Lavishly exquisite ... in Istanbul
a Lavishly exquisite Hotel in Istanbul. Yes, it is the Ritz Carlton.
Over looking the Bosphorus and right opposite to the phenomenal
Dolmabahce palace at the European side of Istanbul. No wonder why the
Ritz Carlton group was rated a Strong First "Most Prestigious Luxury
Hotel Brand" among 15 rated luxury brand beating the Four Seasons
(which came second). This however, comes with a staggering price tag.
eg, the lentil soup costs 13 JD (19 USD), Turkish Coffee 11 JD and
snickers chocolate costs you something like 12 JD (The bar only not
the entire pack). The service is amazingly superb and the staff are
astonishingly friend (compared to Turks), but you feel that they were
taught lessons. Once you have an eye contact with any of them , you
feel that, some where in the system, a push button action is invoked
and SMILE event executed. I tried to observe this performance over a
period of time; it is so robotically crafted and this seemingly
unconditional loop keeps iterating over and over without reporting a
single bug in its logic. I guess the EXIT statement takes place when
they leave the hotel to get a chance to immensely indulge themselves
frenzy Istanbulian lifestyle caused by a spaghetti styled coded
system.
The first language in Turky is obviously Turkish
The Second Language in Turky is strangely Turkish
The Third Language in Turkey is (unbelievably) Turksih
The fourth Lauguage in Tureky is sadly Turkish
The fifth language is normally a mix (some German, some Arabic and
some English ..)
I wanted to ask what people learn as a second language at schools, but
could not pose this question in any of the most popular 4 languages in
Turkey!
What was most interesting for me was the fact that I went to Friday
prayers at the DolmaBahce mosque (By the way i don't know the root of
the name, i know Dolma is stuffed vegetables Ya3ni Ma7ashi in Arabic).
Same rituals as in any other friday prayer, but most intriguing was
the fact that Salah is preceded by Quran read quite nicely in 90% near
perfect pronunciation. Then the speech started with "Alsalat 3la
Alnabi" Also in Arabic and many Du3a in Arabic by a Turksih Imam. Then
the speach is Turkish {very short , just a few minutes, but i
understood exactly what he was saying since, he was introducing some
Quranic verses every now and then} The speech was about Isra and
Miraj. Then the Salah took place in less than 2 minutes, (Al-fatiha
and a small verses afterwards, i mean really really small) Looks like
this Friday Prayer is well suited for tourist. A good offer (Iqama,
speech and salat in less than 7 minutes,, we beat any other offer!!)
To treat yourself well foodwise, Balik�i Sabahattin is a fish
restuarant that serves really good food. This is a place i would come
back to. That was not only my opinion , but the entire group
unanamously agreed (Price is about 50 USD / person -no Alcohol)
The most religious belief that the Turks observe seem to be Halal meat
(kosher). It is kind of fun to notice how Infuriate they could become
when you ask them if the meat is Halah (The answer is predictably
Al-Hamdulila), immediatly then, they ask you if you care for a beer!
Anyway, the question that is still unanswered:
Are they proud of being Muslims???
So far, i could not mingle with the right people to get answers
Finally, it could possible be appropriate for me to mention at this
stsage that my grandfather is half turkish!
We left Istabul two days back, we are now in an area called Turkbuku
in Bodrum province. Our hotel is very big, it more like Spa. Some
Russian Tourists but surprisingly, mostly Turks are staying in the
hotel. Very little from the eastern med. We ran across two jordanian
families that we know from Amman! and could over hear and Eyptian
family and that is about it. More about Pricess hotel and Turkbuku
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