You try not to be xenophobic – believing that where you’re from is the greatest place on the
planet and that every place else comparatively sucks. The thing is, even the best of us – by which,
it goes without saying I mean myself – can slip.
I mean, there are limits, of course. You do not to respond to everything a culture throws at you with a non-judgmental “That is
simply the way they do things.”
Beheadings for example, which seems to be the execution “Method of Choice”
of certain militant, Middle Eastern subcultures…
“Sorry, that’s out.
We’re tolerant. But not that tolerant.”
(Asserts the citizen of a country that dispatches its condemned via an unreliable lethal
cocktail.)
NOTE: During the preceding nine posts chronicling our
recent Turkish adventure, you may well have detected signs of suggested
Turko-phobia, my discomfort, for example, with some Turkish toilets I had
encountered that were just drains. But
in those cases, I kept my disapproval to myself. Yeah, and then I wrote about them – I know. But that was primarily for comedic effect. Which is different, don’t you think? I mean the joke was essentially on me… is what
I am trying to say. Never mind.
Further exemplifying my determination not to offend was this
intense inner struggle I experienced concerning asking about the potability of
the drinking water. I had noticed that the
hotels we stayed at, as well as the boat, all supplied bottled water. Did that mean, I wondered, that the tap water
was not drinkable? Or were they simply
being “fancy” with the bottled water?
The thing, is how do you politely ask that kind of question?
“Can Turkish tap water kill me?” is probably not the way you want to go.
It’s a legitimate issue, the way to appropriate way to ask
something. You are reluctant to inquire
of a person who lives there,
“Is this a Third World country, or what?”
I encouraged myself to steer clear of this potentially
uncomfortable issue, but, like trying not to sneeze, the more I suppressed my
concern, the more the question propelled itself to the forefront of my
consciousness. And so, after three days
of holding my tongue, in the least offensive construction I could think of, I said,
“I am curious about the tap water.”
I am informed, without rancor, that it’s fine; it just
doesn’t taste that good. And I leave it
at that. There was no,
“So you’re saying that it’s not raw sewage coming out of the
faucets?”
I instead dutifully behave myself, proceeding to less
provocative concerns, like, “What’s for dinner?” or “Do you know if the
‘ice-cream guy’ coming today?” I remain throughout
pretty much on my very best behavior.
Until the final night of our journey.
We, by which I mean the five remaining traveling companions
and Sarhan, are sitting together at dinner at the Kismet Hotel outside of Kusadasi – forgive me, but this is probably
my final opportunity for Turkish beach town name dropping – and the
conversation inevitably turns to Jane, who had fallen on the boat and had
undergone emergency surgery in Fethiye. (Okay,
but that’s the last one.)
I can feel my adrenaline revving up for a rant. Being the sensitive person that I am, I
immediately identify with Jane’s desperate situation – having no alternative
but to go under the knife far away from home, the small town surgeon wielding that knife, an unvetted stranger
from a foreign country.
In my admittedly hyper-fearful response system, facing a
crisis of this nature inevitably triggers the emotional equivalent of,
“I want my Mommy!”
“Home”, the geographical surrogate for “Mommy” instills the illusion at least of the familiar, the
capable and the safe. I encapsulate this
contrasting situation, bewailing
painfully,
“I mean, who is
this Turkish doctor?”
Do you see what I did there?
Exposing my xenophobic bias to the world, I was essentially expressing a
coded version of,
“Who is this not American Board Certified ‘Exotic’ who’s going to be cutting open
my shoulder?”
I immediately felt terrible.
Trying to backtrack, by insisting I’d feel the same way about any small town hospital, explaining that
only two weeks before I’d experienced my “heart incident” in Los Angeles, I was
vacationing at our cabin in Indiana, and I’d have felt exactly the same had I
been rushed to the local hospital in Michigan City.
I then abruptly stopped talking, sensing that the insult I
had inflicted was terminally irreparable.
I had “misspoken” – defined as “inadvertently telling the
truth.” By verbalizing my, more than
likely, irrational concerns, I had insulted Turkish doctors and, by implication,
the country of Turkey as a whole. That’s
why the next day, when we parted company, I said to Sarhan, “If anything stupid
accidentally came out of my mouth…” and I asked for his forgiveness.
Sarhan gallantly dismissed my apology. It is true that when I committed my faux pas, Sarhan had behaved like he had
not been offended. But I had looked in
his face at that moment, and I had detected an involuntary flinch.
Ah, well. Two weeks, and
only one egregious boo-boo. (That I know of.)
That’s better than my overall average.
1 comment:
According to Time Magazine, current edition, cover boy Benedict Cumberbatch, page 9, the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul is the most visited tourist attraction in the world: 91 million visitors/year. Were most of those 91 million there when you were?
Like you, I seldom post pics on the Blogger, so I did some experimenting and was able to post the first time, it just took a little extra 'wonder what this button's for?' exploration. A written guide would be too much for me so I'll just say I hope you figure it out soon and get some pics up for the vicarious travelers who read your travelogue.
Glad you posted your adventures, it has been interesting and yes, at times, humorous, but that's why most of us read your stuff, isn't it? Well, it's why I read it.
Similar to many, I happen to believe I live in the best country in the world. I'm not afraid to tell anyone that, either. I'm not about to denigrate anyone's homeland, however, not face to face. But I imagine many of us are guilty of that - I don't want to call it elitism cuz I know some folks from other countries are equally fond of their homelands.
Anyway, welcome back to one of the best places in the world!
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