On the verdant, fertile Gallipoli Peninsula in northwest Turkey, headscarf-clad women in colorful clothes harvest grapes in the blistering late summer heat.
However, they will never taste the flavors of the wine that will emerge from the grapes they pick.
“We eat the grapes, but have never drunk wine, none of us drink wine,” said Aynur, the head of the picking team.
Photo: AFP
Turkey is an overwhelmingly Muslim country and, with alcohol considered to be haram (prohibited) under Islam, many will not touch a drop throughout their lives.
Yet, the country is blessed with an ideal climate for viniculture, with hot, but humid weather and even a long wine-making tradition.
“The climate is very suitable, we have warm summers, we have humidity in the air, so the plants are very active and very happy,” said Mark Sims, the Australian vineyard manager at Suvla, the main producer on the peninsula.
Suvla started up in Gallipoli in the 2000s, mainly with French grape varieties such as Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot.
However, most wine in Turkey is made from more than a half-dozen native grape varieties, such as Kalecik Karasi, Okuzgozu and Narince, although growers increasingly use European varieties, partly in a bid to find new markets.
According to the International Organisation of Vine and Wine, Turkey has the fifth-largest area of vineyards under production in the world.
However, most of the grapes are destined to be eaten as fresh or dried fruit. Turkey accounts for just 0.05 percent of global wine production and 0.06 percent of consumption, according to the California-based Wine Institute.
“The vast majority of grapes are used for other purposes, largely due to religious reasons,” said Murat Yanki, a sommelier, who runs Turkish wine tourism Web site vinotolia.com.
As well as the Gallipoli Peninsula, its main producers are concentrated on the Aegean coast, in central Anatolia and a small area in the southeast.
“It’s correct to say there is an excellent quality due to an improvement in the vineyards and the treatments, especially in the last 10 years,” Yanki said.
However, foreign interest was weak, with just 2 percent exported, he said.
Belgium is the biggest market abroad for Turkish wine, followed by breakaway northern Cyprus, recognized only by Turkey, Turkish Ministry of Economy data showed. Exports also go to Germany, Britain and the US.
However, winemakers complain that high taxes and a tightening of regulations under the Muslim-rooted government of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan have hampered business.
In 2013, Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party pushed through the Turkish Grand National Assembly a controversial law on alcohol sales and drinking that also banned advertising.
The law halted alcohol sales between 10pm and 6am and prohibited them in the immediate vicinity of schools and mosques.
Erdogan justified the measures on public health grounds, while the government argued that the move was simply to regulate, not ban, consumption.
Restrictions on alcohol sales in Turkey are nothing new. In the 17th century, Ottoman Sultan Murad IV famously banned tobacco, coffee and alcohol — although he ironically died of alcoholism.
All forms of alcohol advertising are now outlawed in Turkey. If an alcoholic brand is in a shot during a TV report, it is blurred out. Producers have turned to social media to try to counter the ban.
It is also illegal to order any alcohol over the Internet, although it remains available in supermarkets.
The ban on advertising wine and Internet sales “have had a negative influence on the expansion of wine culture in the country,” Yanki said.
However, an even greater obstacle for producers might be a special consumption tax, in addition to an 18 percent value-added tax on alcohol purchases in Turkey.
Alcohol has been a favorite fiscal target of the Justice and Development Party since rising to power in 2002.
Rising prices have led to a sharp drop in wine consumption in recent years.
About 62 million liters of wine were consumed in Turkey in 2014 and 63 million in 2015, but the figure fell to 51 million last year, Turkish Tobacco and Alcohol Market Regulatory Authority data showed.
Despite the problems, the picture is not all grim for producers.
“This is the way it is now, it will be different in future,” said Hikmet Ataman, a winemaker at Suvla. “What matters is the soil and climate that we already have.”
Sims expressed optimism that Turkish wine was on its way to finding greater worldwide acclaim and said that some varieties were showing “huge potential in an international market.”
Turkish wines have recently won gold medals in international competitions. Nevertheless, wine exports have remained largely flat over the past few years.
“The current export quantity of the Turkish wine sector is not at the level it deserves, considering the volume of grape production,” the ministry said in a recent survey of the sector.
However, for the workers in the field, the taste of the wine will remain a mystery.
“Some hodjas [respected elders] say the money we earn is haram, but we don’t have any other income, we work for our bread and butter,” said Aysel, who also works at the vineyard. “We never drink. We work. We put in our labor here.”
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