Zürcher Nachrichten - Ancient Antioch turns into container city year after quake

EUR -
AED 3.891654
AFN 72.048269
ALL 98.156894
AMD 412.125334
ANG 1.909718
AOA 966.819702
ARS 1061.363933
AUD 1.621899
AWG 1.9013
AZN 1.805203
BAM 1.962133
BBD 2.139505
BDT 126.628699
BGN 1.956713
BHD 0.399389
BIF 3071.046762
BMD 1.05953
BND 1.419522
BOB 7.348927
BRL 6.112848
BSD 1.05965
BTN 89.487358
BWP 14.41653
BYN 3.467692
BYR 20766.781626
BZD 2.135954
CAD 1.478944
CDF 3040.850323
CHF 0.934955
CLF 0.037296
CLP 1029.110366
CNY 7.670144
CNH 7.664733
COP 4658.222215
CRC 538.653778
CUC 1.05953
CUP 28.077536
CVE 110.853302
CZK 25.289492
DJF 188.299669
DKK 7.458655
DOP 64.108714
DZD 141.178959
EGP 52.487722
ERN 15.892945
ETB 129.024183
FJD 2.399358
FKP 0.836305
GBP 0.835397
GEL 2.887188
GGP 0.836305
GHS 16.834192
GIP 0.836305
GMD 74.692382
GNF 9143.740937
GTQ 8.180635
GYD 221.585175
HKD 8.247008
HNL 26.673653
HRK 7.5579
HTG 139.199271
HUF 408.451175
IDR 16789.995921
ILS 3.966074
IMP 0.836305
INR 89.43633
IQD 1388.513639
IRR 44611.496516
ISK 145.49491
JEP 0.836305
JMD 168.062428
JOD 0.751521
JPY 163.89967
KES 137.211295
KGS 91.657202
KHR 4291.095354
KMF 492.442897
KPW 953.576306
KRW 1476.544665
KWD 0.325615
KYD 0.88305
KZT 525.822
LAK 23256.676351
LBP 94880.882412
LKR 308.295035
LRD 191.510041
LSL 19.155914
LTL 3.128516
LVL 0.640899
LYD 5.160237
MAD 10.5688
MDL 19.258156
MGA 4937.408272
MKD 61.523239
MMK 3441.311054
MNT 3600.281778
MOP 8.495018
MRU 42.291155
MUR 49.035374
MVR 16.369686
MWK 1839.343944
MXN 21.317634
MYR 4.739236
MZN 67.767438
NAD 104.930498
NGN 1779.321396
NIO 38.937398
NOK 11.628546
NPR 143.180174
NZD 1.79203
OMR 0.407938
PAB 1.05965
PEN 4.020923
PGK 4.261402
PHP 62.380335
PKR 294.338605
PLN 4.333959
PYG 8252.635715
QAR 3.857219
RON 4.977683
RSD 117.007017
RUB 106.560676
RWF 1451.555654
SAR 3.977625
SBD 8.867754
SCR 14.395509
SDG 637.307936
SEK 11.567235
SGD 1.41737
SHP 0.836305
SLE 23.998292
SLL 22217.812533
SOS 605.501854
SRD 37.654097
STD 21930.125086
SVC 9.271926
SYP 2662.099944
SZL 19.15627
THB 36.585466
TJS 11.263754
TMT 3.718949
TND 3.334869
TOP 2.481527
TRY 36.537562
TTD 7.195427
TWD 34.298568
TZS 2811.972625
UAH 43.746594
UGX 3901.592547
USD 1.05953
UYU 45.486811
UZS 13588.468184
VES 48.506918
VND 26917.351388
VUV 125.789492
WST 2.957773
XAF 658.099677
XAG 0.033918
XAU 0.000403
XCD 2.863432
XDR 0.806001
XOF 656.908534
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.779053
ZAR 19.150573
ZMK 9537.040727
ZMW 29.27331
ZWL 341.168123
  • RBGPF

    -0.4400

    59.75

    -0.74%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1600

    6.69

    -2.39%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    8.92

    0%

  • RELX

    0.2500

    45.29

    +0.55%

  • CMSC

    -0.0590

    24.565

    -0.24%

  • NGG

    0.6800

    63.58

    +1.07%

  • RIO

    0.3100

    62.43

    +0.5%

  • SCS

    -0.1100

    13.09

    -0.84%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.26

    +0.23%

  • BP

    -0.3300

    29.09

    -1.13%

  • BTI

    0.2500

    36.93

    +0.68%

  • BCC

    -3.3600

    138.18

    -2.43%

  • AZN

    0.4100

    63.8

    +0.64%

  • GSK

    -0.2300

    33.46

    -0.69%

  • CMSD

    -0.0460

    24.344

    -0.19%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    27.31

    +0.29%

Ancient Antioch turns into container city year after quake
Ancient Antioch turns into container city year after quake / Photo: Ozan KOSE - AFP

Ancient Antioch turns into container city year after quake

Mevlude Aydin cannot bring herself to visit the graves of her daughter and husband or the dozen other relatives she lost in Turkey's catastrophic earthquake one year ago.

Text size:

The trauma of seeing her ancient home city of Antakya turned into unrecognisable ruins is too much for the 41-year-old to bear.

"Our Hatay is gone. Completely gone," Aydin said at one of the depressingly cramped container homes the government has built for survivors across the devastated Hatay province of which Antakya is the capital.

"I want to go to the cemetery to visit our children but I simply can't. I just don't want to see the city in that state. I get physically sick. My sugar levels spike."

The February 6, 2023, disaster killed more than 50,000 people and erased swathes of entire cities across Turkey's southeast in the middle of the night.

No place was affected more than Antakya -- a mountain-rimmed cradle of Muslim and Christian civilisations known throughout history as Antioch.

Ninety percent of its buildings were lost and more than 20,000 people died in the city and its surrounding province.

Antakya's survivors have been left to deal with the shock in fenced-off camps comprised of hundreds of identical homes that look like shipping containers.

Families have access to running water and power that the government offers for free.

But grim-faced police guarding their entrances give these miniature metal cities the air of prison camps.

- 'No purpose' -

Cagla Ezer sits on the opposite end of the flattened city in a similar container and mourns the life she has lost.

"There is never any excitement any more. No purpose," the 31-year-old mother of two said.

"The goal is to get through another day, to survive the day unharmed."

Local leaders estimate that Hatay's population has shrunk to 250,000 from 1.7 million since the quake. Nearly 190,000 had been housed in containers by November.

Most of those who remained in the province had no relatives to stay with in other parts of Turkey or were simply too attached to their land.

But that land bears little resemblance to what stood before the first 7.8-magnitude quake struck.

Antakya has been transformed from a bustling city with a pulsating nightlife and ancient architecture into a patchwork of vast empty spaces and skeletal remains of buildings.

Standing all alone in the centre of one such debris-strewn field is the green metal container of Fevzi Sislioglu.

The 65-year-old throat cancer survivor set it up with the help of some kind-hearted neighbours at the spot where his hardware store once stood.

"I am selling whatever wasn't looted from my original store," Sislioglu said in a barely audible voice.

"I have no electricity here, no water and very few customers. But I have to keep going. I have to take care of my wife and two children."

- 'Morale boost' -

The remaining vendors of Antakya's Uzun Carsi bazaar -- a partially covered network of 1,500 shops that was once an important stop on the ancient Silk Road -- looked equally glum.

Officials intend to start bulldozing its remaining buildings as a safety precaution by May.

The plan is for a new and safer bazaar to emerge in its place.

"Hopefully we will see better days and have an even more beautiful market," shop association president Mehmet Hancer Gunduz said over a glass of turnip juice.

"I believe in that."

The glow coming from the Umut Et restaurant (meaning either "Umut's Meat" or "Keep the Hope") offers Resim Devir and his family a rare reason to smile.

The original eatery was destroyed and a new one built using only wood and steel.

Many survivors still fear entering cement buildings because so many of them crumbled and trapped initial survivors under tonnes of debris.

"It's one of the few places where you can escape the stress," Devir said over a multi-course meal.

"We need a morale boost to survive these days."

- Children's games -

Umut Et owner Mustafa Kassab thinks it will take at least one or two generations for Antakya to start resembling its former self -- and for normal business to return.

"People have still not been able to overcome the psychological effects of the earthquake," Kassab said. "And financially, they are strapped."

Yazgin Danisma can see the pain reflected in the games her three children play in the paved and soulless alleys between rows of containers in her fenced off camp.

"I can hear the children talk among themselves about running away. But I still want to live in Antakya," the 31-year-old said.

"The children have developed a fear. Whenever they play, the game always ends in a pretend earthquake," she said.

H.Roth--NZN