(This story first appeared on the We Said Go Travel website as part of the 2103 writing competition "Independence".)
When I arrived in Göreme for the first time, it was high summer. Nestled in the Anatolian heartland, Göreme was a traditional farming community like any other in Turkey except for its spectacular landscape. The arid countryside, already aged and yellowed over thousands of years, glared harshly under the heat of the day. My head spun with the swirls of red, orange and ochre reflected off the surreal cone shaped peribaca. These spiky pinnacles looked like carefully thought out sculptures but were actually the result of volcanic activity and time. The cooled molten lava had eroded under the weight of fierce winter snows and wind. What was left was softer stone called tufa, which has been painstakingly carved away by the villagers for centuries. They used the peribaca as homes, stables, churches and depots right up until the last quarter of the 20th century. Now thousands of visitors are drawn to the region of Cappadocia every year, fascinated by the seeming impossibility of this imposing and solid geological reality whimsically known in English as ‘fairy chimneys’.
When I arrived in Göreme for the first time, it was high summer. Nestled in the Anatolian heartland, Göreme was a traditional farming community like any other in Turkey except for its spectacular landscape. The arid countryside, already aged and yellowed over thousands of years, glared harshly under the heat of the day. My head spun with the swirls of red, orange and ochre reflected off the surreal cone shaped peribaca. These spiky pinnacles looked like carefully thought out sculptures but were actually the result of volcanic activity and time. The cooled molten lava had eroded under the weight of fierce winter snows and wind. What was left was softer stone called tufa, which has been painstakingly carved away by the villagers for centuries. They used the peribaca as homes, stables, churches and depots right up until the last quarter of the 20th century. Now thousands of visitors are drawn to the region of Cappadocia every year, fascinated by the seeming impossibility of this imposing and solid geological reality whimsically known in English as ‘fairy chimneys’.
That first time,
I lived in a small pension, helping out in exchange for room and board. It was
the season of the Gulf War, and while tourists were scarce I was rarely alone.
I spent my mornings visiting with the women and my afternoons visiting with the
men. The rest of the time I stayed in the courtyard and learnt Turkish from the
pension owner’s daughter.
When I visited
with the women I sat inside their homes and knitted. I was a good village girl,
learning the arts of the hearth. Sitting cross-legged on the floor I listened
to my elders and helped out with the children who often solemnly circled us while
chanting a simple Turkish song. The women didn’t judge me on my clothes or my
job, but on how well I listened and how well I shared. We only had a mutual
vocabulary of about thirty words, but with mime and hand gestures we managed to
convey enough to decide we were friends. They liked to dress me up to look like
them, in baggy legged şalvar pants, a
saggy homemade cardigan and hand edged scarf over my hair. In turn I put their
hair up in high ponytails and we often laughed until we fell over when we saw
the results. Then everyone would pick up a spoon and eat from the same plate
until we were full.
When I visited
with the men we went riding. On horseback I was fierce and wild, galloping along
narrow winding paths beside tilled fields and cantering back up through the
twisting valleys to hunt for young apples and green walnuts. The mottled canopy
of shade provided by the trees was a cool relief from the unremitting dry heat
of the day, and I felt exhilarated. We’d always stop in a particular gorge,
dismount and race to a wall of sheer white rock at the narrowest point. Then it
was a battle to collect as many stones as possible and throw them at the
walnuts hiding in the branches above. When I knew how to open the walnuts by cracking
two of them in my hand I felt invincible. I was city born and bred, and it was
such a joy to throw, stoop and slowly eat my fill. The men were more impatient
and someone, usually one the youngest, would always jump up into the branches of
the tree and sing and dance along their lengths to shake free more of the tasty
harvest.
Back then I was
a fairly solitary person, often shy and confused about who I was, so at times
the constant company could be wearing. If I wasn’t with the men or with the
women, and could shake free from the pension owner’ daughter, my favourite
place to go was a ridge up behind the main street of the village. At certain
times there was an absolute silence and a stillness to the landscape that
stretched above the village paths and floated out to the horizon and beyond.
This echoed inside me and I felt calm and safe.
Far away I could
just make out a local woman, her donkey loaded with kindling, following a track
down to her home. Behind her, in the glittering rolling hills and smudges of
purple in the valleys I could see that autumn had come. The leaves shimmered
barely red, barely silver. For me though, it was like spring because at that
moment I realised I had a peace of mind and happiness I had never experienced
before. I was free of self doubt and questioning and was just enjoying the
moment. It was Göreme, with its unique land and people that let me understand I
could be that good girl and that risk taker and still be at one with myself. I
had found freedom.
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