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Sumela Monastery
“ The road took us higher and higher
and seemed to have no end. We were climbing to the summit through a
dense forest of trees. A fine drizzle seemed to hang in the air. As
we climbed, the roar of the waterfalls, like white tassels on a
green dress, rushing down the slopes to mingle with the river in the
valley below grew fainter and fainter. Just when my leg muscles were
about to give out, we spotted the monastery from an opening in the
foliage. Not a monastery but an apparition reposing in stone, a rock
utopia. When I reached it, the winged horses of my imagination
suddenly fled to the sky’s grey expanse. Embedded in the belly of
the rock, the ruins of the monastery looked out over a deep chasm.
From between the rocks water dripped into the monastery from above,
while people of diverse religions, murmuring prayers, drank from its
sacred spring. A portion of the frescoes had been cut out like
pieces of pie years ago and smuggled off to who knows where.”
So reads a diary entry I made about the Sumela Monastery at Maçka
twenty-five years ago. Although the earliest parts of Sumela, dubbed
the ‘Monastery in the Clouds’ by Tarsicio Succi da Verica, are said
to have been built by the Byzantine Emperor Justinian, nothing is
known for certain. But in 1340 the Emperor Alexius Comnenus staged
his coronation ceremony here in this structure, perched on the rocks
like a crown; indeed, he even observed the great solar eclipse from
its vantage point. Sumela’s past is veiled in mystery, which makes
it as intriguing as its remote setting. Legends are rife, from the
smuggling to Athens of the monastery’s icon of the Virgin Mary,
believed to have been painted by the Gospel writer Luke himself, to
the fate of the golden candelabra bestowed on the monastery by
Sultan Selim I following his defeat of Shah Ismail and the Safavid
Persians in 1514. And as if this weren’t enough, anyone asked to
name the ten most popular touristic sites in Turkey would surely
list Sumela among them.
There are ruins of two other famous monasteries at Maçka: the
Vazelon in the village of Kiremitli and the Kuştul in the village of
Şimşirli. The road to Kuştul especially, with its rippling streams
and wooden bridges, is an added boon for hikers and nature-lovers.
A GREEN JEWEL
The fame of the Sumela Monastery surpasses that of Maçka, 30 km from
Trabzon, even though Maçka is one of the green jewels not just of
the Eastern Black Sea but of Turkey in general. Nature has so
blessed this area that when you are plunged into mist on the road to
Maçka you will sigh, saying “Who knows how much beauty there is
along this road that I can’t even see?” But don’t blame the mist,
for it is a friend of the forests and plateaus.
I recall what the village headman said as we dipped our bread in
clotted cream made from fresh milk in the 1600 meter-high Şomla
Highlands: “Snow starts to fall here towards harvest time. And the
flakes, driven by the wind, hit the ground like little white nails.
I never tire of gazing at the landscape through my window. And
another thing: the trees in that forest over there make such a roar
in the wind that people come here just to hear it.”
I chime in that people come to Maçka for a thousand and one
different sounds. The patter of the rain, for example. The wild
strains of the kemenche, or the splash of buttermilk being poured
into a glass. There are even those who come to hear a slab of thick
clotted cream sizzling over a fire, or the friendly greetings of the
natives along the roadside.
While a young man cuts wood, his sister drives the cows to pasture.
Dewdrops sparkle on the leaves like diamonds in the sun, and the
brilliant golden hue of the yellow rhododendrons catches your eye.
Approaching the windows of the highland houses above their pink
flowers, the mist peeks in. And why not? What’s to stop it, you say?
It is seeking a creature called the ‘tea kettle’ that is also said
to emit ‘mist’ from its long, curving spout, even to sing a lively
song when a fire burns under it! And when the mist finds this
creature, it will surround it on all sides and try to ferret out
whether it’s a distant relative or not.
JULY, THE FESTIVE MONTH
The plateaus are gay with buttercups, crocuses, cornflowers, Pontic
rhododendrons, orchids, fuchsias, foxglove and cowslips, whose names
sometimes vary even from one highland to another. Lapazan, Kulin
Dağı, Maura, Kiraz and Çakırgöl are the most famous of the
highlands, together with Şolma and Lişer. Carpeted with crocuses in
May, they are most festive in July when the strains of the kemenche
and the voices of the ‘horon’ dancers resound through the valleys.
“The green plateaus where sheep, cows and children gather at the
start of summer are known as ‘yayla’ in the vernacular of our
region,” explains writer Ismet Zeki Eyüboğlu in his book, ‘Maçka’.
“As soon as the heat begins to set in, the sheep are dyed, the cows
and unweaned calves are decked with little bells and the nanny-goats
and billy-goats with big bells, and then all hit the road for the
highlands. Young men and women don red and green, while the oldsters
rub themselves with
henna.”
Head for the Zigana range, enjoy fresh milk pudding at Hamsiköy, or
breathe in the fresh air on the upland byways. It’s your choice at
Maçka. But be sure to bend softly over the purple rhododendrons the
locals call ‘gomar’ and take a closer look at the drops left on
their leaves by the rain that got to the ‘yayla’ before you. If you
look carefully, you will see the mountains, forests and highland
houses reflected in their aqueous globes and you will marvel at how
nature has distilled the whole world into a single drop at Maçka! As
you do so, the strains of a folk tune will reach your ears, sung by
a girl hanging up laundry in her garden: “Made of stone are Maçka’s
roads / Chagrin d’amour is a heavy load / You’re the blossom, I the
leaf / On which branch did we flower?” And I shall recall a poem
called ‘Window’ by Sunay Akın, a poet who was born in Maçka, in his
father, tax collector Şükrü Efendi’s mansion, in the village of
Konaklar overlooking the Galyan valley and who spent the halcyon
days of his childhood in the garden of the same house. I close with
a few of his lines: “Evenings the new bride / leaves her door open /
so the aroma of the dishes she is cooking / will waft through the
neighborhood.”
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