Month: September 2008

  • A pyrotechnical Ramadan in Turkey

    A pyrotechnical Ramadan in Turkey

    By Fazile Zahir

    FETHIYE, Turkey – The daily breaking of the fast during the holy Muslim month of Ramadan, once marked with cannons and drumbeats, is in a modern Turkey being increasingly signaled by fireworks.

    In Izmir for decades a cannon was fired at sunset from the walls of Kadifekale Castle (“the velvet castle” in Turkish) to mark the start of the evening meal or Iftar, but this year it won’t. The Izmir Fire Brigade has said the city’s fast-paced development has made the blast too dangerous.

    As the city has expanded and the area around the castle become increasingly urbanized, the cannon was first moved to Kariyaka district, and then more ignominiously to the heights of the Evka-4

    Asia Times Online :: Middle East News, Iraq, Iran current affairs.

  • Spanish titles sell to Turkey, Middle East

    Spanish titles sell to Turkey, Middle East

    By Pamela Rolfe

    Sept 23, 2008, 10:22 AM ETSAN SEBASTIAN, Spain — In a first for Spanish product, Turkish production house Altioklar has picked up format rights to the hit Spanish series “7 Lives” for digital platform Digiturk, while Minema Media will make a Turkish version of “My Adorable Neighbors,” Spanish sales outfit Imagina International Sales announced Tuesday.

    Additionally, Imagina announced groundbreaking sales in the Middle East, with Sabbah Media picking up “Countdown” for Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Oman.

    All the shows are Globomedia productions, as are “Boarding School” and “Countdown,” which Vietnam’s VTC9 channel picked up ahead of MIPCOM to start airing in September.

    Source : The Hollywood Reporter

  • Anti-nuclear protestors detained in Turkey: Greenpeace

    Anti-nuclear protestors detained in Turkey: Greenpeace

    ANKARA (AFP) — Police detained 40 protestors Tuesday in a demonstration against government plans to build Turkey’s first nuclear power plant, a day before the tender process was to open, activists said.

    Several dozen members of environmental groups, among them Greenpeace, demonstrated outside the energy ministry in central Ankara, brandishing banners that read “No to nuclear.”

    Some of the protestors, dressed in black overalls and their faces painted white, lay on the ground posing as corpses.

    Police officers detained about 40 people on the grounds that the demonstration was unauthorised, Greenpeace said.

    Overriding strong opposition from environmentalists, the energy ministry has invited bids for the construction and operation of a 4,000-megawatt plant, to be built at Akkuyu, on Turkey’s southern Mediterranean coast.

    AFP: Anti-nuclear protestors detained in Turkey: Greenpeace.

  • Italy: Solve Cyprus before Turkey joins EU

    Italy: Solve Cyprus before Turkey joins EU

    ATHENS, Greece: Italy’s president says the island of Cyprus must be reunited before Turkey is allowed to join the European Union.

    President Giorgio Napolitano made the remarks while on a three-day official visit to Greece.

    Rival Cypriot leaders are currently holding reunification talks on the Mediterranean island which has been divided since a Turkish invasion in 1974.

    Napolitano holds a largely ceremonial post. He made the comments Tuesday after talks with Greek President Karolos Papoulias.

    » Save up to 72% on morning home

    Italy: Solve Cyprus before Turkey joins EU – International Herald Tribune.

  • Istanbul-Berkeley

    Istanbul-Berkeley

    REVIEW When veteran Istanbulite Orhan Pamuk received the Nobel Prize in literature two years ago, the committee complimented his “quest for the melancholic soul of his native city.” Melancholic? The world’s third largest city has one big, melancholic soul? I think Pamuk, of all people, would disagree. The 10th International Istanbul Biennial, which was curated by über-busy San Francisco Art Institute faculty member Hou Hanru in 2007, took a more caustic if not realistic theme: “Not Only Possible, But Also Necessary: Optimism in the Age of Global War.” The organizers of the “Orienting Istanbul” conference at Berkeley this week have produced a truly interdisciplinary (and free to the public) conference that cuts through the jargon and confronts big ideas head-on. Nonetheless, I’m glad they snuck in some actual art, including “Istanbul-Berkeley,” Hanru’s selection of video works from the biennial.

    Much of Hanru’s curatorial work has focused on urbanization and living, breathing cities. The chosen videos do not disappoint. They address spatiality in radically different ways.

    San Francisco Bay Guardian : Article : Smuin Ballet.

  • Taking on Darwin in Turkey

    Taking on Darwin in Turkey

    By Daniel Steinvorth in Istanbul

    Fundamentalist Christians in America are not the only ones leading a crusade against Darwin. Creationism and “intelligent design” are becoming increasingly popular among Turkey’s Muslims, too.

    The man who wants to save the world goes by the name of Harun Yahya and resembles an actor from the age of silent films. He wears a white silk suit, gold cufflinks and has a finely trimmed beard on his chin. “In 20 years,” he says in serious tone, “humanity will enter a golden age.”

    Yahya says that he discovered these joyful tidings in the Bible and the Koran. He maintains that it is a “scientific fact” that Jesus and Mahdi, the Muslim messiah, will return to mankind to solve all global conflicts. Beforehand, however, he says that these two heavenly emissaries will have to tackle another challenge: They must eradicate the heresy of British naturalist Charles Darwin, who postulated that all life arose from a process of natural selection.

    As Yahya sees it, Darwinism is the root of all the world’s evils. In order to help rid the world of this theory, he has had thousands of copies of The Atlas of Creation printed and shipped around the world. This large-format 800-page tome aims to prove that there never was a natural evolution of species. Instead, it contends that all forms of life on earth have remained unchanged for millions of years. Brightly colored illustrations of fossils have been included so as to document the lack of so-called transitional forms.

    Interview with Harun Yahya: ‘All Terrorists Are Darwinists’ (09/23/2008)

    Yahya, 52, a onetime student of architecture, is without a doubt his country’s most colorful adherent of creationism. He claims that he has already sold 8 million copies of his various books. Last year, thousands of copies of The Atlas of Creation were delivered — on an unsolicited basis — to schools around Europe. The identity of the person or institution footing the bill for this initiative remains unclear.

    In addition to Yahya, who is currently being prosecuted “for illegal personal gain,” there are other vehement opponents of evolution in Turkey. One of these is Kerim Balci, a journalist who works for the pro-government newspaper Zaman. His message: “God isn’t the one who’s dead; it’s Darwinism.”

    A survey conducted in 2006 showed just how unpopular the theory of evolution remains in the most modern of all Islamic countries. The populations of 34 countries were questioned on their attitude toward the theory of evolution, and the lowest percentage of supporters was found in Turkey. Only a quarter of Turks feel that Darwin’s theory is correct. Just barely ahead of them — in 33rd place — were the Americans.

    For Ibrahim Betil, a Turkish community activist involved in school programs, these figures stand in stark contrast with the country’s official educational policies. Unlike what’s happening in a number of areas in the US, all attempts to introduce creationism into biology classes in Turkey have been blocked. Only the theory of evolution is taught “in every school, in every classroom, even in the remotest provinces.”

    But that could change soon. As Hüseyin Çelik, Turkey’s orthodox minister of education, recently put it, Darwinism is nothing more than a “weapon of materialists and infidels.” Çelik is a great admirer of the theory of “intelligent design” — a modern version of the theory of creationism, which claims to recognize the hand of some sort of designer behind all the world’s natural laws.

    COUNTERING SCIENCE WITH THE WORD OF GOD

    Evolution and God’s Creatures

    Charles Darwin founded the study of evolution with the 1859 publication of his book “On the Origin of Species.” His work not only revolutionized the natural sciences; it also dealt a severe blow to theistic religions by saying that life on Earth was determined by natural selection rather than God’s creation. The religious establishment has feared that the theory would threaten the importance given to God.

    A Muslim Creationism Debate: Taking on Darwin in Turkey – SPIEGEL ONLINE – News – International