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Famous Turks Series -- Actress Esin Moralıoğlu, 12 films between 1990 and present
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Turkish Delights
True stories of travellers to Turkey

The personal Turkish experiences of visitors to the
Learning Practical Turkish
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The Tell Tale Thud

the thief

My Turkish wife and I live year-round on the beach
along the Aegean Sea coast about 80 km south of Izmir
in the little resort town of Gümüldür.

Crime is almost non-existent in Summer when the tourists and summer residents swarm in and leave the local folks fat and happy.
But in the Winter, after all the citrus fruit is picked and packed,
there isn't much honest work to be had.

And it's during those slow months that most of the burglaries occur.

The tourists and the summer residents are long gone then,
and their uninhabited vacation villas
(still filled with lightly guarded furniture, clothes, and electronics)
can be tempting targets for otherwise honest men --
who can't always afford to put a piece of meat, once a week, on the family­dinner table.

On a winter morning just the other day (January '98), I awoke unexpectedly early (at about 3:30 am) in our cozy little beach-front bungalow. I lay there sleepily for several comfortable minutes, dozing -- when I distinctly heard a low thudding sound. I thought it might be air in the water pipes and waited for the sound to stop.

It didn't, and I began to get suspicious.

Our bungalow has not been broken into in the 5 years we've lived here,
but several summer-resident homes nearby have indeed been robbed --
one home has been burgled twice in consecutive years!

I eased into my clothes and started downstairs to investigate. As I groped half­consciously down the steps, I could tell (with some relief) that the sound was coming from outside -- down the road a bit from our place, near an adjoining seaside 'summer-homes' development.

I made a quick decision to get our night-watchman and scare this would-be thief back to where he belonged!

Outside, the thudding sound was noticeably louder -- and I called out in my American-accented Turkish, "Merhaba. Kim o?" (Hello. Who's that?). The sound stopped on a dime.

But then, after about 30 seconds, it resumed -- and this time with a little rhythm to it! I thought to myself, "Why you cheeky devil…" -- and strode off purposefully to fetch the night-watchman.

As I walked, I noticed that the sound was moving, somewhat in parallel to me -- although I couldn't see who was making it. But at least that meant it wasn't the sound of a house break-in, right?So what the hell was it?

I stopped and let my brain fully engage.
Where was I?
Turkey.
What time was it?
Three forty-five in the morning.
What month was it?
January.
What was that rhythmic-thudding sound?
A primitive drum.

Do these facts add up to anything? Yep, they sure do.
This January, Turkish Muslims are right in the midst
of the
Ramazan religious celebration --
when the faithful get up early to have their last meal before fasting
for the rest of
the long day.
And the primitive drum? Why… it's nothing more than
the traditional Ramazan drummer boy (davulcu)
who accepts tips to act as a human alarm clock to wake faithful followers
for their very early morning meal!

When the realization hit me,
I turned like a sheep and slinked back home...

In defense of my temporary cultural amnesia,
this was the first time in five years
that a davulcu had made it all the way down to the seaside
in search of faithful followers during Ramazan.
And, besides…
it was "Burglar Season"
and I was only half-awake…

[Not good enough, huh?
oh, well…
]

JM (January '98)

More Language Related Pages:
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  • Conjunction Celebration
  • Turkish Verbs
  • Essential Idioms, Index
  • Essential Suffixes, Index
  • Sentence Structure, Standard
  • Turkish Pronunciation
  • Turkish Accenting
  • Turkish Numbers Revealed
  • NewsReaders' Dictionary, Index
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