Wednesday, June 25, 2008

"It's Istanbul, not Constantinople now ...."

Not too long ago I wouldn’t have considered visiting Turkey (“isn’t it dangerous there?”), now I live here. Okay, so I exaggerate slightly (moi?). But I am sitting in our home exchange apartment on the Asian side of Istanbul, watching the ships go by our picture window as they make their way up the Bosphorus to the Black Sea, the European skyline quiet in the background. From our patio extending 100’ down the hillside to the waterfront road below lies a terraced garden, where there grow plums and raspberries and herbs and countless other aromatic entities that this city boy can’t recognize but clearly associates with edible nature. On our grounds at the edge of the garden you can walk into two enclosed rooms in the remnants of a building dating back to pre-Ottoman times, when these Constantinople waterways were ruled by the Masters of the Universe. Now one day a year they stop the boat traffic long enough to have a swim race across the Bosphorus. I so want to do this! I’ve done races in the Hudson, catching a glimpse of Manhattan with each breath, and swam from New Jersey to Pennsylvania and back (admittedly across a narrow stretch of the Delaware), but to swim from Europe to Asia, now that would be cool… maybe even dangerous.

So after the usual week of misery scurrying around NYC getting ready to leave, never quite able to get everything done despite 16-hour days, here we are in another world. We’ll be in Turkey for six weeks which, after having done India in a weekend (http://indiaweekend.blogspot.com), sure seems like a long time. I’m here for 3+ weeks of work for OSI on behalf of Bloomfield College, and a couple of weeks of vacation. Jesse, Riley and I just finished a weekend OSI conference (“barcamp“) here in Istanbul, where we’ll stay for the week before heading south to Dikilli on Friday with Nathaniel and CAT students Kahlin, Mercedes and Jonathan to start teaching the media component in an OSI “citizen journalism” program, working with students from 28 different countries. But more on this later. I have to go play with our dog, Rico.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Read about the succession of dynasties, to say nothing of the seraglios. Incredible stories of concubines, wives, sons, brothers, fathers, eunuchs, and imprisonments behind those closed doors.

A lot nicer now.

Don't let Rico convince you that you need a shepherd at 718. The cats might object.

sugarbear said...

Great to hear you you. I'll be performing at the Istanbul Jazz Festival on July 15 with "Sing Freedom".
It the Nina Simone Back-up band performing Nina's material by both Turkish singers as well as Dee Dee Bridgewater. Will you guys be around for that?

C.W.W.