When I arrived in Urfa, I realized that this trip would be special.
The city was my third stop in as many days and the first place I planned to linger. I wanted to take a handful of day trips, and I’d heard only good things about Urfa. Still, I wasn’t expecting to be immediately charmed.
Urfa was unlike any city I’d been to in Turkey, with its heavy Middle Eastern influence. It was still Turkey, undoubtedly, but there was a sheen of foreignness that made it possible to view the city with fresh eyes. I walked through the crowded market street and caught a whiff of the region’s famous Urfa peppers and remembered how the smells of Istanbul fascinated me so deeply when I first visited in 2008. The white winding back streets of the Old City reminded me of Jerusalem and Turkish Nicosia. Women walked by with purple headscarves and men with well-worn faces chatted in Kurdish and bartered over spices and nuts. There was such energy in the city center, and I was swept up by it.
After living in Istanbul, a city infamous for its lack of central and accessible green space, I was elated to find that Urfa’s city center also holds a large and sprawling park, complete with a stream that cuts straight through. By early evening, when the intense daytime heat began to dissipate, the park was swarmed with people of all ages enjoying the cool greenery. It’s a perfect place to stroll over bridges, sip a cup of tea, or sit on the grass and eat baklava.
The park is adjacent to two of Urfa’s main tourist attractions: The Pool of Sacred Fish and the cave where Abraham was born.
The Pool of Sacred Fish, or Balikligol, is one of the most famous places in Urfa, and the centerpiece of the Old City. The legend is that King Nimord was going to set fire to Abraham, but God transformed the fire into water and the coals into fish. Seeing a white fish means you will go to heaven. Eating the fish of the holy pool will cause you to go blind. (We didn’t test this.)
Legend aside, it’s a terrific place for people-watching and fish-watching. Tourists and locals alike are drawn to Balikligol, and the fish swim in swarms all over the pool. It’s a splendid place.
Abraham’s cave is across the park from Balikligol, attached to a mosque. Men and women have separate entrances, so I only saw a small part of the cave—the woman’s section was small and cool and rather crowded. I was more taken with the beautiful mosque courtyard and the mountain that towers above it, especially at the golden sunset hour.
Since 1984, the full name of the city has been Sanliurfa: Glorious Urfa. Though colloquially it’s still called by its shorter name, the longer name is true. Urfa IS glorious and nothing like what I expected. It’s cool winding Old City streets, green and lush parks, spice-fragranced markets and collection of legends was the perfect place to rediscover why I was ever drawn to Turkey in the first place.
14 Comments
Rebecca Gomez Farrell
August 21, 2014 at 10:20 AMBeautiful imagery and words. Urfa will join my ever-growing list of cities to experience.
Katrinka
August 21, 2014 at 10:23 PMThank you! There are so many interesting places to see in Turkey, the list just gets longer and longer 🙂
kami
August 21, 2014 at 4:38 PMThe places you describe and show are definitely the ones I’d love to explore in Turkey! I loved Istanbul but next time I go there I want to go to more remote, off the beaten path areas – and now with posts like this you bring me closer and closer to booking a ticket there! 🙂
Katrinka
August 21, 2014 at 10:24 PMCome to Turkey, Kami!!
Polly
August 22, 2014 at 5:20 PMI looove your people shots here! The grain and black/white, minimal color is really doing it for me.
Bunty McCabe Albert
August 24, 2014 at 7:59 PMThe black and white photos are ALL superb. Thanks for the continuing tour of Turkey to which I doubt that I will ever go.
Katrinka
October 3, 2014 at 10:40 PMYou’re welcome! You should certainly travel here, if you ever have the chance.
Tom @ Waegook Tom
August 26, 2014 at 6:24 PMArgh, this post makes me so wish I’d visited Sanliurfa when I spent a month in Turkey in 2010 – I opted for Gaziantep instead, and ended up DESPISING that city (ripping off anyone who doesn’t speak Turkish/German when prices are clearly displayed, lack of anything to do, overrated and mediocre food). Maybe I’ll have to visit on a return trip. Also, have you been to Malatya yet? I LOVED Malatya – the mosque that lights up at night, the tree-lined boulevards and parks, the random people that will stop you on the street and say, “welcome” and thank you for visiting their city. Loved it.
Katrinka
October 3, 2014 at 10:41 PMI haven’t been to Malatya! I thought about flying in there to go to Nemrut, but it was cheaper to go to Gaziantep. I will have to check it out, hopefully during apricot season. And next time you’re in Turkey, definitely check out Urfa!
Franca
September 1, 2014 at 3:03 PMI’m so glad I stumble on your blog and I don’t know why I never did before. I love your photography, really impressive! The place you describe here sounds exactly like the one I’d love to visit. I’ve been wanting to go to Turkey for long time, it’s probably time to make it happen 🙂
Katrinka
October 3, 2014 at 10:41 PMThank you so much! You should definitely come here if you have a chance.
Cassandra
October 3, 2014 at 10:38 PMThese images are arresting and beautiful. Since you mention that the color white was prevalent throughout the city, it makes sense that you chose to focus on black and white photography.
Speaking of white–did you guys see any of those white fish?
Katrinka
October 3, 2014 at 10:42 PMThank you so much! Sometimes certain cities call for monochrome, and this was definitely one of those. And we didn’t see the white fish, so I’ll have to work a little harder to get to heaven 🙂
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October 7, 2014 at 4:31 PM[…] having seen these beautiful photos of Şanlıurfa by Katrina, Pinkie wants to stop by this city when eventually we’ll make it to Turkey. Pinkie is fascinated […]