Learn Turkish or else
 
 
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20 May 2013 Monday
 
 
 
 
 
 
Columnists 12 April 2012, Thursday 10 0 0 0
PAT YALE
p.yale@todayszaman.com

Learn Turkish or else

While trying to work out the qualities necessary for making a go of life as an expat in Turkey, I’ve already poured cold water on the idea that only those with omnivorous appetites are likely to succeed. Flexibility?

 That would have topped my list of the requisite assets even if globalization might be making it less essential than it once was.

So what do other expats think? In my straw poll the answer that came over loudest and clearest was “no matter how hard it is, you must get to grips with the Turkish language.”

Bodrum resident and British author of the comic expat memoir “Perking the Pansies” Jack Scott was quite clear on the matter. “Learning the lingo, at least conversationally, will really help,” he said, a view echoed by Marc Guillet, a Dutch journalist who lives in İstanbul and runs the enjoy-istanbul.com website. “The absolute number one is, do your best to learn the language. Yes, it is difficult, but whatever your level, when you start to speak some Turkish all doors will be opened for you, because trying to speak Turkish shows Turkish people that you respect their culture and language.”

The same reply came in from all over the country. Duke Dillard, the American author of the CaptivatingCappadocia.com blog, recently moved to Çavuşin in Cappadocia with his family after teaching in Ankara. “I have found that the more Turkish an expat knows, the better the experience. When we lived in Ankara finding English speakers was easy, but as we learned more Turkish our relationships deepened and our understanding of what was going on around us, the hidden cues, became more clear.”

A long-time Selçuk resident also listed linguistic skills as essential: “The more and more easily one can understand and communicate, the easier and more fulfilling life is likely to be. Being on the outside of what’s going on is stressful. I don’t know how couples with discordant and low levels of [understanding of] each other’s languages ever survive.”

Gazipaşa resident Estella Saville, who used to lead wildflower tours of the country, said the same thing: “Above all, learn the language. Turkish people are so kind and generous and will excuse all your foibles, but if you learn a little Turkish it will go a long way.”

This won’t come as good news to the many expats for whom learning a new language is akin to taking up brain surgery, or for those who have moved to Turkey later in life when it’s hard to pick up a whole new vocabulary, but there couldn’t be such unanimity of opinion were it not the case that learning Turkish is crucial. Indeed, I would go so far as to say that not knowing the language is the single biggest obstacle to settling in, now that so many of the creature comforts of home are as readily available in Turkey as anywhere else.

No one expects you to become word perfect, and most Turks are extremely forgiving of even the most comical linguistic blunders. But flip the situation over and imagine what it must be like for people living in your own home country without being able to speak the language. Just think how much they miss out on. Of course it’s just the same here.

Charlotte McPherson is away.

COMMENTS
Knowing Turkish for me, too, has been what bonded me more than ever to Turkey. It helps me really hear the deep language of the heart there in Turkey. Thanks for this very good article.
Yvonne Malstead
Writer of the article is i believe says quite clearly that if you wish to enjoy a good life here in Turkey or any where else it makes sense to learn if you can.In my home we speak four languages at the same time (not all the time)and now i have added another language(Turkish)at the age of 70.As a y...
Gulzar
@Senol and the rest of you Turkish nationalist, you dont seem to understand the words preached in the holly Quran! You are patronizing the Kurdish language to a point it seem like you don't respect it at all. If anything, your attitude is to be ridiculed. What Kurd and Kurdistan is writing makes per...
Adam
@Kurdistan and Kurd, keep going and you just prove how ignorant you people are. You keep it up with these posts and the world will see how many kurdish idiots there are. If I was a Kurd, I would be imbarasted to see my fellow comp. talk with such ignorance. Friend, if you want to have a reason for a...
Senol
You can get by perfectly well in USA without speaking english. Yes, you do need to speak the common language of the area you live in... but that does not need to be English. Try to get by speaking English on most parts of Texas and New Mexico, you will have a hard time if you don't speak Spanish. Im...
Kurdistan
Yes the '..or else...' is open to all sorts of interpretation but I don't think that anyone can deny that if you want to be part of a country and it's culture then you should endeavour to speak the language of that country. In my experience even as a teacher of English at university, knowing Turkish...
john thompson
wanting to learn the language is not the problem. Here if Fethiye there are a number of problems. Firstly the people employed in the town, and that goes for even the corner shops, want to speak English. Secondly, I live outside the town and am the only Englishman for 7-8Km. The men are at work all d...
Alan Haynes
if someone living in Turkey wants to have a better daily life , he must learn Turkish. same as the one living in USA should learn english. otherwise you cant ask where the public toilet is and wet your pants...very simple..!
necati
Learn Turkish... or else! Else= prosecution, torture, forbidding Kurdish, murder, denial... WORST! Im Kurdish and I know Turkish, I had to learn Turkish (through very very harsh methods). NOW I never speak Turkish. Never with my kids, Never with my wife. I would never want them to learn Turkish! I s...
kURD
Dear Pat: What you are advising to the Expat goes to the Turkish Kurds. Unfortunately the Kurdish political leaders have been misguiding the Kurds. Kurdish parents must realize soon that their children cannot get any respectable job and cannot run any business in Turkey, if their children learn onl...
Yabanci
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