ISTANBUL: MEMORIES AND THE CITY -- 9
BY ORHAN PAMUK
Gustave
Flaubert, who visited Istanbul 102 years before my birth, was struck by the
variety of life in its teeming streets; in one of his letters he predicted that
in a century’s time it would be the capital of the world.
The reverse came
true: After the Ottoman Empire collapsed, the world almost forgot that Istanbul
existed.
The city into which I was born was poorer, shabbier, and more isolated
than it had ever been before in its two-thousand-year history.
For me it has
always been a city of ruins and of end-of-empire melancholy.
I’ve spent my life
either battling with this melancholy or (like all ‹stanbullus) making it my
own.
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