Saturday, January 07, 2006


It was Mustafa Kamal the man known as Ataturk and founder of modern Turkey that coined the term “Mountain Turks” in reference to the Kurdish population of the Southeast of the country, and it is his portrait that hangs in the tea shops of Hasankeyf, there are no pictures of Kurdish heroes such as Salahdin Ayyubi whose 14th century dynasty built the citadel that dominates the cliff top above the town, maybe the reason for that can be answered by the plain clothes policeman sitting in his unmarked car parked at the entrance to the town.

The history of Hasankeyf goes back much further though than the Ayyubids, the guide books will tell you of ten thousand years of civilisation, all of which will now come to end as the town will disappear below the flood waters of the Iisu dam.

The dam is one of 22 being built as part of the GAP regeneration project, the Turkish government can give a sound argument for the ambitious plans, but for the people, mostly Kurdish, of Hasankeyf and almost a hundred other towns and villages they are hollow words.

The Kurdish population has long suffered discrimination and persecution at the hands of the Turkish authorities, Turkey’s human rights record has been one of the main issues of its entry to the European Union, concessions have been made, you can now listen to Kurdish music without fear of arrest, the worst of the fighting between the army and Kurdish separatists has past but many still view the dam building as a form of ethnic cleansing, the population has been falling steadily in Hasankeyf to well below 5000 from 10000.

The evidence of Hasankeyf’s antique past is all around, the rock fort from which the town takes its name dominates the cliff top high above the Tigris river, the Ulu Mosque with a stork nesting on top of its slender minaret, the vast cemetery with tomb stones dating back to Byzantium, the rare 15th century mausoleum of Zeynal Bey that sits alone on the East bank of the river, decorated with intricate coloured tiles, the remnants of the Artukid bridge standing forlornly beside the new one, in any other country tourists would flock here, in the summer at weekends the town is busy with day trippers from nearby Batman or Diyarbakir out for a picnic, the occasional tour bus does make it this far South but when the visitors leave the town is empty, old men sitting drinking tea, the barber and shoe shine boys keeping up appearances.

In many ways life hasn’t changed in Hasankeyf, farmers still use horses to plough the fields and boys lay fishing nets in the river but there is precious little else to help make a living, nowadays the young men head off to the resorts of Marmaris and Bodrum in the summer, the money they send home is often the families only income, in the winter they have nothing to do, just sit in the tea shops with the old men, not even a bus after five to the nearest city.

The future is bleak for the Hasankeyf, there is a sense of hopelessness that hangs in the air; one young man told me he didn’t care if they flooded it, at least then he would know where he stands, the government has been talking about a dam here for forty years, no enterprising businessman would invest in such place.

Ataturk would be pleased with the progress his modern republic is making, a Moslem democracy being welcomed into the arms of the Europeans that Salahadin bravely fought.

9 Comments:

Blogger hiwa said...

fantastic
with my recently emerging love for photography you are giving me the best encouragement possible to make me love photography even more!

and for hasankeyf I REALLY DONT KNOW WHAT CAN I DO?!

I will be visiting your blog keep it up please!

4:02 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

it's a beautiful ancient place of Kurdistan.

6:05 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I was in hasankeyf in september. It really is a place of stunning beauty. The sense history is astonishing. I know if a place existed like this in Ireland, where i come from, it would be visited by 100,000's each year.

It is a travesty that a place of such historical significance and natural beauty can be wiped away from the face of the planet.

I also feel so much for the local people, many of whom have set up lovely little restaurants on the river shore. The restaurant in the cave in particular is fantastic. The proprietor, i cant remember his name, put so much work into decorating it. Its worth the trip alone. Yet he along with so many other of the inhabitants feel a sense of hopelessness.

This is their home, its been their home and their ancestors home before the america were populated, before christianity, before abraham, be history. This is the birthplace of civilisation. These people want to hold on to that and weshould do anything we can to support that.

6:19 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Your pictures are fascinating. When I found your page to get some info about this region I got very excited. Yet hearing your comments reflecting your lack of knowledge about the social and historical net surrounding this problem are harsh and hurt my feelings as a Turkish person. You are actually no different than Turkish authorities you criticize in your blog, because you are in need of despising our leader in favor of arguing your way. I have a feeling that you could easily bash Ayyubi in an argument where you sided with crusaders. Turks don't think lowly about Ayyubi. No pictures of him maybe but this is true for any other significant character of the past, not just for Ayyubi. Somehow an artifical only Ataturk name and pictures phenomenon going on. I don't think Ataturk asked for this. My family has no Kurdish blood but my grandmother I remember was telling me Ayyubi's and other great muslims victory stories when I was young. Many people that I know in Turkey carry Kurdish blood. They are my friends and colligues. They also comprise a big chunk of the society you are criticizing as an outsider. Our imperialist past wasn't as successful as British so we need more time to gather economic power to provide better education, jobs and social services for everyone, in order to build a more effective democracy.

12:15 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Posting pictures with such strong polical text indicate that you are not just a photographer, are you? I see this attitude on 'certain' people who would just see things from one end. I guess you are happy to make a story by hearing things from one end.

It may be a city where some kurdish-origin community would also live. It is sure that there are other people there and there is no doubt that most kurdish would call themselves turkish as being turkish is not a racially oriented issue, its just citizenship.

So, buildign a dam is not so interesting, but cruel turkish authorities are destroying a kurdish city(you called) is a good story! yes, you got it go ahead.

10:55 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Lets chance the title of your page first : Hasankeyf -
Photography from Turkish South East Turkey. You are a photographer..not a historian. not a political scientist.

6:04 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

It really is a shame that this beautifull landscape should vanish, and only for a small percentage of energy increase. It is really ridicilous, but once it is discovered how great a mistake it will be, it can never be undone.
so sign this even if it may not help much
http://www.kesfetmekicinbak.com/apps/proposal.app/view_m.php/3?ln=eng

2:21 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

What is the situation with Hasankeyf now? Does anyone know if they are going ahead with the dam? Are there schools & hospitals in Hasankeyf?

2:06 AM  
Blogger Unknown said...

And you forgot about how the Turkish Police have for years MURDERED teachers, postal workers, engineers sent there to help advance the area! Yes, that must be why tourists know that they can only visit these areas with an armed guard - a bus of tourists would just be irresistable to the Police. Lucky for you your pictures are clearer than your thinking.
If you have been a tourist on the south or east coasts, you have learned to spot these men who bring with them their worst habits of theft and harassment to make life more difficult for visitors - but they do provide a good reason for the existence fof the Tourist Police.
Maybe they need to take some initiative to get things moving there and lift themselves up instead of waiting for "Evil Daddy" to take care of them.
The "million tourists" sound like they are from the local area... most outsiders don't have additional thousands for bodyguards to take on vacation.

5:40 AM  

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