Turkey opens airspace to spare Italian baby's life

In the midst of the conclusion of Turkish airspace due to the coronavirus flare-up, it freed it up to an Italian stream to spare the life of a 2-year-old Italian kid.

Italy's National Transplant

On March 14, Dr. Massimo Cardillo, the leader of Italy's National Transplant Center, sent an email approaching Turkish experts for help with the feeble little child, as per Turkish human services sources.

The mail said that after an extensive hunt of universal benefactor banks, the perfect giver for the baby anticipating an undifferentiated cell transplant was found in Turkey, included the sources, who asked not to be named because of limitations on addressing the media.

In spite of the fact that at that point Turkey had shut its airspace because of the COVID-19 risk, Turkey's Health Ministry and Foreign Ministry made a unique special case right now spare the little child's life.

The perfect benefactor was found and given by Turkey's Stem Cell Coordination Center.

On March 31, a stream took off from Rome and was permitted to land at Istanbul Airport.


The undeveloped cells were then conveyed to the Italian group by Turkish specialists in a secluded room at the air terminal.

The Italian group took the cells to Rome without occurrence and conveyed them to the medical clinic for transplantation to the little child.

Nicoletta Sacchi, chief of the Italian Bone Marrow Donor Registry, said they will always remember Turkey's assistance during this troublesome period.

"I stretch out my gratitude to the giver, the primary legend of the occasion. We're appreciative to both Turkey and the contributor," he said.

Due to the coronavirus pandemic, which has slaughtered a huge number of individuals worldwide since rising last December, numerous nations, including Turkey, have shut their airspace to both global and local flights.

Performer records Hagia Sofia acoustics

The acoustics of Istanbul's famous Hagia Sofia was recorded just because all the while with eight cameras and voice recorders.

interior design

Turkish performer and artist Emre Yücelen and a volunteer group are behind the chronicle.

Hagia Sophia azan reading acoustic video


For an acoustics sound test, imam Önder Soy and muezzin Ahmet Toraman worked from a supplication room on the exhibition hall grounds and recounted the Muslim call to petition, or adhan, and different areas from the Quran inside the memorable historical center.

A "muezzin" is the individual who decides to petition.


Named the "Eight Wonder of the World" by students of history, the 1,500-year-old Hagia Sophia was a Christian church until it was changed over to a mosque when the Ottoman Empire vanquished Istanbul in 1453 preceding it transformed it into an exhibition hall in 1935.

exterior design

An alum of Istanbul's esteemed ITU-Turkish Music State Conservatory's Sound Department, Yücelen transferred the video to his YouTube channel which has so far been seen in excess of multiple times.

This was not his first endeavor to record acoustics from chronicled structures in Turkey.

In 2006, Yücelen visited 17 mosques in Istanbul and talked with strict authorities for two hours and recorded their bare voice during the adhans.

Massive mosques have wonderful acoustics


In 2007, he discharged a CD, Istanbul Mosques and Muezzins and recollects the feel inside those structures. "Presenting the adhan in the first part of the day with Ali Rıza Şahin Hoca in [Istanbul's historic] Fatih Mosque on a winter evening," he reviewed. "Those leaves outside … the eminent acoustics of that huge vault."

He said Istanbul's tremendous mosques have glorious acoustics and noted they were constructed dependent on presenting the adhan with a stripped voice, however these days it is recounted with a receiver.

Yücelen said he had a "great point of view" and since he additionally gives singing exercises he, "truly needed to tune in to the acoustics of this spot."

The chronicles were made in three distinct areas inside the gallery: under the arch, in the mihrab – a half circle specialty in the dividers of a mosque demonstrating the heading the reliable should confront while supplicating, and in the muezzin mahfili, an uncommon stage in a mosque where muezzin does his obligations.

As per Yücelen a nitty gritty account like the one he did has never been finished. He reviewed teacher Zerhan Karabiber of Istanbul's Yıldız Technical University who did an acoustical test in the exhibition hall yet it was a voice recording.

Everybody hypnotized during recording


Yücelen reviewed how everybody was hypnotized during the account.

Ought to Hagia Sophia stay an exhibition hall or be come back to a mosque, as it worked during the Ottoman time? It is a subject that has been for quite some time bantered in Turkey and Yücelen said his motivation was never to make a contention.

"These are social legacy," he said. "We are discussing engineering, a culture that has been representing 1,500 years, and it is as of now living in Anatolian lands."

"It is an amazing privilege for us," he said.