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Forum Messages Posted by Roswitha

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Thread: Istanbul Journal; ´Natasha Syndrome´ Brings On a Fever in Turkey

981.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 08 Aug 2008 Fri 06:09 pm

The "Natasha syndrome" has caught Istanbul when a mix of Turkey´s own changes and those of the world around it have presented the city with something close to an identity crisis.

Since 1950, its population has increased tenfold to an estimated 10 million as people from the Anatolian hinterland have propelled themselves here. A trader in the bazaar, who offered scorn in return for anonymity, said: "They think the very streets are paved with gold. And they bring the village with them." Other changes have been just as great.

In the decades when Turkey represented the easternmost bastion of the Western alliance, its borders were closed to the very lands, most notably the Soviet Union, that formed its geographic neighborhood around the Black Sea.

Those countries are all technically free now. For the most part, their citizens -- Georgians and Azerbaijanis and Russians and Ukrainians -- do not even need visas. And they are coming to a land that has offered to lead the countries of the region in a new Black Sea economic union. Fundamentalists Win Election

"Istanbul is becoming Constantinople again," said Zeynep Attikan, a political scientist and journalist.

By referring to the city´s name during the Ottoman Empire and before, she meant that the city had again become a metropolis for those who found leadership and inspiration here.

It is also becoming much more of a mess, pulled apart by competing notions of what being an Istanbuller is.

In four out of six poor boroughs contested in municipal elections last year, Islamic fundamentalists swept the field, reaping political gain from what one diplomat called their "Tammany Hall" readiness to welcome the new immigrants from Anatolia and find jobs and homes for them.

Equally, though, parts of the city aspire to be a Milan of the Orient -- all fax machines and lookalike Ferragamo shoes -- just as other parts of it seem intent on determining how many apartment blocks can be squeezed through the eye of a building permit.

The public profile of morality is changing, too, as Western influences seep into a society numerically dominated by new arrivals from the Anatolian east.

In a city where the stern paternalism of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of the modern Turkish republic, once overlaid the conservative morality of Islam, the newsstands are suddenly selling local, although modest, editions of Penthouse and similar magazines (the bolder imported editions are sold in white cellophane covers).

Private Turkish and foreign satellite television stations have begun beaming slightly naughtier fare than the state-run stations had offered.

Then came the "Natasha syndrome." One young woman, 20, in the Lalileh district of Istanbul explained that she was "not a prostitute by education." She said she was facing unemployment back home and had come to Istanbul to accumulate "the money for a boutique in Bucharest."

She expected, she said, to accumulate up to $3,000, after overhead and commissions had been paid, within three months, and then she would go home, where her fiance was awaiting her and where $3,000 was quite a sum. But it could be a risky venture, she said, because the Turkish police have been known to behave harshly toward the "Natashas," whose job, while long tolerated in Turkey, is illegal.
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F0CE6DB1638F934A25757C0A965958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=2



Thread: On the Edges of Paradise and Istanbul Peripheral

982.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 08 Aug 2008 Fri 05:53 pm

Istanbul is the largest city in the Balkan region. It is an ancient, but rapidly-growing city that straddles Asia and Europe along the Bosphorus strait. 95% of Istanbul is urbanised, mainly in response to overwhelming housing demand from inward migration. The formal city covers 1,839 km2, an area slightly larger than London but with 30% more people. But its informal bounds are ever-expanding as the city grapples with a combination of suburban sprawl and increased inner-city living.

In past decades pressing urban needs have often been met through informal means. This is particularly true of the housing sector, where gecekondu (‘built overnight’) squatter settlements on the city’s edges have been legitimised. In contrast, more recent residential developments take the form of gated communities.

Istanbul’s metropolitan government has recently acknowledged the need for more comprehensive planning by establishing an urban planning department. The intention is to put in place a structured process of project negotiation as well as more efficient administration of public works projects.

Co-ordinating transport is another key challenge. Over two-thirds of daily journeys in Istanbul are made on an already over-burdened public transport system; under a third are conducted by private car. Public transport infrastructure struggles under the weight of an ever-expanding population. Nevertheless, public policy has had some success in encouraging car-free travel alternatives, and improvements to the current transport system are planned, including a new tunnel beneath the Bosphorus strait linking train networks on both continents.

see prints by Laurence Bonvin
Born Switzerland, works Switzerland, Germany
On the Edges of Paradise and Istanbul Peripheral


http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/globalcities/form.shtm



Thread: Qu´ranschool collapsed in Balcilar

983.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 08 Aug 2008 Fri 03:55 pm

Three arrested for fatal dormitory collapse in Turkey

Anatolia news agency quoted one student, Merve Avci, as saying she had got up to wash before pre-dawn prayers when she and some teachers heard a strange sound and went to the kitchen to investigate. There, they saw a loose gas pipe, and she returned to her room after the teachers told her to close the door. Soon after, Avci told Anatolia, she smelled gas and there was an explosion. Half of the building collapsed, but she was in the section that remained intact. She said flames rose from the basement toward the top of the building.

http://www.welt.de/english-news/arti2274243/Three_arrested_for_fatal_dormitory_collapse_in_Turkey_.html

In today´s ZAMAN
http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.do?load=detay&link=149330



Thread: Şebnem Ferah Sil Baştan (İstanbul Konseri)

984.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 08 Aug 2008 Fri 04:51 am

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AHC_s9r64Qo&feature=related



Grup Çığ - Yarim Yarim

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oSAErx3vdL4&feature=related

Esat Kabaklı - Oğul
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W16mZpWtbEY



Thread: Interest Of Tourists In Uzungol Tourist Center

985.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 07 Aug 2008 Thu 03:48 pm

Interest of tourists, particularly Arabs, in Uzungol, one of Turkey´s important tourism centers in East Black Sea region, is gradually growing.

Uzungol Mayor Mehmet Nuri Alibeyoglu told A.A correspondent on Tuesday that leading travel agencies included Uzungol to their program in the past few years. "There are around 50 facilities with 1,200 bed capacity in the region. This can only meet 25-30 percent of the demand."

"More than 200,000 people visited Uzungol in July. Most of them are Arabs, Israelis and Europeans. Particularly, Arabs spent at least 10 days," he added.

Situated at 1250 m., Uzungol, with its unparalleled natural beauty, has become a popular tourist destination in the last few years. The infrastructure is complete and the 500,000 m2 lake has large numbers of trout and carp. Ten kilometers south of Uzungol in the Holdizon Mountains is Lake Balikligol, a perfect place to take a hike and observe wildlife in a pristine unspoiled environment.
http://www.turkishpress.com/travel/view.asp?id=245354



Thread: Three hurt in Istanbul explosions

986.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 07 Aug 2008 Thu 03:36 pm

A television report said the blasts were caused by mortars that targeted a military garrison near the municipal building in Uskudar, on Istanbul´s Asian side.
http://www.turkishpress.com/news.asp?ID=245680



Thread: The aims of Hurmet

987.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 07 Aug 2008 Thu 03:31 am

In many languages in the Middle East, Hurmet stands for respect. The Hurmet Foundation is an aid organisation, which directs its activities at giving help to the displaced in Turkey. The foundation consists of a group of volunteers who have been active round the situation in Turkey for many years, and have build up a lot of knowledge in this field. Hurmet wants to be a bridge between aid organisations in Turkey and organisations in the Netherlands. The main aim of the foundation is encouraging development from below.

Giving support to projects which have been developed by organisations in Turkey, but which find it hard to survive because of lack of contacts and financial support.

Improving communication between the organisations here and in Turkey. The resolving of problems is also part of Hurmet´s remit. We reject the usual kind of aid development because those projects are often imposed by the west. The ideas and the projects most, come from the people on the spot. This is the only way to encourage and build selfsufficiency.



The aims of Hurmet
To propose and develop projects which are to the benefit of the people, especially the displaced. We will give support to humanitarian organisations, which are active in a wide field. We give preference to projects dealing with education, health, housing, selfsufficiency and development of people who have very limited chances.

We want to develop friendship ties between groups, organisations and cities in Turkey and in the Netherlands, with the main aim being the giving of support to projects set up at local level.

The passing on of knowledge to make the projects in Turkey more effective and selfsufficient. The exchange of experiences to clarify further the needs and wishes both here and in Turkey.

Giving moral support. This means supporting, developing and exchanging cultural heritage in the widest possible field. We also want to create exchange schemes for young people in the sports and games area.



Projects and activities

The projects, which the Hurmet Foundation wants to support, are those which are developed by organisations in Turkey. We provide contacts and know how to make it possible for Dutch organisations to get involved in the projects straight away. Hurmet guards the contacts and will give active support when problems have to be resolved or prevented. To get a clear picture of the situation in Turkey Hurmet will send delegations at regular intervals. These delegations will have two tasks: giving guidance to projects which are already in progress, and giving representatives of Dutch organisations, who are considering giving aid, the chance to see the situation first hand. We are convinced that communication and contacts are the only possibility to solve the massive problems of the displaced. Parallel to the contacts and acting as go-betweens Hurmet wants to give special support to projects dealing with street children. We now have close ties with organisations in Istanbul, Mersin and Diyarbakir, which are already specialised in this field. In the coming time we want to increase and strengthen these ties.



Giving aid to the displaced of Turkey
The Hurmet Foundation wants to give aid to the displaced in Turkey. This problem is much larger than is reported in the regular media. Because of war and deportation millions of people have lost their homes and agricultural land. Many people, refugees in their own country, have sought shelter in the big cities and now live in shacks and tents on the outskirts of town. Not only in the south east, but also in the west of the country. The people have little money and the worst possible jobs. Because of the difficulty of registration in most cases, it is impossible for the people to get health care and education. As a result many children live on the streets and are in urgent need of a safety net. There are organisations, which want to help, but they often lack the resources. Because of Turkey´s candidacy for membership of the European Union, there are now possibilities for the development of aid. In the future, after Turkey has become a full member, there will be possibilities to use EU funds. But that is still a long way away. That´s why the Hurmet Foundation wants to encourage and support all initiatives, which can make bearable the lives of the displaced in Turkey again. Europe can already play a role in this at this time.


http://www.hurmet.nl/english.html








Thread: Turkish Aid Organization Honored by Peru

988.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 07 Aug 2008 Thu 03:17 am

Three years ago Turkey also gave humanitarian aid to African countries facing famine threat.



Thread: Who is Yusuf Hayaloglu a poet or a singer?

989.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 07 Aug 2008 Thu 12:00 am

Aci Hayat - Yusuf Hayaloglu (Hangi Ayrilik)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=11mIdDmQazk&NR=1



Thread: Was Ahmet Yildiz the victim of Turkey´s first gay honour killing?

990.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 06 Aug 2008 Wed 03:00 am

In a corner of Istanbul, the man who might be described as Turkey´s gay poster boy will be buried – a victim, his friends believe, of the country´s deepening friction between an increasingly liberal society and its entrenched conservative traditions.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/was-ahmet-yildiz-the-victim-of-turkeys-first-gay-honour-killing-871822.html



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