A horse's tomb that has become a place of pilgrimage, a tree held up by
a pillar in the garden of a Sufi convent that would herald the end of
the world if it fell down, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk's glass, a carpet that
predicts the end of the Ottoman empire, fragments from the Black Stone
of Mecca, the covering of a fountain from Pearl Harbor in the Pacific, a
church under the protection of Muhammad, a synagogue that was a landmark
for Ashkenazi Jews, a garment worn by the Prophet that was inadvertently
ironed, a handful of hot ash that saved the Ottoman empire. Far from the
crowds and the usual clichés, Istanbul is still a reserve of
well-concealed treasures only revealed to those who know how to wander
off the beaten track, whether residents or visitors. An indispensable
guide for those who thought they knew Istanbul well, or who would like
to discover the hidden face of the city.