The Kurdish herbalist reaches for a sachet as fragrant as a wild meadow, garnished with linden, rosehip, slivers of dried ginger, cinnamon stick and a touch of mystery.
It is the tea his mother, Haci Nahide, makes to fight flu and colds.
“It’s the mixture she made for me when I was a kid. Winters were harsh,” Suleyman Onur recalled with a smile, surrounded by hundreds of herbal teas, spices and aromatic herbs.
Photo: AFP
Each is bagged or tied in bouquets piled high on the shelves of the oldest herbal shop in Diyarbakir, a restless predominantly Kurdish city in Turkey’s southeast, not far from Syria, Iraq and Iran.
The shop, named Joseph the Blind, was established in 1891 and has kept the nickname of its founder, a Chaldean Catholic of the Syriac rite whose descendants moved to Istanbul in the 1950s, ceding the shop to Onur’s parents.
Its black lacquered cabinet drawers are from that period, but its walls are relatively new.
“The first store was destroyed in 1977,” Onur said.
The Turkish government at the time opened up the streets of the historic quarter to traffic, which once had to wind through a mesh of alleys hugging the ancient black basalt wall running along Diyarbakir’s central Sur district.
The city center had to be rebuilt yet again in the wake of violent clashes between Kurdish militants and government forces in 2015 and 2016.
Now 57 years old, Onur no longer remembers the original shop.
When he took over with his brother, Seyyaf, after their father’s death, the shop was already at its current location, in a new alley, far too cramped for its wealth of herbal treasures.
A window counter serves customers directly on the street, saving space for Onur — belly tucked and shoulders hunched — to scoot around piles of thyme and jars of chili paste.
The shopkeeper is expansive about the virtues of the potions made from the herbs collected around Diyarbakir.
The region, framed by mountains and bathed by two rivers that defined ancient Mesopotamia — the Tigris and the Euphrates — was attached to the Ottoman Empire in the 16th century.
Its granaries, along with those of Egypt, fed Ottoman armies in wars fought over the centuries against the Persian shahs and Russian czars.
“Diyarbakir has rich flora thanks to its geographical location, geomorphologic structure and influence of various climate types,” said Alevcan Kaplan, a pharmacological botanist at Batman University.
A study by his university of the region’s medicinal plants discovered 406 species and 226 genera, 56 of which are endemic to the lands around Diyarbakir.
Many of them offer relief for respiratory, dental and urinary infections, as well as high blood pressure and stomach problems.
“We have our own pickers,” Onur said, adding that he sells “nothing that has not been tested and proven” to work.
From morning to night the shop is bustling with activity.
Among the first customers, an elegant sexagenarian, sent by his wife, unfolded an impressive shopping list.
A young man walked in to ask about the price of saffron, which is US$1,350 per kilogram, and left shocked.
Then an elderly woman waddled in to ask about a kidney problem.
The neighborhood’s young and impeccably dressed butcher, Hurrem Yalcin, came in to pick up spices for her sucuk — a dry Turkish sausage — “We come here because we trust them. They are the only ones who know our recipe,” she said.
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