchen speak both Armenian and Turkish. I still
feel on my tongue the taste of food and all the words”.

On the islands, the crossing of the lines that usually divide religions
and ethnicities was and continues to be a constant. The sweet bread
originally prepared by the Greeks to celebrate the Passover, for
example, has over time become a staple food for all the population,
and under the name of paskalya föregi is consumed throughout the
year without reference to the religious celebration.

The spring festival of St. George (Ayios Yorgi, with a church dedicated
to him on Buyukada) corresponds to the Turkish Hıdrellez – both
communities celebrate with a picnic where the main dish is roast lamb.

“My family was mixed with Greek and Turkish blood, but also Hebrew
and Hungarian – a true Ottoman family”, recalls with a smile Sema
Temizkan, passionate researcher of the Greek-Byzantine cultural
heritage. “The kitchen was the kingdom of my grandmother Theopoula,
who was capable to meet and enhance all the colourful festivities
that marked the life of our house, for example with fanuropita,
a cake mixed with orange juice and grape juice, consumed on August
27th in honour of Ayos Fanurios, the patron saint of lost things”.

It only takes a few hundred metres along the steep sides of Buyukada,
where rows of cypress trees leave little by little room for dark
forests of pine, to find yourself alone. Cars are banned on the
islands, where bikes or horse-drawn carriages are the only transport.

>From here, Istanbul, with its miles of concrete buildings and
skyscrapers, is a fascinating, but equally terrible vision. The
immense megalopolis represents the danger facing the islands’
microcosm. Hundreds of thousands of people every week leave the chaos
of the city behind for a few hours on the quiet Princes’ Islands – a
peaceful invasion, but one that may succeed where the violent ones of
the past have not, and delete words and fragrances of an unrepeatable
history of coexistence and mutual enrichment.

A real danger, to fight with words and flavours. The stakes are too
high in case of defeat – not even the intercession of Ayos Fanurios,
I fear, could help Istanbul to find the lost treasure of pearls on
the Sea of Marmara.

Kurds Seize Oil-Bearing Regions Of Syria. Their Aim – To Secure Equa

KURDS SEIZE OIL-BEARING REGIONS OF SYRIA. THEIR AIM – TO SECURE EQUAL RIGHTS WITH SYRIANS, AND IDEALLY TO OBTAIN FULL AUTONOMY
by Konstantin Volkov

Izvestiya
July 25 2012
Russia

Syria’s Kurds have begun an organized advance in the northeast of
the country, occupying cities left without government control. The
aim is the creation of an autonomous formation along the lines of
the one that exists in northern Iraq.

“The central authorities are currently leaving cities in the territory
traditionally inhabited by Kurds,” Radwan Ali Badini, an activist of
the Kurdish Liberation Movement, told Izvestiya. “And we are helping
these population centres to create a new administration.”

According to Badini everything is happening peacefully and there are
no clashes with the armed opposition or with the regular army.

Furthermore the Kurds, who live along the whole length of the
Syrian-Turkish border, regard themselves as something along the lines
of a border guard.

“To some extent Damascus has an interest in our presence along the
border line, otherwise Ankara might get the idea of taking advantage
of the unrest to enter Syria,” Badini explains.

The Kurdish movement gained strength in the 1950s when its demands
were finally formalized as follows: the granting of broad autonomy,
equal rights with the main population of Syria, education in the
national language, and the right to self-determination within the
country. Over the past year some of the demands have been met. In
particular, Damascus granted Syrian citizenship to some of the Kurds
and promised them autonomy.

Nonetheless many of them still do not have the right to use their
own language in education or in business and also they cannot build
Kurdish schools or publish books in their native language.

That is why they are now continuing to insist on the continued
fulfilment of their demands, although they are also interested in
the resolution of the Syrian conflict by peaceful means.

At the same time, the influence of the new force is extending further
and further. The next objective is the city of Qamishli, centre of
Syria’s oil industry.

“If we enter it, it will be by peaceful means,” Badini says. “But
I wish to stress that the city now represents itself, there are
interruptions to the fuel supply, and it is difficult for the
residents, finding themselves in conditions of anarchy, to cope with
their problems themselves.”

The emergence of a Kurdish autonomous formation is a very real
prospect, the activist believes. All the preconditions exist to assert
that this region will consent to nothing less. All the conditions
currently exist for us to obtain our rights without the use of force.

“Some of the Kurds really want democracy and the preservation of
Syria’s integrity, while some are geared to secession and full
independence, as happened in Iraqi Kurdistan,” Mahmud Khamo, member
of the Syrian National Council, says.

According to Khamo there are fighters active among the Kurds who
underwent training in Iraqi camps for the training of the peshmerga
(semi-guerrilla formations of Kurdish separatists), as well as
activists of the Workers Party of Kurdistan (PKK).

True, they will hardly be able to establish themselves along the
Syrian-Turkish border; Ankara will not permit the unification of the
Kurds living in Turkey with their Syrian fellow tribespeople. As far
as obtaining full autonomy is concerned, not only the Bashar al-Asad
regime but also the Syrian opposition is against this.

“In Syria the Kurds are about 10-15 per cent, that is not enough for
secession,” Khamo suggests. “In the northeast of the country there are
also Arabs, Armenians, Assyrians, and Chaldeans, and the Kurds do not
form a majority, although they are the most active in political terms.”

If a referendum on secession from Syria was held they would not be
supported, according to the Syrian National Council member. Nor will
it happen by force; the Free Syrian Army, which is fighting against
the al-Asad regime, will not permit separation.

[Translated from Russian]

Armenian Mp Threatens Gyumri Mayor To Disclose Terrible Things About

ARMENIAN MP THREATENS GYUMRI MAYOR TO DISCLOSE TERRIBLE THINGS ABOUT HIM

news.am
July 26, 2012 | 21:55

YEREVAN. – If ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) MP
Ashot Aghababyan discloses some facts about the Gyumri Mayor
Vardan Ghukasyan, the latters’ family will refuse him, the RPA MP,
Nagorno-Karabakh [Artsakh] liberation war participant Ashot Aghababyan
told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

His comments came after Ghukasyan had claimed that it was he who
helped Aghababyan to become an MP.

“He cannot have assisted me in becoming MP. He cannot even make himself
a man, let alone make me an MP. On the contrary, he had hampered me
during the election campaign. Besides, we have never been friends
as I can make friendship only with those together with whom I have
struggled in war,” Aghababyan said adding no need to personalize
relations in the political field.

If he speaks about the Gyumri Mayor, the latter’s family will refuse
him, Aghababyan added.

As the agency has informed earlier, Armenia’s Gyumri City Mayor Vardan
Ghukasyan earlier released a statement about ruling Republican Party
of Armenia (RPA) MP Ashot Aghababyan’s recent interviews.

“I am really pity that there are people like Aghababyan in the Armenian
nation. He had no right to enter the Parliament, and in general to be
politician or to owe the nation’s property – the Hrazdan stadium. It
was you, the former canteen server, who was kneeling at my doors
with your family members and expressing gratitude for helping you to
become an MP? You will not gain honor by keeping a beard, I will do
everything so that people see your real face without a beard.

People like you spoil the party, the Parliament and the image of
Armenian,” Ghukasyan’s statement reads.

The agency has also reported that the Gyumri Mayor and head of the
RPA regional section Vardan Ghukasyan has resigned from the party
office remaining the mayor. At the same time the RPA will support
the Prosperous Armenia Party (PAP) MP Samvel Balasanyan’s candidacy
in the Mayoral elections in Gyumri city.

The Turkish Authorities Go On Destroying Many Of The Historic Armeni

THE TURKISH AUTHORITIES GO ON DESTROYING MANY OF THE HISTORIC ARMENIA’S HABITATS

ARMENPRESS
25 July, 2012
YEREVAN

Yerevan, July 25, ARMENPRESS: The Turkish authorities go on destroying
many habitats of the Historic Armenia which are now in Turkey’s
territory. As “Armenpress” reports the Turkish Haberler.com website
published an article about the fact that the old city of Van turned
into a pasture instead of being a reservation.

The Turkish website noted that very little is left standing from
the historic fortress of Van and the town. Despite the fact that
these areas were considered to be reservations, however, no necessary
measures for their preservation have been taken. The fortress territory
has turned into a cattle pasture. The tourists visiting the fortress
of Van demanded to protect the historical area.

Setian To Lecture At Naasr On ‘Humanity In Midst Of Inhumanity’

SETIAN TO LECTURE AT NAASR ON ‘HUMANITY IN MIDST OF INHUMANITY’

Weekly Staff
July 24, 2012

BELMONT, Mass.-On Thurs., Aug. 9, Dr. Shahkeh Setian will discuss
her book Humanity in the Midst of Inhumanity, which provides stories
submitted by 16 descendants of survivors who were saved by Muslims
during the Armenian Genocide.

In Humanity, Setian graphically presents the vicious treatment of
the victims, conveying the horrors committed by government officials
and out-of-control citizens in order to illustrate that the victims
of the genocide were not simply numbers but were breathing, living,
women, men, and children.

Some brave Muslims-Turks, Kurds, and Arabs-risked their lives to
save Armenians. Humanity features many stories of such individuals,
as well as missionaries and others who came to the aid of suffering
Armenians. Despite the threat by the government against such actions,
brave individuals acted out of their humanity. Lives were saved,
but a nation was lost.

The daughter of genocide survivors, Setian is a graduate of the
University of Massachusetts, Amherst. She has three children and
five grandchildren and lives in Cape Cod. She lived for a year as an
independent volunteer in post-war Nagorno-Karabagh (Artsakh). She
has taught at Springfield College, Cape Cod Community College, and
Artsakh State University, and has facilitated workshops and presented
talks about genocide, injustice, and values.

The talk is free and open to the public. It begins at 8 p.m. at the
National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) Center,
on 395 Concord Ave. in Belmont. For more information, call NAASR at
(617) 489-1610 or e-mail [email protected].

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/07/24/setian-to-lecture-at-naasr-on-humanity-in-midst-of-inhumanity/

Armenians Are Banned From Pilgrimage To Mountain In Turkey

ARMENIANS ARE BANNED FROM PILGRIMAGE TO MOUNTAIN IN TURKEY

NEWS.AM
July 25, 2012 | 14:39

The Armenians’ annual pilgrimage to the chapel located atop Mount
Marout in Turkey’s Sassoon city was restricted this year by Sassoon’s
Mayor and Provincial District Governor.

Mayor Muzaffer Arslan and Provincial District Governor Bahadir Yoruk
banned the mountain climb slated for Saturday, on the grounds that
it is currently the Ramadan season in Turkey. Sassoon’s authorities
stated that the mountain climb is rescheduled for September, the
Turkish Aykiridogrular website informs.

Sassoon’s Armenian journalist Cevat Sinet pointed out that, during
their pilgrimage to Mount Marout, the Armenians light candles, pray,
and offer a sacrifice and hand out its meat to the needy.

In his words, it is a very joyful fact that Ramadan and the pilgrimage
to Mount Marout have coincided, yet, without considering this,
Sassoon’s Mayor and Provincial District Governor prohibited the
pilgrimage for their own pleasure.

To note, numerous Armenians from Armenia and abroad had arrived in
Armenia to take part in the pilgrimage to Mount Marout.

Last Person To See Vano Siradeghyan In Armenia Was Head Of His Guard

LAST PERSON TO SEE VANO SIRADEGHYAN IN ARMENIA WAS HEAD OF HIS GUARD

tert.am
25.07.12

The last person to see former Armenian influential figure, ex-interior
minister Vano Siradeghyan in Armenia was the head of his guard Suren
Sirunyan.

Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Sirunyan said with the request of
Siradeghyan he left him in the place Siradeghyan told him to on April
3, 2000. Sirunyan said Siradeghyan has not been in Armenia since then.

According to him, no one knew about Siradeghyan’s intention to leave
the country, neither did his family.

The speaker refused to say whether he has contacted Vano Siradegyan
since then or not.

Sirunyan said while leaving the country, Siradeghyan was not wanted
by the police but possessed information about the intention of the
then prosecutor general to come to the National Assembly and deprive
him of immunity.

Vano Siradeghyan is charged with organization of assassinations of
a number of political figures and is wanted by Interpol.

The talks over possible return of Vano Siradeghyan have intensified
recently with initiatives created in Facebook.

Briefing Of Hovik Abrahamyan And Sergey Narishkin In The National As

BRIEFING OF HOVIK ABRAHAMYAN AND SERGEY NARISHKIN IN THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY

24.07.2012

On July 24 National Assembly President Hovik Abrahamyan and Speaker
of the RF Federal Assembly State Duma Sergey Narishkin, who arrived
in Armenia on official visit, had a joint briefing.

Summing up the results of the visit, Hovik Abrahamyan noted that
numerous issues relating to bilateral relations were discussed, which
were connected with economy, science, education and partnership in
humanitarian and other spheres, the activation and development of
inter-parliamentary cooperation had been emphasized. “Taking into
consideration the allied and strategic relations of Armenia and
Russia, we also underlined the need of deepening the cooperation in
international parliamentary structures. The necessity of unified
position in the issues of mutual importance and the role of
parliamentary diplomacy in strengthening the inner-state relations
was especially stressed,” the Head of the Armenian Parliament.

Talking about effective cooperation in the Parliamentary Assembly
of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO PA) he also
said that in September the first consultation of the Committees on
Security and Defense of the parliaments of the CSTO member countries
will be held in Yerevan.

In Hovik Abrahamyan’s word, taking into consideration the close
cooperation shaped between the two parliaments and the necessity of
deepening the partnership, the Armenian side has proposed to discuss
the possibility of forming the Institute of the representatives of the
two parliaments in the National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia
and State Duma of the Russian Federation.

As the RA National Assembly President noted, during the meeting
with the Head of the RF Federal Assembly State Duma in the context
of deepening of inner-state relations the necessity of activation
of the activity of the Inter-Parliamentary Committee on Cooperation
between the parliaments of the two countries had been highlighted.

Thanking for hospitality and warm reception shown to the Russian
Delegation the S peaker of the RF Federal Assembly State Duma Sergey
Narishkin stressed that the relations with Armenia were important and
dear for Russia. “Those are relations with allies, strategic partners.

The development of relations literally in all spheres – political,
economic, security, humanitarian, and others – is important for us,”
the S peaker of the RF Federal Assembly State Duma. In his word,
the two countries pay big attention to the development of bilateral
and multilateral relations especially in the sphere of economy, and
the trade-economic cooperation between Armenia and Russia records
big rates of growth. As Mr Narishkin, particularly, the volumes of
goods turnover between the two countries had been restored, reaching
the level, which was before the world financial-economic crisis, the
annual investment of the Russian organizations in Armenia is over 3bn
USD. Touching upon the cooperation in economic sphere the S peaker
of the RF Federal Assembly State Duma also talked about the issue of
joining Armenia to Treaty on Free Trade Zone within the CIS framework,
expressing hope that it would promote Armenia’s economic development
and the increase of goods turnover with the CIS countries.

He also thanked for promoting the development of the Russian
language in Armenia, high level of teaching at schools and higher
educational institutions and activity of Russian mass media. Noting
that the parliaments of the two countries successfully cooperate in
international platforms, Sergey Narishkin noticed that their positions
either almost coincided or simply they are identical in key issues.

The parties highly appreciated the role of the inter-parliamentary
diplomacy in the further development of relations and deepening
of cooperation.

http://www.parliament.am/news.php?cat_id=2&NewsID=5303&year=2012&month=07&day=24&lang=eng

Armenian structures caution before Mammadyarov’s visit to South Amer

ARMENIAN STRUCTURES CAUTION BEFORE MAMMADYAROV’S VISIT TO SOUTH AMERICA

11:19 . 25/07

Before Azerbaijani FM Elmar Mammadyarov’s visit to South America
scheduled on July 27, the responsible officials of Argentina’s and
Uruguay’s Armenian structures cautioned and reminded that Azerbaijan
runs anti-Armenian and militaristic policy around the world. They
cautioned through press or directly contacting the governments of
those countries.

The responsible officials of the Armenian structures underscored that
the Karabakh conflict must be settled peacefully based on the right of
self-determination and expressed hope that while making decisions in
their cooperation with Azerbaijan, the South America countries will
be guided by that principle and the fundamental arguments presented
by them.

Elmar Mammadyarov will pay an official visit to Columbia, Peru,
Argentina and Uruguay. The main aim of the Azerbaijani foreign
minister’s visit is to search for new markets to expand economic ties.

http://www.yerkirmedia.am/?act=news&lan=en&id=8666

Turquie: << Le Reveil Du ‘Kurdistan Imaginaire’ >> D’Ismail Besikci

TURQUIE: > D’ISMAIL BESIKCI

Publie le : 25-07-2012

Info Collectif VAN – – Le Collectif VAN vous
soumet cette information publiee sur le site susam-sokak.fr, le blog
d’Etienne Copeaux, le 15 juillet 2012.

susam-sokak.fr

Dimanche 15 juillet 2012

[Dernières corrections le 19 juillet 2012]

Ismail Besikci, >’ýn Dirilisi, Istanbul, Aram,
1998, 151 p.

Ismail Besikci (ne en 1939) est un des intellectuels centraux de la
periode que j’observe, les annees 1990 ; mais il n’est pas ce qu’on
appelle un intellectuel >, frequentant les colloques,
ecrivant pour les journaux et revues… car il est bien souvent en
prison. Lorsqu’il apparaît dans les journaux, au contraire, c’est en
general parce qu’il lui est arrive quelque chose de desagreable.

La decennie 1990 est marquee par une intensification progressive de
la guerre entre l’armee turque et la rebellion kurde, et l’histoire
politique et militaire de la periode atteint son apogee en 1999,
lors de l’enlèvement du chef de la rebellion et du PKK, Abdullah
Ocalan dit Apo.

Le titre du livre d’Ismail Besikci, >’ýn dirilisi
-c’est-a-dire Le Reveil du >- fait reference
a une caricature publiee dans Milliyet, 68 ans plus tôt, et qui
a ete reproduite en couverture : elle represente une sepulture,
localisee a Agrý, dans l’est du pays, non loin du mont Ararat ; la
pierre tombale indique : >. Une
reference a une periode de repression atroce contre le mouvement kurde,
et qui souligne, justement, la continuite de la repression depuis les
debuts de la republique, alors que, durant la guerre de liberation
(1919-1922), la propagande kemaliste promettait des droits pour les
Kurdes >.

Besikci retrace donc les racines du mal, qu’il faut chercher dans
un passe deja bien trop long. La revolte de 1925 a ete ecrasee si
durement, puis le soulèvement du Dersim (1938) reprime avec une
telle sauvagerie, que l’Etat turc a connu > pendant
quinze a vingt ans. Une generation avait ete brisee, il a fallu
que les forces se refassent. La mobilisation avait repris après la
guerre mondiale. Mais après le coup d’Etat de 1960, la politique
d’assimilation des Kurdes, et de negation de leur identite, s’est
renforcee. Malgre cela, 1965 voit la naissance du Turkiye Kurdistan
Demokrat Partisi (Parti democrate du Kurdistan de Turquie), en 1967
l’organisation des

http://www.collectifvan.org/article.php?r=0&id=65896
www.collectifvan.org