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Forum Messages Posted by Roswitha

(4132 Messages in 414 pages - View all)
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Thread: Visiting a Turkish kuaför

1591.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 22 Apr 2008 Tue 05:32 am

thanks for trying, Faruk.



Thread: Lutfen: what is the article about?

1592.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 22 Apr 2008 Tue 05:30 am

Thank you Faruk, for your kind reply. Much obliged.



Thread: Lutfen: what is the article about?

1593.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 22 Apr 2008 Tue 03:32 am

23 Nisan İstanbul'da şenliklerle kutlanacak!

İstanbul'daki çeşitli alışveriş merkezleri, kulüpler ve eğitim kurumları 23 Nisan Ulusal Egemenlik ve Çocuk Bayramı için çocuklara birbirinden cazip eğlenceler sunuyor.

İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyesi’nin 23 Nisan Ulusal Egemenlik ve Çocuk Bayramı kutlamaları kapsamında gerçekleştirdiği etkinlikte, 165 bin domino taşı devrildi.

Zeytinburnu Spor Kompleksi’nde dün gerçekleşen ve Kanal D Çocuk Kulübü’nün sponsor olduğu etkinliğe İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediye Başkanı Kadir Topbaş da katıldı. Büyük izler bırakmak amacıyla Türkiye domino rekorunu kırmak istediklerini ifade eden Topbaş, “İstanbul, geçmişte rekorlara imza atan bir şehirdi. Biz de bu rekorları sürdürmek istiyoruz. Bunun arkasından dünya rekorunu da kırarak rekorlara imza atacağız” dedi.

Hollanda’dan gelen uzmanlar ve öğrencilerin 9 günde dizdiği domino taşlarına ilk hareketi, Topbaş ile İstanbul’un 7 tepesini temsil eden 7 ilköğretim okulu öğrencisi verdi. Boğaziçi Köprüsü, Marmaray, Ayasofya Müzesi, Galata Kulesi, İstanbul’un 7 tepesini simgeleyen 7 tepede 7 Türk bayrağı, Atatürk portresi, Türk bayrağı ve İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyesi’nin logosunu oluşturan 165 bin domino taşı, yaklaşık 8 dakikada devrildi.

23 Nisan'da trafiğe dikkat
23 Nisan kutlamaları kapsamında düzenlenecek etkinlikler nedeni ile Anadalu yakasında bazı yollar 4 saat trafiğe kapatıldı.

23 Nisan Ulusal Egemenlik ve Çocuk Bayramı kutlamaları çerçevesinde düzenlenecek "Çocuk Şenliği" nedeniyle bugün Anadolu yakasında bazı yollar trafiğe 4 saat kapalı olacak.

İstanbul Emniyet Müdürlüğü ve İstanbul Valiliği tarafından yapılan yazılı açıklamaya göre; bugün 13.00 - 17.00 saatleri arasında trafiğe kapalı olacak güzergahlar şÃ¶yle: Kadıköy İlçesi, Bağdat Caddesi, Göztepe Işıklar ile Feneryolu Işıklar arası.

Açıklamada, Bağdat Caddesi'nden gelen trafik akımının Tütüncü Mehmet Efendi Caddesi, Fahrettin Kerim Gökay Caddesi ve Caddebostan Plaj Yolu sokaktan sahil yoluna yönlendirileceği bildirildi.

23 Nisan Toyiki treni kalkıyooor!
Çocuk süpermarketi Toyiki, çocuklarla 23 Nisan’ı kutlamaya hazırlanıyor. Bu özel gün için hazırlanan Toyiki Treni, 23 Nisan 2008 tarihinde Ankara’da olacak.

İstanbul İl Milli Eğitim Müdürlüğü ile organize edilen ilköğretim öğrencilerinin katılımı ile bu gece yola çıkacak olan Toyiki Treni, Ulusal Egemenlik ve Çocuk Bayramı’nın coşkusunu Anıtkabir’e de taşıyacak.

Oyuncak sektörünün lideri olan Toyiki tarafından organize edilen proje sayesinde 100’ü aşkın çocuk ailesi ile birlikte, Atatürk Orman Çiftliği’ni, Atatürk’ün evini ve Anıtkabir’i ziyaret edecek.

23 Nisan Ulusal Egemenlik ve Çocuk Bayramı İstanbul'da birbirinden eğlenceli etkinliklerle kutlanacak. İstanbul'da gerçekleştirilecek etkinlikler şÃ¶yle:

http://www.istanbul.com/Event/EventDetails.aspx?Id=2306






Thread: Osmaniye’s sunny Karatepe

1594.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 22 Apr 2008 Tue 02:00 am

Home to 2800-year old neo-Hittite remains.
The Karatepe hilltop where 1,800-year-old remains can be found.
There are imposing ancient sites scattered across Turkey, bursting with things to see. Your self-imposed sightseeing program leaves you rushing from temple to theater, struggling to choose between Byzantine church and Roman aqueduct.
http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.do?load=detay&link=132223



Thread: THE CIRCASSIANS

1595.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 22 Apr 2008 Tue 01:09 am

Historically, until the Russian conquest , the Western Circassians lived in free tribal societies whereas the Eastern Circassians (mainly the modern day Kabardians) fashioned a highly stratified aristocratic society. Having survived the Mongolian, Khazar and Alan invasions throughout two millenniums they encountered with the Tsarist Russian Armies in the first half of the 19th Century. As all the other North Caucasian peoples they fiercely fought the Russian Army but were defeated and decimated by it in 1864. As a result of the Russian conquest, the overwhelming majority of the Circassians, around 1.200.0000, were forced to flee to the Ottoman lands of whom around 800.000 (4) survived the tragic exodus. Their descendants today comprise a sizeable Circassian Diaspora in Turkey and the Middle East.

http://www.kafkas.org.tr/english/tarih/circassian_karachai_essay_.html

The Circassians who had remained in the North Caucasus participated, with the other North Caucasian peoples, in the short-lived independent state of Mountaineers Republic of the North Caucasus formed in 1918,which became part of the new Soviet Union and was renamed the Soviet Mountain Republic in 1921. Within a few years the Mountain Republic disintegrated and the Circassians were divided into three categories as the Adyge (self designation in Circassian language), the Cherkess (name by which the Circassians by then had been called by the Turks and the Russians) and the Kabardians (name of the one of the biggest tribes of the Circassians).



Thread: Anyone wants to learn Turkish???

1596.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 21 Apr 2008 Mon 11:05 pm

At the moment we have summerlike temperatures in Rochester, N.Y. USA, [I think also in Turkey] Members might be having fun outdoors, sports or gardening.



Thread: Visiting a Turkish kuaför

1597.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 21 Apr 2008 Mon 11:02 pm

What to say in Turkish: Plaese wash and set my hair, etc.



Thread: Istanbul Strait immersed tunnel

1598.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 21 Apr 2008 Mon 08:52 pm

It will be finished in 2010 and is the deepest ever immersed tunnel crossing.
I have a question: what happens in case of a seismic event during the life of the tunnel? (North Anatolian fault line)



Thread: Hacıbektaş

1599.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 21 Apr 2008 Mon 08:29 pm

O.K. Lady in red, I will see to it!



Thread: Hacıbektaş

1600.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 21 Apr 2008 Mon 03:56 pm

is the sacred centre of Alevi Islam, and every year on 16, 17 and 18 August, tens of thousands of people flock here, not just from Turkey, but from Bulgaria, Albania and other Balkan countries.

They come from communities which follow the teachings of Hacı Bektaş Veli, whose emphasis on peace and tolerance make his a universally relevant doctrine still widely popular today. During the three days of the ceremonies, people from far and wide: from the Deliorman villages of Bulgaria, Albania, and the Turkish provinces of Isparta, Tokat, Tunceli, Mersin, Antalya, and Erzincan come together here. Teams of Alevi semah dancers from different regions and in colourful costumes perform these ceremonial dances, each of which represents a separate thread in the rich cultural tapestry. The last representatives of the folk ministrel tradition take the stage, sharing it with modern-day theatre companies and music groups. Book and souvenir stands are set up, and for three days the small town is transformed by the festival mood. The life of Hacı Bektaş Veli is shrouded in mystery. All that is known are stories and legends passed down by word of mouth until they were written down several centuries after his death in a book entitled the Velayetname by a Bektaşi dervish. It is believed that Hacı Bektaş was descended from the Caliph Ali (Alevi means those who follow in the footsteps of Ali), and his date of birth is given variously as 1209 and 1247. The Velayetname tells us that Hacı Bektaş came from Nishapur in Turkistan, where he was the student of Lokman Perende, one of the followers of Ahmed Yesevi. He later migrated to Anatolia, where he settled in Sulucakarahöyük and began to spread the teachings of the Alevi mystic tradition in Turkey.

These teachings, which came to be known as Bektaşi, address the heart, and urge friendship and humility instead of strife. Much later his teachings were given systematic form by the 15th-16th century Bektaşi dervish Balım Sultan, and so the Bektaşi dervish order gained its body of tradition over the centuries.

The dergâh or dervish lodge of Hacıbektaş became a museum in 1964. The entrance leads into a large courtyard, to the right of which once stood buildings accommodating the dervishes who worked the land and farm labourers employed by the lodge. These buildings were demolished when the lodge was being converted into a museum, and a wall built here. At the far end of the wall is the Üçler Fountain symbolising the Creator, Muhammed and Ali, a fundamental concept of Alevi faith. An open space on the left is like a small park, and originally there were stables for the horses of guests, barns and other outbuildings here. At the end of the courtyard a gate leads into a second courtyard, where there is a pool with a border of flowers. If it is not too crowded you can drink from the holy water of the Lion Fountain. The inscription over this fountain explains that the lion statue was brought from Egypt as a gift to the lodge in 1853. The second courtyard was the busiest part of the lodge, with the aşevi (refectory), pantry, hamam (baths), guest house, hall where the sacred services known as cem were held, and the pavilion where the lodge’s leader, the Dedebaba, received guests. The final gateway leads into the third courtyard where the tomb of Hacı Bektaş Veli stands. On the right are the graves of dervishes belonging to the lodge, and in the small mausoleum just beyond lie Balım Sultan and Kalender Şah, two great figures of the order. The ancient wishing tree in front of the mausoleum is one of the places which visitors never fail to stop at. Before entering the mausoleum it is customary for visitors to embrace the cylindrical marble stone in the right-hand corner. If you can embrace it with two arms, then it is regarded as proof that your heart is clean and your intentions pure. The tomb was built by Şeyhsuvar Ali, lord of the Dulkadirogulları principality, in 1519 following the death of Balım Sultan.

The walls of the mausoleum are decorated with painted kalem işi, and there are examples of Bektaşi calligrapher. The door is original. The mausoleum of Hacı Bektaş Veli himself is known as Pir Evi, and at the entrance are the graves of the baba’s of the order, dervishes who attained the highest degree. As you walk towards the Kırklar Meydanı hall, on the right you pass the çilehane, a cell where the dervishes spent time alone in the presence of God. If you wish to see inside you must bend almost double, and a few minutes alone in that dark cell gives you an impression at least of what it must have been like for the dervishes who came here. On the raised platform to the left of the Kırklar Meydanı are buried the descendants of Hacı Bektaş who sat on the ceremonial fleece of office and were known as çelebi or bel evlatları. In this hall where the dervishes performed the ceremonial dance known as the kırklar semahı, are now exhibited the twelve sided stones known as teslim taşı which the dervishes hung around their necks as symbols of the Bektaşi order, earrings worn by unmarried dervishes who devoted their lives to serving their lodge, handwriting of the Caliph Ali on gazelle skin, beautiful examples of calligraphy, torches, censers, and the Kırkbudak Candelabra which according to the Velayetname came from India. Finally a small door on the right leads into the tomb chamber of Hacı Bektaş Veli, where visitors perambulate three times around the sarcophagus before offering up a supplication to Hacı Bektaş Veli. Near the lodge is Dedebagı, an open park scattered with trees, where visitors who have come for the commemoration ceremonies gather to picnic and drink the ice cold spring water from a fountain known as Şekerpınar.
http://www.turizm.net/cities/cappadocia/hacibektas.htm



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