The Prague Post - Living like sultans: Istanbul's pampered street cats

EUR -
AED 4.287277
AFN 73.534047
ALL 95.535658
AMD 433.255886
ANG 2.089168
AOA 1071.497689
ARS 1623.031705
AUD 1.640733
AWG 2.103893
AZN 1.98615
BAM 1.9502
BBD 2.351647
BDT 143.258643
BGN 1.947023
BHD 0.440496
BIF 3473.612335
BMD 1.167208
BND 1.490913
BOB 8.067834
BRL 5.859973
BSD 1.167547
BTN 110.683181
BWP 15.781617
BYN 3.28766
BYR 22877.28554
BZD 2.348257
CAD 1.597803
CDF 2707.923829
CHF 0.923496
CLF 0.02684
CLP 1056.335279
CNY 7.981663
CNH 7.990435
COP 4243.981581
CRC 530.975343
CUC 1.167208
CUP 30.931024
CVE 110.738925
CZK 24.385788
DJF 207.435635
DKK 7.471182
DOP 69.303018
DZD 154.880392
EGP 61.854227
ERN 17.508127
ETB 183.251225
FJD 2.576732
FKP 0.863876
GBP 0.866074
GEL 3.139661
GGP 0.863876
GHS 13.060425
GIP 0.863876
GMD 85.206348
GNF 10242.25367
GTQ 8.920348
GYD 244.277528
HKD 9.147354
HNL 31.059053
HRK 7.532224
HTG 152.920899
HUF 366.01964
IDR 20253.109151
ILS 3.469468
IMP 0.863876
INR 110.785298
IQD 1529.043064
IRR 1535462.710691
ISK 143.765356
JEP 0.863876
JMD 183.084287
JOD 0.827541
JPY 187.221423
KES 150.72194
KGS 102.04822
KHR 4680.505971
KMF 492.561567
KPW 1050.448694
KRW 1737.635283
KWD 0.359488
KYD 0.973002
KZT 540.79714
LAK 25649.405231
LBP 104931.24418
LKR 373.038846
LRD 214.6205
LSL 19.690933
LTL 3.446463
LVL 0.706033
LYD 7.412088
MAD 10.812727
MDL 20.100198
MGA 4843.914897
MKD 61.616412
MMK 2451.113911
MNT 4177.306165
MOP 9.425236
MRU 46.664671
MUR 54.648196
MVR 18.039184
MWK 2032.68877
MXN 20.467466
MYR 4.613742
MZN 74.590422
NAD 19.690846
NGN 1605.681849
NIO 42.848653
NOK 10.885626
NPR 177.092732
NZD 2.001657
OMR 0.448622
PAB 1.167547
PEN 4.113233
PGK 5.065655
PHP 72.057606
PKR 325.505215
PLN 4.261974
PYG 7264.141546
QAR 4.252722
RON 5.101285
RSD 117.426982
RUB 87.223313
RWF 1705.291539
SAR 4.377744
SBD 9.383002
SCR 16.262421
SDG 700.904949
SEK 10.88224
SGD 1.496013
SHP 0.871439
SLE 28.708195
SLL 24475.773032
SOS 667.061996
SRD 43.724768
STD 24158.858246
STN 24.744819
SVC 10.216664
SYP 129.250943
SZL 19.667131
THB 38.249799
TJS 10.946022
TMT 4.091066
TND 3.375859
TOP 2.810358
TRY 52.675186
TTD 7.939203
TWD 36.93222
TZS 3028.905729
UAH 51.46223
UGX 4349.510697
USD 1.167208
UYU 46.466575
UZS 14064.861924
VES 566.782129
VND 30762.945801
VUV 138.164995
WST 3.169993
XAF 654.076066
XAG 0.016361
XAU 0.000257
XCD 3.154439
XCG 2.104258
XDR 0.814383
XOF 652.469442
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.525117
ZAR 19.64992
ZMK 10506.279751
ZMW 22.03772
ZWL 375.840643
  • RBGPF

    -0.5300

    63.47

    -0.84%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    15.22

    +0.13%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.82

    -0.04%

  • RIO

    -2.0000

    96.49

    -2.07%

  • BTI

    -1.0200

    57.45

    -1.78%

  • RELX

    -0.2100

    35.8

    -0.59%

  • AZN

    -1.4800

    185.2

    -0.8%

  • GSK

    -3.0700

    51.4

    -5.97%

  • BCE

    -0.2400

    23.26

    -1.03%

  • BP

    0.4500

    46.8

    +0.96%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    15.34

    -0.98%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    12.74

    -0.55%

  • CMSD

    -0.1400

    23.06

    -0.61%

  • BCC

    -3.6100

    79

    -4.57%

  • NGG

    -1.4700

    85.98

    -1.71%

Living like sultans: Istanbul's pampered street cats
Living like sultans: Istanbul's pampered street cats / Photo: Yasin AKGUL - AFP

Living like sultans: Istanbul's pampered street cats

Kanyon is getting fat: since someone stole his basket, this white cat with grey markings who lives at an Istanbul shopping centre has been showered with snacks, love and affection.

Text size:

News of his plight brought out countless well-wishers, who have handed him endless supplies of food, toys, a comfortable cat house -- and his very own Instagram page run by a fan.

He's not alone: according to City Hall, Istanbul has more than 160,000 cats living on its streets who are regularly fed and fussed over by the city's 16 million residents.

These street cats are looked after with an almost religious devotion.

Whether on the Asian or European side of Istanbul -- or the ferries connecting them -- cats can be seen everywhere, snoozing on restaurant chairs, wandering through supermarkets or curled up in shop windows.

And they are rarely, if ever, disturbed.

"Istanbulites love animals. Here, cats can walk into shops and curl up on the most expensive of fabrics. That's why they call it 'the city of cats'," explains Gaye Koselerden, 57, looking at Kanyon's toy-filled corner which looks like a child's bedroom.

- From pre-Ottoman times -

Like Kanyon, many strays have turned into much-loved neighbourhood mascots.

In Kadikoy, locals set up a bronze statue in 2016 to immortalise Tombili (Turkish for "chubby"), a pot-bellied feline whose characteristic pose -- lounging on benches with one paw draped over the edge -- spawned countless internet memes.

When Gli, the tabby mascot of Istanbul's sixth-century Hagia Sofia basilica-turned-mosque, died, an obituary in the Turkish press recalled how she was stroked by US president Barack Obama when he visited in 2009.

At the neighbouring Topkapi Palace, for years the opulent residence of the Ottoman sultans, they have just restored a centuries-old cat flap.

"Cats have always been here, no doubt because they are clean and close to humans," the site's director Ilhan Kocaman told AFP.

The presence of so many cats in the city has often been explained with reference to "the deep affection the Prophet Muhammad had for them", explained Altan Armutak, an expert at Istanbul University's veterinary history department.

When Ottomans seized Constantinople in 1453, "they found cats waiting to be fed outside fish stalls and butchers' shops," he said.

"Giving the cats food was seen as an offering in the name of God."

- 'Living side by side' -

Six centuries later, cats have retained their historic presence in Istanbul, although these days City Hall is trying to manage their numbers, sterilising more than 43,000 cats last year, 12 times more than in 2015.

And the authorities are concerned about residents' often over-generous offerings of food, which they fear is encouraging the spread of rodents.

"Normally, cats chase rats. But in Istanbul, you can see the rats eating the food alongside the cats. We must tackle this," the region's governor Davut Gul recently warned.

Although several such clips did the rounds on social media, they seem to have had a limited impact.

"I've lived here for four months and I've never seen a single rat," said Fatime Ozarslan, a 22-year-old student originally from Germany as she put out a sachet of wet food in Macka Park, which is home to at least 100 cats.

"In Germany, we have many rats, but here, with so many cats, they must be afraid," she smiled.

Without its cats, Istanbul just would not be the same, she said.

"Here people and cats live side by side, as equals."

D.Dvorak--TPP