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May 10

NYC Turkish Day Parade And Festival 2011

Posted on Tuesday, May 10, 2011 in New York, Turkish Culture

New York Turkish Day Parade

Turkish Day Parade on Madison Avenue in NYC

The NYC Turkish Day Parade will be on Saturday, May 28th, 2011. The parade will start on 51st Street at 11:00 am and follow Madison Avenue down to 47th Street, ending in the Dag Hammarskjold Park near the Turkish Consulate. A stage will be set up in the First Avenue side of the Dag Hammarskjold Park, where there will be speeches and singers from Turkey. There will also be food vendors selling Turkish food. This year, Turkish singers Ferhat Gocer and Linet will be coming from Turkey for the festivities and will be the heavyweights of the festival. In last year’s Turkish post-parade festival, the Turkish pop singer Kenan Dogulu, the Turkish national soccer team and the Ottoman military band (Mehter Takimi) were the special guests from Turkey. The Annual Turkish Day Parade is the largest Turkish American event in North America and has been organized in NY by the FTAA, the Federation of Turkish American Associations, since 1981.

As usual, there will be the Turkish Day Ball the night before the parade and this year’s ball will be held at the New York Marriott Marquis Hotel on Friday, May 27th. Singers Ferhat Gocer and Linet will be taking stage as special guests at this year’s ball.

NJ Turkish Day Parade And Festival

As part of the Turkish festivities in May, there will also be the Turkish American Day Parade and Festival in Clifton and Paterson, New Jersey on Saturday, May 14th. The parade will start at noon from Madison Avenue in Paterson and follow the Main Street ending in Clifton Park in Clifton. The post-parade NJ Turkish festival in Clifton Park will feature vendors selling Turkish food and other products and there will be surprise singers, prizes and a raffle.

Additionally, there will be Turkish flag raising ceremonies in front of Paterson City Hall and Clifton City Hall at 10:00 am and 12:00 noon respectively on Thursday, May 12th, and the Balo, the pre-parade ball, in Victor Chateau at 7:30 pm on Friday, May 13th.

May 2

Turkish Music in NYC: Istanbulive 3

Posted on Monday, May 2, 2011 in New York, Turkish Culture

Turkish music concert in Central Park

Turkish music in New York Central Park

Turkish music will be showcased in New York third year in a row on Friday, June 17. The concert will be held in Central Park SummerStage and this time, unlike the first two concerts in 2009 and 2010, it will be an evening concert starting at 6:00 pm and ending at 10:00pm. The admission will be free and music fans are advised to arrive early, as crowds are expected.

Turkish music: From Istanbul to New York

This year’s Istanbulive concert will feature the renowned Turkish singer Zulfu Livaneli and the Turkish alternative rock band maNga from Istanbul, joined by New York’s own NY Gypsy All Stars that recently returned from a very successful tour in Turkey. Zulfu Livaneli has been singing traditional Turkish folk rhythms for four decades and is also a political figure in Turkey. This will be maNga’s first New York appearance, although the Turkish band has loyal fans in both Turkey and all across Europe. 2009 and 2010 marked two consecutive successful years for maNga’s music career and the group extended its fan base outside of Turkey with the Best European Act Award by MTV Europe in 2009 and the impressive second place ranking at the prestigious Eurovision Song Contest in 2010. maNga successfully blends Anatolian melodies with rock and electronic music.

Serdar Ilhan and Mehmet Dede, the two founders and producers of Istanbulive concert series, showcased Turkish music in New York very successfully in 2009 and 2010 and approximately 12,000 New Yorkers combined attended the first two concerts. The first Istanbulive concert in 2009 featured the all time favorite Turkish band Mazhar Fuat Ozkan and the 2003 Eurovision Song Contest winner Sertab Erener, and over 6,000 music fans stayed till the very end of the hours long concert despite the pouring rain. The following year, Istanbulive 2 featured the Turkish pop singer Kenan Dogulu and the Turkish rock band Duman from Istanbul. The success of the first two concerts promises Istanbulive 3 to be a good showcase of Turkish music and culture in NY this year as well.

Mar 28

Nevruz shows in New York

Posted on Monday, March 28, 2011 in New York, Turkey, Turkish Culture

Nevruz show at the Town Hall in New York

Nevruz Show in the Town Hall

Two Nevruz shows were performed in New York this week. The first performance was held at the General Assembly Hall in the United Nations Headquarters at 6:00 pm on Thursday, March 24th. There was a press conference before the show at the same location and the show was followed by a reception at the Turkish Mission (Permanent Mission of Turkey to the United Nations). The second performance at the Town Hall on Saturday night was attended by fewer dance troupes as the stage wasn’t big enough to accommodate all the dancers. Over 150 musicians and dancers represented 11 countries and regions, including Turkey, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Crimea (Ukraine), Kyrgyzstan, Bulgaria, Gagauzia (Republic of Moldova) and several republics from the Russian Federation, in their colorful costumes.

Nevruz is celebrated as a festival in many Turkish speaking nations all across Eurasia as the beginning of the spring. It is a major public holiday in several countries and a celebration of life, renewal and hope. Nevruz has a history of more than 5,000 years and has an important influence in Turkish music and literature. Also, the Turks all around Eurasia share the tradition of many different meals special to Nevruz. The General Assembly of the United Nations declared March 21st as the International Day of Nevruz and included Nevruz into the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage List.

Nevruz in New York
This New York debut of the two Nevruz performances was presented by Turksoy, the International Organization of Turkic Culture. Turksoy, based in Turkey, is an international organization aiming to strengthen relations  among Turkish speaking nations, and developing the common culture, literature, history, arts, customs and traditions in the Turkic World. Turksoy was founded in 1993 by Turkey, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Then, the Republics of Altai, Tatarstan, Sakha-Yakutia, Khakassia, Bashkortostan and Tyva from the Russian Federation, Gagauzia from Moldova, and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus joined the organization as observer member states.

Aug 17

Turkish soap operas are getting more popular in Greece

Posted on Tuesday, August 17, 2010 in Turkey

Turkish Soap Operas

Binbir Gece has been very successful in Greece

Starting with the big success of Foreign Groom (Yabanci Damat) a few years ago, Turkish soap operas have been getting increasingly more popular in Greece. Following the Foreign Groom, Binbir Gece (1001 Nights) was shown from October 2009 on and broke the record by drawing 1.1 million Greek viewers each day. Even on the first day of the World Cup, Binbir Gece captured 30.5 percent of viewers, overshadowing the opening game between France and Uruguay – the first time that a soap opera ever beat the ratings of a soccer match in Greece.  In the winter season, additional Turkish soap operas, Forbidden Love (Ask-i Memnu) and Silver (Gumus), will start broadcasting on Greek channels.

The strong interest of Greek viewers in Turkish soap operas is seen as the indication of strong similarity between Greek and Turkish cultures by many. The rapprochement that started between Greece and Turkey in 1999 turned the two countries once enemies into strategic partners. During Turkish Prime Minister’s last visit, Turkey and Greece had a joint cabinet meeting and formed a High Level Cooperation Council between the two countries.

Turkish soap operas have been enjoying great popularity all throughout the Balkans, including but not limited to Serbia, Croatia, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Albania and Bosnia Herzegovina. Lately, some of these series have also started being shown in some Central European countries such as Slovakia and the Czech Republic. This overwhelming interest inevitably increases the interest for Turkey and the Turkish language in the region.

Jun 28

Turkish Music Concert in Central Park

Posted on Monday, June 28, 2010 in New York

Summerstage in Central Park

The countdown has started for this weekend’s Turkish music concert at Central Park Summerstage. The concert, which the Turkish American community has been looking forward to after last year’s successful first concert, will start at 3:00 pm on Saturday, July 3rd and will feature some famous singers and bands from Turkey, including Kenan Dogulu, Duman, Ilhan Ersahin and Sukriye Tutkun. Last year’s concert was a huge success with close to 7,000 Turkish music fans and most people sang with Mazhar Fuat Ozkan for hours despite the pouring rain.

Istanbulive II, the official name of this year’s concert organization, presented by Serdar Ilhan and Mehmet Dede, is intended to bring the sounds and colors of Istanbul, the 2010 European Capital of Culture, and Turkey to New York. Please check out the below given website for more information on this Turkish cultural event:

http://www.istanbulive.org/2010/

Feb 14

Istanbul: From the Orient Express to European 2010 Capital of Culture

Posted on Sunday, February 14, 2010 in Istanbul

Published in Daily Mail on February 14, 2010

The most expensive gin-and-tonics in Istanbul, the crown of Turkey, are served in a poorly-lit hotel bar unchanged since Greta Garbo, Agatha Christie and Ernest Hemingway haunted the Pera Palas.

The quirky Palas opened in 1892 as the first hotel built in Istanbul for Europeans. Its horse-drawn carriages would meet the Orient Express as it steamed in below the Turkish sultan’s palace at Topkapi.

Spies such as Graham Greene and Mata Hari also out in the bar with dispossessed Russian emigrés and professional intriguers.

The Blue Mosque, Istanbul
Ravishing: The Blue Mosque is one of Istanbul’s Big Five

Today, the Turkish city has expanded rapidly to become an economic and cultural powerhouse  -  and now it’s being honoured as European 2010 Capital of Culture.

In the backstreets of Pera, less has altered. As I dive between the time-blackened houses that line the streets of the old diplomatic quarter, there are still puddles in potholes and housewives hoisting home deliveries up in rope baskets, the smell of sweet apple tea wafting from their doorways.

The Crimea Memorial Church (built to honour British soldiers who died despite Florence Nightingale’s best endeavours) is still hidden away behind a mosque in Serdar Ekrem Sokak.

This very British church, designed by George Street, architect of London’s Royal Courts of Justice, was only rediscovered in the Eighties. And yet it’s just off Istiklal Caddesi, the trendiest shopping street in Istanbul, the fashion powerhouse of modern Turkey.

The artSumer Gallery, which opened in September, is the place for cutting-edge contemporary Turkish painting while 360 Istanbul is one of the city’s most fashionable restaurants because of its uninterupted 360-degree view over the whole city.

You get the same panorama from the 200 ft-tall Galata Tower that dominates this side of the Golden Horn, the famous inlet of the Bosphorus that cuts into the European side of this city.

It was built by the Genoese who held Pera as an independent colony until 1453 when the Ottoman Turks conquered Constantinople and renamed it Istanbul.

Istanbul has a ‘Big Five’  -  Topkapi Palace, the Grand Bazaar, Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, and the Great Cistern  -  and these should not be missed.

Then there are the Lesser Five  -  Galata Tower is one  -  the Crimea Church and the restaurants under the Galata Bridge and others.

Until recently, Galata Bridge was on of the few places you could eat in Istanbul and get a view of the Bosphorus.

The old city turned its back on the water but now there is Aqua, the restaurant at the new Four Seasons Bosphorus. There’s also Angelique further north along the Bosphorus, which serves the best Asian fusion food in this city.

But I head past the colourful, musty Spice Market, another 16th-century structure where visitors should call in to shake hands with a caviar salesman called ‘Al Pacino Turco’.

On a side street called Bahcekapi, in 1777, an immigrant to Istanbul called Haci Bekir created the dish that was to make him famous.

Bekir called his soft, sweet cubes lokum and they proved so popular that Sultan Abdulhamid appointed him Royal Confectioner. When we English discovered lokum in the 19th century, we renamed the heavenly product ‘turkish delight’.

Haci Bekir’s family still runs the shop, and always offers you a taste as you enter. I’m unable to resist. A delight indeed.

Feb 14

Can’t take the Ottoman out of the Balkans

Posted on Sunday, February 14, 2010 in Ottoman Empire

Skopje's Turkish quarter - Turkish mosque

For some Macedonians, this is just a mirage. Skopje's Turkish quarter (Photo: Ranopamas)

Published in Globus-Skopje on February 8, 2010

Five centuries of Turkish domination left their mark on culture, cuisine, language and even gestures in Balkan countries. It is an influence that is still apparent in attitudes that have affected the pace of integration in the European Union for a number of Balkan states.

For the most part, Balkan scholars tend to overlook the influence of Ottoman heritage on contemporary Balkan identities. In so doing they are largely aligned with public opinion in the Balkans, which also prefers to minimize the significance of an Ottoman legacy that is nonetheless omnipresent. Maria Todorova, author of Imagining the Balkans (Oxford University Press, 1997), has sparked controversy by accusing official historians and other Balkan state sanctioned academics of disguising the truth about the region’s Ottoman past and heritage, which is often denied or perceived with disdain. In her native Bulgaria, where “Turkish subjugation” is the only officially sanctioned term for the Ottoman era, Todorova goes even further to suggest that it is no longer a question of studying “the Ottoman legacy in the Balkans,” but rather of studying the “the Ottoman legacy that is the Balkans.” And as a starting point, she proposes the etymology of the word “balkan,” which comes from the Turkish for “wooded mountain.”

This heritage is perceptible on every level of social interaction. For example, in political life, it is expressed by an exclusively extra-institutional approach to problem solving (pazarlık – bargaining). Then there is the absence of an indigenous cultural elite. In all of the regions of the Ottoman empire, elites were mainly composed of intellectuals who had been educated abroad: a situation that remained relatively unchanged when the different nations of the empire finally obtained their independence. At the same time, the lack of a local bourgeoisie or aristocracy, and the failure to industrialize that characterized the Ottoman era continued to contribute to the economic weakness of Balkan countries well into the 20th century.

Centuries of Turkish power have left their mark

The Ottoman era has also left extensive traces in everyday customs and gestures that figure large in our cultural codes. Along with the wealth of Turkisms in our speech, our non-verbal discourse is marked by distinctive “post-Ottoman” tropes that are completely incomprehensible to Westerners. In particular, they are astonished by well defined abrupt gestures like spitting to show disappointment or indignation (which is often highlighted with a loud shout of Yazık ! – “calamity”) and are immune to the subtleties of Oriental body language e.g. leaning heavily on one knee to show one is serious. Cuisine is another area in daily life which has no shortage of Turkish influences: sarma (stuffed vine or cabbage leaves),  moussaka, tourlitava (ratatouille) and börek savoury pastries are first and foremost Oriental specialities. We drink Turkish coffee and we love baklavas, touloumbas, boza and other Ottoman sweets. And lets not forget the preponderant role of the kafeana in determining public opinion in cities and small villages, which makes it radically different from a restaurant or a bar in the Western world.

If we indulge in a little introspection, it is easy to cite several other examples: patriarchy, corruption, judiciaries controlled by political and financial elites, the black economy and the systematic recourse to bargaining are typical of Ottoman culture. Such is the deep rooted influence of five and half centuries of Turkish power and presence in our cultures that it has had a unique and not wholly beneficial impact on our progress towards the liberal Western model. It has also created an enduring obsession with defining characteristics of the Ottoman empire, which is why — at a time, when everyone uses the internet and speaks English as second language — debate is still focused on the opportunity to build new mosques and churches.

Jan 13

Beginner Turkish Classes in NYC

Posted on Wednesday, January 13, 2010 in Learning Turkish in NYC

For New Yorkers who would like to learn Turkish in NYC, two new beginner Turkish classes are offered this semester by the NYC Turkish Club. The classes will start on January 26th and there will be two sessions meeting for 12 Tuesday evenings in Midtown Manhattan. There will be an opportunity to sign up for a Turkish II class once this Turkish I class ends.

Learning Turkish is turned into a fun activity by applying different teaching methods in an interactive class setting at NYC Turkish Club.  Also, in an effort to make the Turkish language accessible to everyone, the classes are offered at a fraction of the cost.

With the rising importance of Turkey in the world stage, Turkish is becoming more and more important every day. Being one of the world’s top 10 largest spoken languages, Turkish can be used in many countries other than Turkey, including Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Iran, Kyrgyzstan and parts of Russia thanks to its Turkic roots.

NYC Turkish Club has been offering beginner, intermediate and advanced Turkish classes in New York several nights a week since 2005, in addition to organizing social and cultural events that introduce Turkey and Turkish culture to New Yorkers.  Beginner Turkish classes are offered three semesters a year, whereas intermediate and advanced classes are available all year round.

Come and experience the Turkish culture at the NYC Turkish Club!

For more info on all Turkish classes:  NYC Turkish Club