Istanbul’s Santa Bear says Merry New Year’smas

Zeynep Tufekci
The Message
Published in
5 min readDec 31, 2014

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I’ve left the United States for Istanbul for the holidays, and came back to my country of origin Turkey, a majority Muslim country, but I can’t avoid Jingle Bells. Or Santa Claus. Or Christmas trees. Or candy cane lights. Or street peddlers hawk Santa hats…

This isn’t Christmas “Xmas”, because it happens without the traditional religious part, and it happens on New Year’s Eve.

Like all good rituals, it is a story reappropriation.

And like most rituals, it’s also a story of polarization, a way of marking us versus them.

But Santa Bear appears to have made peace, however tentative, something he’s been doing for millenia in this part of the world.

Here Santa is no mere jolly old man with gifts. He’s a symbol of everything that has torn this country, and this region for centuries.

But he’s also a peacemaker.

Last year during the holidays, I walked by a mosque where a Turkish nationalist political organization had hung a banner proclaiming that “We don’t belong with Santa who brings gifts at New Year’s Eve.”

Yes, besides being a symbol of political polarization, and rebellion or sell-out depending on your side, he comes to these parts of the world on New Year’s Eve.

Let’s call it Merry New Year’smas.

In Turkey Santa is also a jolly old man in a red suit, who rides a reindeer sleigh. (No chimneys, though, Istanbul is a land of apartments and high-rises so no chimneys for him to come down from to houses). He does bring gifts to place under a duly decorated “New Year’s Eve”tree.

Except sometimes he’s not a fat old man—that part seems not to have caught. I kept encountering fairly thin Santa’s which were as jarring as the fact that they were waiting for the New Year’smas.

And, of course, Santa protesters proclamations aside, Santa is from this part of the world.

St.Nicholas, originally from Demre (or Myra), Antalya was a rich man who is said to have given secret gifts, including money, especially to people in trouble. His most famous act of charity was giving bags of gold coins to a poor family so the three daughters could have a dowry to marry, one bag per daughter. It is said that maybe he threw those bags of gold down the chimney, or put them in the stockings of the daughters who had hung them to dry, so the legend goes. But who knows? But that legend evolved, and merged with other legends, including SinterKlaas of Netherlands, and turned into the recognizable Santa Claus I now see at every other street corner in store windows.

And historians believe that Xmas itself an appropriation of pagan Winter Solstice celebrations. Origins of the reason that it’s on December 25th also goes back to a place now in modern Turkey: That was date selected by the council of Nicea, in 4th century AD. Nicea is now called İznik, a place I knew growing up only as a sleepy town one went to eat and purchase fresh trout. In the beginnings of the Christian era, the local pagans wanted to celebrate the winter solstice festival, called Saturnalia, and hence Christian religious symbolism was merged with a festival of Winter Solstice.

So, Santa helped make peace between the pagan and Christmas populations by merging rituals and celebrations.

The next twist comes when modern Turkey, a Republic from the ashes of the Ottoman Empire, where the caliphate ended, switched from the lunar-based Muslim calendar to the current Western in 1925, and celebrating New Year’s Eve has had a contested history since. New Year’s Eve came to symbolize the new order, and rejecting it became a rejection of that.

What happened goes back to the uber ritual of it all: gift giving. Contested or not, New Year’s Eve absorbed all the ritual of gift-giving: Santa, sleighs and Jingle Bells.

With the rise of an Islamist government in Turkey, the picture Santa and Christmas trees became symbols of rebellion: I’ve even seen people decorating them with flags adorned with Turkey’s secular founder, Ataturk.

But regardless of the political polarization, giving gifts is popular — popular because merchants of all stripes like people to buy gifts, of course, but not just because. Like most commercialized rituals, it is based on something that people enjoy: giving gifts. Hence many malls, even in Islamic neighborhoods are decorated with recognizable Christmas decorations — though, again, remember, here, they celebrate New Year’s Eve, gifts exchanged at on December 31st.

But Santa, the rebel, has an uneasy role in it all, and shopping malls in more religious neighborhoods in Istanbul hence face a dilemma: they want to partake in this ritual, while minimizing the political significance of it all.

Hence, meet the Santa Bear, greeting shoppers in a shopping mall decorated for New Year’smas, where people from all walks of life seem to revel in taking their pictures taken with this new character.

From a pagan celebrations in this part of the world, to a local kind man who believed in giving away his money, and now to a bear to ease the polarization, Santa’s historical role seems to be making peace between rituals, in this birthplace of so many civilizations.

I like this Santa.

Merry New Year’smas.

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Zeynep Tufekci
The Message

Thinking about our tools, ourselves. Assistant prof at UNC iSchool. Princeton CITP fellow, Harvard Berkman faculty associate, Sociology.