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Turkey's kaleidoscopic carpets draw summer tourists – DW – 08/16/2025

Turkey's kaleidoscopic carpets draw summer tourists – DW – 08/16/2025

DWa day ago
Image: Ozan Kose/AFP
Every year, from June to September, merchants bring their handwoven carpets to these harvested fields and spread them out to fade in the dazzling summer sun. The strong sunlight exposure softens the bright, natural colors of the new rugs and rids them of unwanted elements. Image: Ozan Kose/AFP
Spread out on the bare ground, the thousands of carpets create a kaleidoscopic patchwork on the outskirts of Antalya, a coastal city in southern Turkey. Image: Ozan Kose/AFP
Hasan Topkara is one of the merchants who washes the knotted wool carpets and rugs from across Turkey. Once dried, he trims the fringes and any stray strands before spreading them out in the sun. He told news agency AFP that the area used to see up to 60,000 carpets spread out in the sun, a spectacular sight. Image: Ozan Kose/AFP
Today, Topkara is one of the last to handle the carpets, with only around 15,000 spread out side by side on a 40-hectare (100-acre) area. Known as kilim, the flat, woven carpets and rugs are traditionally made from wool or cotton. Their origins lie in the Middle East, where they've played an essential role in culture and traditional crafts for thousands of years. Image: Ozan Kose/AFP
Around 50 workers monitor the carpets day and night, turning them regularly and keeping an eye on the weather. When it rains, an extra 100 people from the nearby villages rush out to help fold up the rugs and take them to safety. The entire process takes about 45 minutes. When the clouds part, they help bring everything back out. Image: Ozan Kose/AFP
As soon as the carpets fade to the desired shade, most are sent to Istanbul's Grand Bazaar, where they're often sold abroad. However, the carpet field has become a tourist attraction in its own right, especially since Turkish pop singer Mabel Matiz filmed a music video here in 2018. Image: Ozan Kose/AFP 08/16/2025 August 16, 2025
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Gaza: When the oud plays, the war falls silent for a moment – DW – 08/17/2025
Gaza: When the oud plays, the war falls silent for a moment – DW – 08/17/2025

DW

time4 hours ago

  • DW

Gaza: When the oud plays, the war falls silent for a moment – DW – 08/17/2025

Image: Dawoud Abu Alkas/REUTERS Gaza College, a school in Gaza City. The walls of the building are riddled with shrapnel, the windows blown out. Three girls and a boy sit in guitar class with their teacher, Mohammed Abu Mahadi. He believes that music can help the residents of the Gaza Strip heal psychologically from the pain of bombing, loss and deprivation. Image: Dawoud Abu Alkas/REUTERS At the beginning of 2024, Ahmed Abu Amsha, a guitar and violin teacher, was one of the first of the scattered teachers and students of the Edward Said National Conservatory of Music to offer evening classes again to those displaced by the war in southern Gaza. Now he lives in Gaza City in the north again. Image: Dawoud Abu Alkas/REUTERS "Music gives me hope and alleviates my anxiety," says 15-year-old Rifan al-Qassas, who began learning to play the oud, an Arabic lute, at the age of nine. Al-Qassas hopes to be able to perform abroad one day. People are deeply concerned about being uprooted again following the Israeli cabinet's decision on August 8 to take control of Gaza City. Image: Dawoud Abu Alkas/REUTERS In front of the music teacher's tent lies Gaza City in ruins. Almost all residents are crammed into emergency shelters or camps; food, clean water and medical aid are scarce. Students and teachers are weakened by hunger, and some find it difficult to attend classes. Image: Dawoud Abu Alkas/REUTERS Palestinian Youssef Saad poses with his oud in front of the destroyed school building. Only a few instruments survived the fighting. At 18 years old, Youssef already has a big dream: "I hope that I can teach children music so that they can see beauty despite the destruction." Image: Dawoud Abu Alkas/REUTERS No matter the dire conditions, learning to play instruments still calls for a performance in front of an audience. In a tent, the music students show off their skills and receive loud applause. The musical repertoire is wide-ranging. A 20-year-old guitar student says, "I love discovering new genres, but especially rock. I'm really into rock." Image: Dawoud Abu Alkas/REUTERS Singing also plays an important role. The harmonies of the children's voices on the improvised stage are a welcome contrast to the rhythm of the deadly explosions that the people in Gaza live with every day. Image: Dawoud Abu Alkas/REUTERS Osama Jahjouh plays the ney flute, which is used in Arabic, Persian and Turkish music. He says, "Sometimes I rely on breathing exercises or playing silently when the shelling is intense. When I play, I feel like I can breathe again, as if the ney is releasing the pain inside me." Image: Dawoud Abu Alkas/REUTERS Culture Palestinian Territories 08/17/2025 August 17, 2025

Turkey's kaleidoscopic carpets draw summer tourists – DW – 08/16/2025
Turkey's kaleidoscopic carpets draw summer tourists – DW – 08/16/2025

DW

timea day ago

  • DW

Turkey's kaleidoscopic carpets draw summer tourists – DW – 08/16/2025

Image: Ozan Kose/AFP Every year, from June to September, merchants bring their handwoven carpets to these harvested fields and spread them out to fade in the dazzling summer sun. The strong sunlight exposure softens the bright, natural colors of the new rugs and rids them of unwanted elements. Image: Ozan Kose/AFP Spread out on the bare ground, the thousands of carpets create a kaleidoscopic patchwork on the outskirts of Antalya, a coastal city in southern Turkey. Image: Ozan Kose/AFP Hasan Topkara is one of the merchants who washes the knotted wool carpets and rugs from across Turkey. Once dried, he trims the fringes and any stray strands before spreading them out in the sun. He told news agency AFP that the area used to see up to 60,000 carpets spread out in the sun, a spectacular sight. Image: Ozan Kose/AFP Today, Topkara is one of the last to handle the carpets, with only around 15,000 spread out side by side on a 40-hectare (100-acre) area. Known as kilim, the flat, woven carpets and rugs are traditionally made from wool or cotton. Their origins lie in the Middle East, where they've played an essential role in culture and traditional crafts for thousands of years. Image: Ozan Kose/AFP Around 50 workers monitor the carpets day and night, turning them regularly and keeping an eye on the weather. When it rains, an extra 100 people from the nearby villages rush out to help fold up the rugs and take them to safety. The entire process takes about 45 minutes. When the clouds part, they help bring everything back out. Image: Ozan Kose/AFP As soon as the carpets fade to the desired shade, most are sent to Istanbul's Grand Bazaar, where they're often sold abroad. However, the carpet field has become a tourist attraction in its own right, especially since Turkish pop singer Mabel Matiz filmed a music video here in 2018. Image: Ozan Kose/AFP 08/16/2025 August 16, 2025

From Snoop Dogg To Tom Brady, Stars Flock To English Second-tier Clubs
From Snoop Dogg To Tom Brady, Stars Flock To English Second-tier Clubs

Int'l Business Times

time4 days ago

  • Int'l Business Times

From Snoop Dogg To Tom Brady, Stars Flock To English Second-tier Clubs

When Snoop Dogg sang the praises of Swansea City, it signalled the unlikely arrival of the latest celebrity owner in the once unfashionable Championship, English football's second tier. The American rapper has joined the Welsh club's ownership structure, investing an undisclosed sum to rub shoulders with former Real Madrid stalwart and World Cup finalist Luka Modric, who has also sunk his money into the club. "The story of the club and the area really struck a chord with me. This is a proud, working-class city and club. An underdog that bites back, just like me," Snoop said in an introductory video. In North Wales, Wrexham are dreaming of an extraordinary promotion to the Premier League this season on the back of the enthusiastic and lucrative support of Hollywood star Ryan "Deadpool" Reynolds and fellow actor Rob McElhenney. Meanwhile, former Super Bowl-winning quarterback Tom Brady has a minority stake in Birmingham City, very much the second club in England's second city after Premier League outfit Aston Villa. His arrival in 2023 was not met with universal approval, with one fan asking "Tom Brady, who's he?" in the Amazon Prime Video series "Built in Birmingham: Brady and the Blues" which follows his early, whirlwind involvement in the club that includes the sacking of manager Wayne Rooney. Brady says his is a "visionary role" and he tries -- not always successfully -- to pass on his experience of winning seven Super Bowl winner's rings to the Birmingham players and their young manager, Chris Davies. But why do so many celebrities want to invest a slice of their fortunes into the Championship? Christopher Winn, course leader at the University Campus of Football Business (UCFB), told AFP the principal reason was because they see it as an attractive investment -- with the carrot of the Premier League's riches if the team can gain promotion proving irresistible. "There is the notion of long-term returns, in other words buying low (in a lower league) and selling high," Winn told AFP. "While on-field success and subsequent off-field returns are no guarantee, should the promised land of the Premier League be reached, a significant profit would likely be generated on any future sale of the club, in other words generating returns for investors well beyond their initial investment and operational outlay. "Granted, that does not mean the investors are all out to make a return -- football can often be a game of utility maximisation after all, and for some a personally funded passion project." Brady's friend and co-owner at Birmingham, the New York-based investor Tom Wagner, reveals in the documentary they originally tried to buy a Premier League team but the deal fell through. Then the chance to snap up Birmingham presented itself. "We thought we could make some money, have a good return, which is our ultimate objective, so we just couldn't pass it up," Wagner says. Birmingham manager Davies has quickly felt the effect of having a sporting icon breathing down his neck -- he good-naturedly recounted to The Times that his attempts to relax on a family holiday in the Maldives were disrupted by Brady insisting on scheduling daily conference calls at the children's dinner time. In Wagner and Brady's first season, Birmingham crashed down into League One, or England's third division, but with Davies in charge they emphatically secured promotion to the Championship this year, romping away with the League One title with a record points total. That was largely due to the Americans' injection of funds for new players such as forward Jay Stansfield, acquired from Premier League club Fulham for GBP15 million ($20.3 million), a huge fee for League One. Celebrities are active behind the scenes at other Championship clubs. Birmingham kicked off the season last week with a 1-1 home draw against Ipswich Town, who count multi-million-selling music star Ed Sheeran among their financial backers. Ipswich confirmed last year that Sheeran had bought a 1.4% stake in his local club and he has been the shirt sponsor for the last four years - although in a cautionary tale for other star owners, his involvement did not stop Ipswich being relegated from the Premier League last season. NFL legend Tom Brady has a stake in English football club Birmingham City AFP Jay Stansfield and Tomoki Iwata are two of the players bought by Birmingham City's American owners AFP

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