A Turkish Delight
Country Life UK|December 13 & 20, 2017
EDINBURGH is very civilised and yet so jagged and wild. It’s even heftier when you see it through the window of a consular limousine. The Turks recently upgraded their diplomatic mission there to a Consul-Generalship and they’ve provided their Consul-General with a new consulate and a BMW driven by an affable Turkish close-protection officer with a slight Scots burr.
Jason Goodwin
A Turkish Delight
One of the consul’s tasks is to keep Turkish students amused and another is to maintain the national reputation for hospitality, which enfolded me from the moment my feet touched the ground at Waverley Station.

Kemal collected me in the consular limo. I met the consul in his office. He walked me to a very good lunch at a Turkish restaurant in New Town and, after my address to the University Turkish Society, we visited a kebab shop for dinner, where the choice lay between battered fish or shish kebab. Both came with chips and the consul smoked a cigar.

I have to say that all the Edinburgh people I meet (all the Turks anyway—I can’t speak for the natives because I scarcely met any) seemed to be enjoying life in the Athens of the North. A lot of them, apparently, are tailors or barbers and the consul checks in with them now and then to see that they’re happy.

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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 13 & 20, 2017-Ausgabe von Country Life UK.

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