Categories
Diasporic Musings

Almond Cookie for Fifty Cents

It’s the first time I’m experiencing a polar vortex. It wasn’t this cold back home, neither in Vancouver nor Istanbul. Toronto is different. Face freezing, I pull up to a cafe inside a plant shop to see a friend I met at a Palestinian event. She isn’t here yet.

Looking at the menu, I see that I can get an almond cookie for 50 cents with the purchase of a coffee. Deciding to treat myself, I grab a cookie. I turn on my Kindle to start reading Susan Abulhawa’s Against the Loveless World. I sip my cappuccino. The first pages of the novel is a glossary that translates the foreign words in the novel. I glance through the Arabic words.

Booza: Ice cream.” 

I bite the almond cookie.


I used to live in a neighbourhood called ‘Bitter Almond’ (Acıbadem in Turkish) in Istanbul until the age of seven. My dad would come home late in the evening, the smell of the chilly weather on his coat. In his hands, a box of ice cream from a shop called Efendiler. The box had 10 different flavours, and my favourite was chocolate chips. The owner, Mustafa, apparently travels all around Turkey to pick the highest quality fruits to make ice cream with. Raspberries, clementines, apricots, and lemons. The best ice cream I ever had and ever will. It’s a staple in this neighbourhood. Everyone loves it. Once a week, we sit on the small balcony of our pink apartment with tea spoons at hand and try all the seasonal flavours as a family.

They say that the ‘Bitter Almond’ neighbourhood had lots of almond trees back in the Ottoman era, hence the name. When I was a kid, I thought that the neighbourhood was named after the famous Turkish ‘bitter almond cookie’.

I loved these cookies. Crunchy on the outside, soft and chewy on the inside. A bittersweet taste, similar to an amaretto. 

Now, sitting here in the cafe, the gluten free almond cookie I took a bite of tasted almost the same. How long has it been since I last had one?


After the age of seven, my parents decided to move out of Bitter Almond. We moved into a magical home in the forest where I got to play with twigs and mud all day. Made potions out of crushed rose petals and rain drops. Shared secrets with the worms. Rolled dried flowers in a huge magnolia leaf to make cigars. Saw a praying mantis for the first time. My mom shouted her lungs out to call my name after sunset to get me home. My dad taught me how to blow into a trumpet flower to make music. This was where I got wet to the bone under the sprinklers in summer. Where I first fell in love. I was only 13 at the time so it didn’t make much sense. My dad still brought us a box of ice cream from Efendiler after work occasionally. What a treat it was. We still ate it with teaspoons. Sitting at the garden as a family, mosquitos buzzing by. 


It must have been fate because we moved back to the Bitter Almond when my parents had to sell the magic house. I was 17. This time it was a different reality. I was now going to a boarding school so I got to visit home on some weekends. The dorm I was staying at was an hour away from home. We were looked after really well there. If one of us was sick, the principal brewed us all herbal tea. Served us in our beds and checked our foreheads one by one to see if we had fever. 

Each time I got to visit home from school, I saw my parents getting more and more stressed. Things were brewing, I knew. There was already a lot of hostility towards our community. But no one saw it coming this fast. Or this hard.


One summer night, we hear military planes flying over our heads, shots being fired, they say it’s a coup. The mayor of Bitter Almond is shot and killed on the lower street. The “coup” is over the same night, and the people I love are suddenly labeled enemies of the state, aka. terrorists. Nothing changes other than our lives. I don’t send my dad to work next day in fear of his life. I don’t see the dorm principal again. I can’t thank her for the tea. 

Dad wants us to relax the next day. He says things will settle down. They can’t accuse hundreds of thousands of people with terrorism in one night. The people who’ve known us for years will not believe any of that. He goes out to get us ice cream, that always cheers us up.

He’s back in 20 minutes and I open the door. I know something’s wrong because he’s holding some store bought ice cream bars.

“They vandalized Efendiler.” he says. “They are calling him a terrorist.” 

I’ve never seen my dad shaking like that. 

I can hear the ticking of the clock. It’s much louder than usual. “What will happen next?” I ask, nibbling on the ice cream stick.

We plan the next steps. I am 17.


It’s been almost eight years since I had an almond cookie that tastes like this. 

I text my spouse: “Found almond cookie. Tastes just like the ones back home. It used to be my favourite when I was a kid you know.”

I receive a reply stating that he did not know that. 

We are now 26. Still learning new things about each other. It makes a lot of sense now, why we fell in love back then. He says he’ll Google a recipe and bake me bitter almond cookies. “Pick up some eggs from Shoppers on your way back.” 

My friend is here, so I put my phone away to greet her.

“You should try out the almond cookie, it’s really nice.”

The patio of Efendiler in Acıbadem. Now closed down.
Categories
CULTURE

My Books Broke My Heart

I was very hesitant to buy any books in my first year in Canada. I only got the essential ones for my classes. I would even say that I was very angry at any book that I had to buy. 

To be honest, I did not want to get hurt by my books. 

Let’s start from the very beginning. Building a library from scratch is special. A library has the ability to take you on a journey through all the phases you went through in life. You grow, and you learn some amazing things along the way. Let’s say that you have Hunger Games or Twilight in your library. They never let you forget that you were once a teenager. I did not have those series because my mom would not let me read them, we had a good collection of world literature instead. (Oh look, even the lack of books in your library is a story on its own.) Anyways, I had an amazing set of Agatha Christie books in my library. Most of it was handed down to me from my sister. Some of it, I bought myself over time. I remember getting scared reading those murder mysteries. “And Then There Were None” made me shiver in my bed at nights. I was really young then; I remember finishing books so fast that my parents would have to hand me whatever book there was at home to read. That is probably how I ended up getting obsessed with the genre of murder mystery at the age of 9.

Great parenting tip: make your children reserve at least one shelf in their cupboard for books. That is what my mom did, and I am forever thankful for that. I had a library before I knew how to read. I made my mom read to me before I went to sleep every night. Yes… every night. She tells me that she was so happy when I learned how to read because it meant that she could finally stop reading the same stories over and over again. All of the children’s books from my sister’s library got transferred over to mine. And as I kept getting more and more books, we started moving my clothes from that cupboard so that I could have more empty shelves.


I started high school and met with the amazing world of academic books. Couldn’t believe that so much knowledge existed in the world. My teachers were giving meaning to the world around me. We read about economy, sociology, history… And oh man, there was no end to how many books you could cultivate. 

But then, we had to move away from my childhood house to a smaller apartment because times were changing. 

It meant that I had to give some books away because we wouldn’t have much space in the new apartment. It’s okay, how bad could it be right? I ended up crying. The books had reminded me of all the good times we had at that home. Found my childhood books and remembered the times I spent with my mom trying to learn how to read. Found some of my old English books and remembered how I used to keep a notebook of all the new words I had learned. Found books that I have never read and just bought because I thought that it would look cool in my library. A lifetime just hidden inside my cupboard like that, how dare my books make me sad? I chose the ones I wanted to keep, and the rest were donated. 


Life was good, I was cultivating more books as I go. I would use my pocket money to order books online. I gave away some old ones to make space for newer ones. I just loved the feeling of having a library of my own because it told my story. The story of someone who cherished learning. I spent a long time writing my story, which books I had would affect who I would become. 

But then, my parents had to move abroad because times were changing.

I would stay behind in Istanbul. But this meant that I had to say goodbye to most of my books because I did not have a home anymore. This time, it only hurt a little bit. In the end, if I could part with my parents, then why would some books matter? Some tears were shed, the unclarity of our situation got us all stressed. I said bye. They got on a plane.


I took the limited number of books to the dormitory I was going to stay in. I had stopped buying books at that point because I knew that I wanted to go to UBC. A year after my parents left, my university applications were done, I got my passport ready, got my Canadian visa approved… 

I was going to Canada knowing that I would not return to Turkey because times were changing.

I gave my books to my best friend at the time and told him to either donate or keep them. I didn’t care about my books at all this time. If I was able to part with the most amazing person I knew, then why would some books matter? Some tears were shed, we didn’t think much of the unclarity of the situation. I said bye. I got on a plane.


My parents and I came to Canada. I was extremely stubborn to not buy any books here because it reminded me of my library staying behind all the times I had to move. It reminded me of a home that I did not have. Reminded me of friends that I could not reach. My books made me angry. Like everything in my life, they were too heavy to carry around with me.

I am realizing now that it was my feelings that were too heavy to carry around, the books did not have a fault. I had decided that I was not going to have a library anymore. Like everything I have cultivated in my life, the books would always have to stay behind in case I had to leave again. 

A library means that you belong to a place. And I did not belong.

I was very hesitant to buy any books in my first year in Canada. I only got the essential ones for my classes. I would even say that I was very angry at any book that I had to buy.

To be honest, I did not want to get hurt by my books.


Over the past few years I have made some amazing friends and they made Vancouver home for me. Without realizing, I started frequenting book shops more. A voice called to me when there was a great bargain happening. It said: build a library, do it.

October 2020, Vancouver

This year, I realized that I open up more shelves to stock books in my small nano studio each month. I am not sure what affected this decision, but I have an idea. I am sure all of us who have moved at least once in their life knows how heavy books are, you simply can’t travel with them. I am reminded of this fact every single time my very good friend Rahma moves around (she moves a lot, don’t even get me started.)

It is funny but I think that what made me interested in a library again was seeing Rahma carry all her books with her when she travels to Dubai or Ottawa. Whenever she decides to travel, I sit with her and we choose which books she should carry. I try to stop her at five books maximum, she doesn’t have a limit. (And I am pretty sure she puts more than what we agreed for into her suitcase whenever I leave her place)

This made me realize that the weight that I could not carry around was not my books. Rahma carries them around everywhere right? The heavy weight was all the anger and sadness I had to carry every time myself or someone else got on a plane and left things behind. At the end of it all, my books leaving my life meant that the people I loved were leaving my life. My books didn’t hurt me. I just put too much meaning into them. Now that there is some healing happening 4 years after losing my homeland, I am building a library again. If I have to leave it all behind, oh well, that’s life.

And yeah, I’m not giving up.

Note: I honestly had no idea where it would go when I started writing this blog post. But eh, everything in life is political right? As always, shoot me a message if you have any issues regarding the content. Cheers.