It is known by many names: the squat toilet, the Eastern, Iranian, Turkish toilet - even the Natural-Position toilet. Here in Turkey, it is alaturka (from the Italian alla turca) - it's arch nemesis, the alafranga (alla franca), flush toilet. Remarkably, since we've been in Turkey, I have had occasion to avail myself of the alaturka at only two establishments: at a bus stop on the way to a dried shithole Turkish border town, and at the bar which Mr. This Cat's (Not) Abroad and I frequent. Not so remarkably, the more I drink the better my aim gets. Or perhaps worse, and I just don't notice
I don't actually mind the squattie - as I am wont to call it. In many of the places I've had to leave my amber mark, a squattie - if clean (and yes, I know that's a big 'if') - is far preferable to a throne. If not clean ... well ... better we just don't entertain that image.
In spite of the fact that I have only seen an alaturka once in Izmit, I know they are here. At least, they are on sale here. Walk past any hardware store in the city and you'll see a fine selection - with an without raised footpads - of porcelain and chrome alaturkas on display, tilted jauntily on the sidewalk against storefronts, promising untold hours of pleasurable pees. Someone must be buying them.
But what happens to an alaturka when its services are no longer required? When it's been ousted from its position as Number One (and Number Two) by an alafranga? It gets filled in, cemented over, sealed like a dried up well. How sad. Now consider the squattie in the above photo. It has been rendered obsolete, not by its replacement by an alafranga - for I could find none on hand - but by its now hallowed status.
Hallowed status? you ask.
Look again, I respond.
Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you Mustafa Kemal Atatürk's very first toilet - what Mr. This Cat has lovingly baptised: the Ata-sqüirt.
Last week, when we were in Thessaloníki, we felt behoved to pay
It seems somewhat ironic that Mr. Atatürk's city of birth is no longer part of the Ottoman Empire - or for that matter, that there no longer exists an Ottoman Empire
The Blessed Birth House is now on the grounds of the Turkish Consolate (or vice versa) and if you present your passport, are not deemed security threats, and walk through the metal detector without setting off all sorts of bells and whistles, your unworthy feet will step upon anointed ground. Of course, in full Turkish fashion - why should a visit to Atatürk's Blessed Birth House be any different from shopping at Zara or the Gap? - the visitor is followed oh-so-closely from room to room by an attendant, who draws our attention to the exhibits. This is the kitchen. Uh-huh. This is the living room. His presence effectively quashes a veritable legion of somewhat snarky comments sitting precariously on my lips. Would I get my passport back, if I observe - quite accurately - that the Ata-sqüirt looked like a stone giant penis? Probably not.
We pass by the cabinets of tuxedos and walking canes, and make hushed and banal comments that will ensure us receipt of our passports. Look at the piping along the seam of his trousers, I remark. And the stitching! We are about to leave The Blessed Birth House via the garden entrance - in whose foyer looms a humungous larger-than-life bust of Atatürk - when another group
Everything? Hmmmmm ...
Camera in hand, I nip up the stairs to the second floor. Click click my ass, I think as I snap the Ata-sqüirt. I slip back down the stairs where Mr. This Cat is waiting for me, where the Worshippers are posing for photos in front of the humungous larger-than-life bust of Atatürk.
What, they've never seen an Atatürk bust before? I ask.
There are probably more Atatürk statues in Turkey than döner kebab shops - and that's no small feat.
Mr. This Cat shrugs.
Let's get a drink, he suggests.
Wise man. Quite fittingly, there is a bar directly across the street from The Blessed Birth House. Atatürk would have approved. In any case, we leave happy. We have been privy to The Privy. I have a fitting momento of our visit to The Birth House and, more importantly, I will - without question - blow my students' socks off when I tell them. Of course, they will assume that this pilgrimage - for what else can you call it? - was the raison d'être for our trip to Thessaloníki. Why else would you visit, they will ask. After all, as one of our most educated and erudite students (a judge, no less) recently said to me, Thessaloníki (also known as Salonika or Saloniki) is a 3rd World City in a 3rd World Country not worthy of being in the EU (= sour grapes).
But I ask you: how can a city which is still home to the Ata-sqüirt be a 3rd World City in a 3rd World Country not worthy of being in the EU (= sour grapes)? In fact, perhaps The Birth House - it's already technically on Turkish soil what with its proximity to the Turkish Consolate - should have its own unique sovereign-city state status like Monaco or, better yet, like the Vatican. I mean, at least it already has a throne.
3 comments:
Now you're just showing off.
"She wrote about what and made it lyrical?"
Good for you. Showoff.
And I WAS about to make some tea, but seem to have lost my taste for it...
Hmmmm ... I don't know how 'lyrical' I made a urinal ... but ta!
Ataturk ....Atasquirt ? What a level of mind....
There is one popular proverbe in Turkish .They say "espri yaptı sifonu çek" İt mean "just flush the toilet, she made a jog" for this kind of jog made by this kind of low level language.
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