Skip to content
Advertisement

A Turkish border town known for its cats - in times of peace

The border town of Van in Turkey is known for being a hub for Iranian travelers, its lavish breakfasts ... and its cats.

schedule 19:54 visibility 103 views
A Turkish border town known for its cats - in times of peace
Source: NPR News

VAN, Turkey - Turkey's eastern border province of Van is a hotbed of Iranian travelers, dissidents, and government officials.

NPR has reporters been reporting from Turkey's Van province on the war in Iran. Van butts right up against the snow-covered mountains that separate it from Iran.

During times of peace, however, Van area is well-known among tourists for something else entirely: its cats.

They are striking, white cats famous for a rare trait, in which their eyes are sometimes one green, one blue.

The Turkish government started protecting these cats about thirty years ago. The population of Van cats had dropped to as low as 120 cats, and they are susceptible to various diseases, experience on average a higher rate of deafness. But Turkey now breeds the felines.

About fifty of these Van cats are cared for, here, at what's called the Van Cat Villa, in town. The cats have become a local attraction. Marve Inoglu has come to see them, while visiting from Istanbul.

She says the Van cat likes to live in large groups together. "They are not meant to be pets," she says – though Van cats have been increasingly adopted as part of the Turkish government's breeding efforts.

The cats' carer, Baran Talib Urgan, says unlike most other cats, "the Van cat loves water."

The cats been known to swim in Lake Van. Some Kurdish legends here in Van say the cats are divinely blessed. Other folk tales trace them back to Noah's ark.

newspaper

Originally published at

NPR News

open_in_new Read Full Article

Related Articles

Misinformation complicates Ebola efforts
Travel

Misinformation complicates Ebola efforts

In tonight's programme, efforts to contain the Ebola outbreak are hampered by mistrust and rumors. Ruto defends Kenya’s preparedness measures, including a U.S.-supported Ebola quarantine facility. And Africans themselves drive tourism's growth on...

France 24

Read More

Germany news: More than 1,900 missing children
Travel

Germany news: More than 1,900 missing children

Authorities say there are 1,933 missing children cases nationwide, up 6.8% from the year before. And, travellers in Germany seem nervous when it comes to air travel, amid the war in Iran, a survey suggests. Follow DW.

DW News