Monday, May 24, 2010

Kıbrıs (Cyprus) Part I

My most recent trip outside of Turkey was to Cyprus, but that was the beginning of April (this is how far behind I am in blogging - but that means then that I'm enjoying life instead of sitting in front of a computer screen, right?!). One week with three of the lovely ladies I work with - Kate, Caitlin, and Emily. It definitely got off to a rocky start, but it was still one of the best trips I've taken!

Step 1: Getting to the Hotel, Renting a Car

Cyprus is not a big island. It takes maybe 3 hours to drive from one coast to the other by car. Depsite it's small size, it is shared by 2 republics: Turkey to the North (flying a slightly different flag than Turkey), Greece to the South.

Considering the rather tumultuous relationship between the two countries in the past, it's not the most convenient thing to travel from one side of the island to the other. Emily and I flew in first, a couple days before Kate and Caitlin. We flew into the North and had reservations for a hotel in the South. Our master plan was to return a car immeditately after we landed. Tamam. The trick is that if you rent a car in the North, you're not allowed to take it to the South, but if you rent a car in the South you can take it to the North and we were determined to see as much of the island as possible.

And instantly our plan was thwarted! All because of Easter! Greece is Orthodox and in comparison to the States, Easter is a much more elaborate holiday. It quickly became evident that it was impossible to rent a car the night of our arrival; we're told it is too late (10pm) in the evening to do so. Thus, yet again, problem-solving skills are put into practice. The plan is to go from the airport on the Turkish side to a hotel on the Greek side and rent a car the next day. Forty Euro for a cab to the border, a short walk and passport check to skip through the EU zone and enter Greece. We find a nice little hostel, settle in for the night with high hopes for the next day.

And...yok! The next day we hiked all over Nicosia with no luck. We return to our hostel and after about an hour of the friendlist people trying to help us locate not just a car, but an automatic car, much to our dismay we are not successful. Frustrated and tired, we opt to take a cab to the Turkish side - which naturally does not celebrate Easter - and seek out the hotel we were originally planning on staying at in a few days time. A slight adjustment to our travel plans wouldn't put us out...you would think.

Another sixty Euro to make it to L.A. Hotel in Girne. It's Sunday, so we imagine that on Monday we should be able to return to the Greek side, get a car, and finally be one our way. We decide to relax and spend the rest our or day enjoying the GORGEOUS resort.


It was still early for the Tourist season, and as the only guest we were free to embrace the sun, pool and coastline in total comfort and peace.



Em and I enjoyed a lovely dinner at the harbor and then made it an early night in preparation what was sure to be another adventure the next day.

Back to the Greek side it was - a 40 minute dolmus and a 30 minute cab ride brought us back to our starting point in Lefkosa/Nicosia, but still the Monday after Easter the holiday continues and we are hopeless yet again. We decide to return to our original hostel to see our old friends. After another failed attempt to aid our quest, I sit at a cafe table, head in hands, trying to generate yet another Plan B at which point a very kind Lebanese man asks the simplest question: "What's the problem?"

It seems that in the this part of the world a problem is never really a problem. I explain our situation and he informs us that we can most definitely find a rent-a-car at Larnaka airport, further to the South. Tired of forking out extra cash to pay for cabs, we gratefully except his offer to drive us there in an hour or so.

Three hours, countless cups of tea later, and we're off!

Friday, May 21, 2010

It was inevitable...

Turkey won me over - heart and soul! Last week I finished signing what I think should be almost all of the papers I need to sign to officially return to Ankara and Bilkent next academic year. My old contract is null; I will no longer be a CSI (speaking instructor) but instead a main class teaching, instructing on all matters English: reading, writing, listening, grammar, the whole kit-n-kaboodle! I am leased out to Bilkent until August 2011 and will begin the CELTA (Certification of English Language Teaching to Adults) program in the beginning of June!



Thankfully, however, I will get to make a brief and much-needed reappearance to the homeland. I made my flight reservations a couple of weeks ago and will be coming across the pond on July 10th and then back to Turkey on August 21st.


It was inevitable that I would stay in Turkey another year - I love it too much! I love my job, I love the culture, the people, the weather, how close it is to so many other wonderful places, not to mention that it poses a lot of opportunites for my future! After I get my CELTA that will open doors for me to teach English as a second language the world over; it gives me valuable experience that can be marketed for a variety of jobs in the future; and it gives me time to figure out exactly what it is I want in a carrer in the future. The list goes on and on....yet, naturally there are things I miss: my family, my friends, burritos, driving, and sidewalks and that's why this summer will be so wonderful! Six weeks to spend as I choose! And only 50 days away!

It's sort of a double-edged sword: living abroad is wonderful - exciting and plastered with opporutnities to learn and grow, but home will always be home!

Serdar Ortaç


Somehow time has escaped me and I have failed to post blogs about so many things in the last few months: Christmas in Budapest, my trip to Egypt, the beaches in Cyprus, may fest, friends visiting, and so many other things!! Any hope of this blog being well-organized or chronological is lost.....

So...Serdar Ortaç- this is where I'm going to pick up the dropped ball and continue reminiscing.

A Turkish pop star my yabancı friends and I are obsessed with had a concert at Hacettepe University's mayfest last weekend. He played one song: şeytan. Our favorite!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1oXk-UvAvA

However, after this the some threw Ayran at the man of the hour!



After which, he stormed off the stage never to return again. The disappointment! My first Turkish concert and Serdar bounces because a salty dairy product was launched on stage.....

In classes this week, I consulted my students about the event and it seems as though it was more than ayran, but also rocks and maybe a knife or fork? (it is unclear) and other legitmately dangerous objects.

Why the contempt?

It seems as though, per usual, politics lies at the root of the problem.

Ahmet Kaya (please consult Wikipedia, best source of info ever, lol: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahmet_Kaya) was attacked in 2001 by Serdar for his position on Kurdish-Turkish relations. Ahmet, known for his involvement with the PKK (Kurdistan Workers Party) which tends to effect terrorism in the Eastern part of Turkey seems to have been mildly avenged last weekend....a quintessential example of all the complicated underpinnings I fail to recognize or initally understand, being a foreigner and all, even after almost nine months in Turkey.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Inna Broke My Heart!

INNA - an amazing Romanian dance singer was supposed to be giving on concert in Ankara on February 27th at Dib Sahne. Natalie, James, Caitlin and I bought tickets and were ready for possibly one of the best pop/dance concerts of our lives. . . but were sorely disappointed. The concert was supposed to begin at 21.30 and we were ready and waiting but soon 10 o'clock passes, then 11, then 12....we left a little after 1 a.m. after devouring several drinks, but never actually seeing Inna perform!! I wish I knew Romanian just so I could write some extensive hate mail! WHY INNA, Why?



None-the-less we still had the time of our lives, obvi.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zr_c5rqvSg4

Türk Kahvesi


Two weekends ago I was invited to brunch at the home of one of the Turkish women I work with - Elif. She is a fabulous person who has helped me out so much since I've been in Turkey and her family is wonderful as well! After brunch she was kind enough to show me the ways in making Turkish Coffee (Turk Kahvesi) -- Don't forget to let it boil 3 times!

Monday, March 8, 2010

March 4, 2010 - US Congress votes to classify "Armenian Genocide"


TURKEY RECALLS AMBASSADOR AFTER US VOTE ON ARMENIA 'GENOCIDE':
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_america/article7050439.ece



TURKEYTHREATENS 'SERIOUS CONSEQUENCES' AFTER US VOTE ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/mar/05/turkey-us-vote-armenian-genocide

Norman Stone is a prominent British academic, currently a member of the faculty of the department of International Relations at Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey. Former professor at Oxford and lecturer at Cambridge, adviser to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, prize-winning author, and a leading public intellectual in the UK and Europe, Stone is one of the world's foremost historians writing in the English language.

BAD THINGS HAPPEN WHEN EMPIRES FALL: Harking back to Armenia in 1915 will only drive modern Turkey into China's arms.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article7053138.ece

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Founder of Bilkent University


Professor Ihsan Dogramaci, the founding president of Turkey's Higher Board of Education, of YOK, and founder of Bilkent University died in the Turkish capital of Ankara on Thursday, Febrauary 25, 2010 at the age of 94.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Being Foreign - The Economist

The Others: It is becoming easier and more difficult to experience the thrill of being an outsider:


http://www.economist.com/world/international/displayStory.cfm?story_id=15108690&source=hptextfeature



Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Tweet Tweet!


It's about time I started using my Twitter account a little more often....an easy way to keep people updated on the small things in life and a great way to stay in touch with news!

www.twitter.com/Creeta31