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Living like sultans: İstanbul’s pampered street cats

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Kanyon is getting fat: Since someone stole his basket, this white cat with grey markings who lives at an İstanbul shopping center has been showered with snacks, love and affection.

News of his plight brought out countless well-wishers, who have handed him endless supplies of food, toys, a comfortable cat house — and his very own Instagram page run by a fan.

He’s not alone. According to City Hall, İstanbul has more than 160,000 cats living on its streets who are regularly fed and fussed over by the city’s 16 million residents.

These street cats are looked after with an almost religious devotion.

Whether on the Asian or European side of İstanbul, or the ferries connecting them, cats can be seen everywhere, snoozing on restaurant chairs, wandering through supermarkets or curled up in shop windows.

And they are rarely, if ever, disturbed.

“İstanbulites love animals. Here, cats can walk into shops and curl up on the most expensive of fabrics. That’s why they call it ‘the city of cats’,” explains Gaye Köselerden, 57, looking at Kanyon’s toy-filled corner which looks like a child’s bedroom.

From pre-Ottoman times

Like Kanyon, many strays have turned into much-loved neighborhood mascots.

In Kadıköy, locals set up a bronze statue in 2016 to immortalize Tombili (Turkish for “chubby”), a pot-bellied feline whose characteristic pose, lounging on benches with one paw draped over the edge, spawned countless internet memes.

When Gli, the tabby mascot of İstanbul’s sixth-century Hagia Sofia basilica-turned-mosque, died, an obituary in the Turkish press recalled how she was stroked by US president Barack Obama when he visited in 2009.

At the neighboring Topkapı Palace, for years the opulent residence of the Ottoman sultans, they have just restored a centuries-old cat flap.

“Cats have always been here, no doubt because they are clean and close to humans,” the site’s director, İlhan Kocaman, told Agence France-Presse.

The presence of so many cats in the city has often been explained with reference to “the deep affection the Prophet Muhammad had for them,” explained Altan Armutak, an expert at İstanbul University’s veterinary history department.

When Ottomans seized Constantinople in 1453, “they found cats waiting to be fed outside fish stalls and butchers’ shops,” he said.

“Giving the cats food was seen as an offering in the name of God.”

‘Living side by side’

Six centuries later, cats have retained their historic presence in İstanbul, although these days City Hall is trying to manage their numbers, sterilizing more than 43,000 cats last year, 12 times more than in 2015.

And the authorities are concerned about residents’ often over-generous offerings of food, which they fear is encouraging the spread of rodents.

“Normally, cats chase rats. But in İstanbul, you can see the rats eating the food alongside the cats. We must tackle this,” the region’s governor, Davut Gül, recently warned.

Although several such clips did the rounds on social media, they seem to have had a limited impact.

“I’ve lived here for four months and I’ve never seen a single rat,” said Fatime Özarslan, a 22-year-old student originally from Germany as she put out a packet of wet food in Maçka Park, which is home to at least 100 cats.

“In Germany, we have many rats, but here, with so many cats, they must be afraid,” she said, smiling.

Without its cats, İstanbul just would not be the same, she said.

“Here people and cats live side by side, as equals.”

© Agence France-Presse

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