By now the whole world
knows that Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç doesn’t want women laughing out loud in public. He said so last Monday, the first day of the
Bayram, or national holiday, marking the end of Ramadan. Right away, Turkish women voted Arınç down with
their pearly whites, flashing them in hilarity for selfies which they’ve posted
on Snapchat.
In my own way, I, too, stood at the barricades. Only two days after Arınç’ speech, I made a
Turkish woman laugh. Where Turkish
culture’s concerned, I’m a tenderfoot, functionally mute when the conversation
drifts away from ekmek, or baguettes, and çay, or tea. The woman was laughing at me, which I’ll
admit she had every right to do.
It happened at Yenikapı, in front of
the ticket window for the Istanbul Deniz Otobüs, or
ferryboat. I had spent three days in the
city, visiting my girlfriend, Gülçin. Now
I was preparing to re-cross the Sea of Marmara, back to Bursa, where I teach
English. In truth, it hadn’t been much
of a vacation. Instead of visiting the
Hagia Sophia or the Galata Tower, or sampling the hip charms of Kadıköy, Gülçin
and I had mostly hung around her air-unconditioned apartment, doing our
best not to melt. Money, as we’ll see
presently, was tight.
As we sped away from the dock along Kennedy Cadde, I had noted hundreds of
billboards touting Recep Tayyip Erdoğan for president. Erdoğan is already prime minister and chairman
of the Justice and Development Party – under either hat, he is Bülent Arınç’s boss. Erdoğan's
opponents fear that adding the presidency to his portfolio will complete
his transformation from politician into strongman. They may have a point. Citywide Pop Art project seems pretty far
down the road to equestrian statue.
Pointing to a bank of posters, I observed to the
driver: “Tayyip – everywhere!” Calling
the PM by his middle name is a habit I picked up from Gülçin, a member
of the opposition center-left Republican Party. I hadn’t worked out whether
this kind of familiarity normally conveys affection, as in “Dubya,” or contempt, as in “Slick
Willie” or “Barry Hussein.” But I
thought it sounded jaunty and knowing. At the beginning of the ride, the driver
had bummed me a Parliament, which seemed like permission to show off.
Now he retorted: “Erdoğan! President!”
Reverent and approving, the two words sounded like a parry in pidgin and
made me shut my trap for the rest of the drive.
Ever after, I wondered whether inflating my fare and impounding my
luggage could have been an Erdoğan loyalist’s act of sabotage against a cheeky
Westerner.
Three days later, the return trip to Yenikapı
came to an all-time low 73 lira. I should have
been overjoyed, but I wasn’t. The
bargain only confirmed my suspicion that on my earlier trip I’d been taken,
literally, for a ride, and the confirmation put me in a poisonous mood. All budget expats knows this mood well. It dawns with the realization that the hardiness
and adaptability we’ve claimed for ourselves is an alibi; that in our heart of
hearts we’d rather be at Club Med, having our boots expertly licked. The mood transcends politics, but politics,
being one more source of strangeness, can feed it. Worst of all, this mood has a way of
demanding expression.
The waiting room at the ferryboat landing wasn’t
especially crowded. The lines at the
ticket windows were only a few people deep.
Most of the travelers seemed to be Turkish – sedate mothers and fathers with
bouncing children in tow. Together they
made a low, contented hum. Under other
circumstances, it might have soothed me.
In my present state, the mellow domesticity reminded me that I was a
foreigner, awkwardly transplanted into someone else’s incomprehensible normal.
The ticket agent was a woman in her early 20s,
wearing hijab. Briskly, she printed out
my ticket and demanded: “Yirmi dokuz
lira.” Twenty-nine lira, or $13.58, is
no great imposition by any standards.
But it also happened to be nearly twice what I’d paid to ride the same
ferry in the opposite direction. That
was the match to the powder. I went Five
Easy Pieces, lashing the agent with the umbrage earned by the crooked driver
and – now that I think about it – by the sales clerk at Mavi Jeans.
She opened her mouth and blinked when I called
the price a travesty. When I called it
exploitative, she cocked her head like a curious beagle. This is not what communications experts call
mirroring, so I groped for the words in Turkish. How “korsan,” or “pirate,” made its
way into my working vocabulary, I had no idea.
But surely it had to express the thought “This is highway robbery” better
than “ekmek.”
Pointing fiercely through the glass, I snapped, “Korsan!” The agent’s eyes narrowed with delight and a
laugh escaped her. It was a most unpirate-like
laugh – practically a titter – and she quickly covered her mouth and tried to
look serious. All of it, her laugh and
her determined reversion to gravity, so charmed me that I took my ticket and
stomped off to the büfe, where I picked a fight over marked-up Biskrem cookies.
Maybe by now, in the best Turkish tradition, the agent’s
told all her friends that the foreigner she served last Wednesday was acting
from his own political motive, making her laugh on purpose in the hope of subverting
her religious observance or her party’s social agenda. For the record, I wasn’t – I was melting down
like a Snickers bar. But where’s the
glory in that?
You are pure delight, Max.
ReplyDeleteEven to people I'm trying to piss off, apparently.
DeleteHad I been that girl, I would have laughed too. :)
ReplyDeletehey max! i'm taking a fb break so i can't "like" your patheos posts and just wanted you to know (somehow) that i have been enjoying your posts, whether it be about self love or creepiness creep or caitlyn or the suicide hotline.seems you have been cooking lately! thanks! brenda rogers
ReplyDelete