Wednesday, 24 August 2022

Being Šeherezada: Turkish Teenage Years in Croatia

August 23, 2022 - TCN is delighted to welcome Irmak Erol to the team, kicking off with a Turkish viewpoint of growing up in Croatia. Welcome, number 178! If you would like to contribute to TCN and become TCN 179 and write about the Croatia where you are, contact us on This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. Subject 179 with your sample article.  

I moved to Croatia in 2006 when was 13 years old. Because I started primary school a year earlier back in Turkey, I arrived in Croatia having finished elementary school and ready for the fiery corridors of high school, as ready as one can be. There are certain phases in life when you don’t particularly acknowledge the emotions you go through. Thinking back today, I must have been scared, anxious to say the least, but all I remember is the feeling of being lost. The breadcrumbs that led to that feeling are somewhat scattered too loosely as it is, like trying to see through a misty window. It’s a blur.

I started 9th grade in IB, XV. Gymnasium. A couple of months later, around 8pm, a classmate called and told me to turn the TV on and find HRT 2 in an excited manner. She wouldn’t tell me why. I ran to the living room, reached for the remote, and there it was. Binbir Gece, or as translated in Croatian Tisuća i jedna noć (1001 Nights) was playing its first episode on Croatian national television! At first, I couldn't believe my eyes. It made me feel excited, and effortlessly empowered.

In the following years, the Turkish series blossomed, and the floral landscape became a norm. I would laugh humbly every time someone compared me to Šeherezada. That humble laugh never really ceased to exist. 16 years later, it's still there, lurking.

The popularity of the Turkish series had a major influence on my expat experience, appreciably contributing to the adaptation process in a foreign country. I stopped being an expat once I had been in Croatia longer than I had lived in Turkey, but that's a story for another time. It is funny to think that through struggle, one can develop a feeling of home, a sense of belonging. I think that also applies to people, as much as it applies to places. It's not really about good or bad; it's about rawness.

I've been gently muffled with the comfort of a flicker in people's eyes when they find out that I am Turkish. The very same flicker that kept my teenage years warm, subsequently continued to illuminate in momentary flashes during a friendly encounter with a lady working at a kiosk throwing Turkish words at me or the entrepreneurial endeavors sweating from one government building to another interacting with seemingly bored and/or annoyed individuals prior to my visit, hiding behind computer screens.

Šeherazada is a homage to the life I have so far lived. It is a building block emphasizing the positive impact of cultural fluidity on an individual in a societal frame. Because I felt accepted, I had the courage to meet new people, to make friends, to have my first big crush on a guy fanatically wearing red Converses; I had the luxury to listen to music more passionately, knowing I have friends to go to concerts with, to notice the colours around me as brightly as they may appear, to discover places within places that I thought I already knew, to develop new ideas, ultimately new realities...

Thursday, 19 December 2019

Seherezada: Dubrovnik Villa in Which Ronaldo Stayed Being Renovated

If you've ever looked from the sea at Dubrovnik's mainland, you'll more than likely have noticed a very unusual villa with a blue roof, sticking out of the array of white apartment buildings with red roofs and traditional stone Dalmatian houses. Seherezada is one of the Pearl of the Adriatic's most outstanding buildings, it's extremely expensive to stay there, and it's getting a face lift in time for next season.

As Novac writes on the 18th of Deember, 2019, a large construction crane has been erected near the distinctive blue ''dome'' of Villa Seherezada, the most unusual building in Dubrovnik, in recent days.

Adriatic Luxury Hotels' spokeswoman Zrinka Marinović responded to the question of what kind of interventions are to follow for one of Dubrovnik's most expensive accommodation facilities, with a view over the sea and the nearby island of Lokrum.

''Given the fact that this is an extremely demanding project, at this moment we're not yet able to provide details on the renovation of Villa Seherezada. We'll be able to share more information about the renovation of the villa, as well as the additional projects under preparation, in the first quarter of next year,'' they promised from the well known Croatian hotel group.

This year, the gorgeous Villa Seherezada celebrated its 90th anniversary. The building, which some call the "Taj Mahal of the Mediterranean" because of its very Eastern style of construction, was built back in 1929, upon the order of wealthy Russian Jew William Zimdin, who was both its first owner and first resident.

The villa was also very popular in the former Yugoslavia when Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton stayed there. Famous footballer Ronaldo also stayed in the luxurious facility which boasts several deluxe apartments this spring.

Make sure to follow our dedicated lifestyle page for much more. If it's just Dubrovnik you're interested in, give Total Dubrovnik a follow or check out Dubrovnik in a Page.

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