Sadun Boro

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Sadun Boro
Born 1928
Istanbul, Turkey
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Marmaris, Turkey
Cause of death Bladder cancer
Monuments Monument of Global Circumnavigation in Kadıköy, Istanbul
Residence Gökova, Muğla, Turkey
Nationality Turkish
Education Textile engineering
Alma mater Galatasaray High School
University of Manchester
Known for First Turkish global circumnavigation
Spouse(s) Oda Boro
Children 1 (daughter)

Sadun Boro (1928 – June 5, 2015) was the first Turkish amateur sailor to circumnavigate the globe by sailing.

Early years

Sadun Boro was born in Istanbul, Turkey in 1928. He spent his childhood at Caddebostan neighnorhood of Kadıköy, Istanbul, on the coast of Sea of Marmara. He changed his rowing boat with a sailboat as soon as he became a high school student.[1][2][3]

He finished Galatasaray High School in 1948, and went to the United Kingdom to study textile engineering at University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology.[1][2][3]

In 1952, Boro made his first ocean voyage from British Islands to the Caribbean Islands on the 11 m (36 ft)-long sailboat Ling together with an Englishman.[4] The story of his travel that lasted six months was published in serial format in the Turkish daily Cumhuriyet, and was compiled in his book titled Bir Hayalin Peşinde (literally: Pursuing a Dream) later in 2004.[1][3]

Circumnavigation the globe

File:Sadun Boro's Global Circumnavigation 1965-68.jpg
Route of Sadun Boro's global circumnavigation between 1965-68.
File:SadunOdaBoroStatueKadıköy.JPG
Monument of Global Circumnavigation of Sadun Boro and his wife Oda in front of the Kalamış Marina's main entrance at Kadıköy, Istanbul, Turkey.

His 10.5 m (34 ft)-long sloop was laid down at the workshop of Athar Beşpınar in Salacak neidhborhood of Üsküdar, Istanbul in 1963, and named Kısmet (Turkish for "Fortune").[1][3] The sail, he manufactured in the textile plant, he was working at Çukurova, southern Turkey.[2]

Boro began his westabout (east to west) voyage to circumnavigate the globe on August 22, 1965, accompanied by his German-born wife Oda Boro.[4][5] He set sail from Istanbul, passed Strait of Gibraltar crossing Mediterranean Sea and reached Canary Islands, where they took a housecat aboard and named it "Miço" (Turkish for "shipmate").[3][4][5][6] Crossing the Atlantic Ocean, he arrived in Barbados and Caribbean Islands. Passing through the Panama Canal, he sailed crossing Pacific Ocean to Galápagos Islands, Marquesas Islands, Tuamotu Archipelago, Tahiti, Society Islands, Tonga Islands, Fiji Islands, New Hebrides and New Guinea. His route went then through Torres Strait to Timor, Indonesia and Singapore. Crossing the Bay of Bengal, he was in Ceylon (today: Sri Lanka). He sailed then on Arabian Sea and Red Sea and then was carried by a truck from Eilat to Haifa. In Mediterranean Sea again, his last stop before completing his globe circumnavigation was Israel.[5]

On June 15, 1968, after 1,028 days of an ocean voyage, he arrived in Istanbul, where he was welcomed by his mother,[2] and cheered as a national hero. Becoming the first ever Turkish global circumnavigator,[3][4] he paved the way for global circumnavigation of Turkish sailors.[1]

The memories about his voyage around the world were published as newspaper serialization in the daily Hürriyet at that time, and were written down later in his popular book Pupa Yelken (Turkish for "Full Sail").[1][4][6]

Erected in front of the Kalamış Marina's main entrance in Kadıköy, Istanbul, a monument featuring Sadun Boro at boat's wheel of his sloop and his wife Oda standing next, both sailing on the globe commemorates his achievement.

Later years

Between 1977–79, Sadun Boro sailed with his wife and then-eight-year old daughter Deniz to the Caribbean and the East Coast of the United States. After 1980, he settled down in Bodrum and Gökova, known for its idyllic coasts full of forests and turquoise sea.[1][2][3][4]

He devoted himself to the protection of nature at the Turkish Riviera, in particular in Gökova, Göcek and Fethiye. Boro aimed to instil love for nature and sea to young people with his articles published in newspapers and journals. As a lover of Gökova, he had a mermaid statue erected with an inscription atop a rock in the middle of Okluk Bay.[2][6] The inscription reads Boro's words as "This mermaid has traveled many seas and horizons to find the heaven that she dreamed of. She traveled continents, islands and bays, until she reached Gökova."[4] His latest book, titled Vira Demir (Turkish for "Haul Up the Anchor"), is a guide for sailors.[1]

Boro donated his sloop Kısmet, he sailed 46-year long about 150,000 nautical miles (170,000 mi; 280,000 km) with, to the Rahmi M. Koç Museum,[1][2][3][6] a museum in Istanbul dedicated to the history of transport, industry and communications,[5] which was founded by the wealthy businessman Rahmi Koç, who also circumnavigated the globe between 2004-06.[4]

Sadun Boro lived in Okluk Bay, Gökova on board his catamaran named Son Bahar (Turkish for "Autumn" or "Last Spring").[1]

Illness and death

Sadun Boro was diagnosed with bladder cancer a couple of years ago. He was first treated in Marmaris, where he lived, and then transferred to the American Hospital in Istanbul. However, he was airlifted by helicopter back to Muğla on May 14, 2015 as he wished to spend his rest of life on board of his sailboat.[1][2][3]

At 9:15 hours local time on June 5, 2015, he died at age 87 in the intensive care unit of a hospital at Marmaris, where he was taken into three days before.[4][5] His last will was to be buried under the pine, to which his sailboat is secured mooring at İngilizlimanı (literally: English Harbor) in Gökova. For its realization, a cabinet decision is necessary.[1][2] He was interred in Karacasöğüt Cemetery in Marmaris following a memorial tour in the bays of the Turkish Riviera he admired on board of his catamaran Son Bahar accompanied by many boats and vessels of the Turkish Coast Guard and a frigate of the Turkish Navy.[6]

He was survived by his wife Oda and his daughter Deniz (Turkish for "Sea").[1][5]

Works

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Other Turkish circumnavigators of the globe

Turkish sailors circumnavigated the globe following Sadun Boro, listed chronologically:

As of 10 April 2015

Sailor Accompanied by Sailboat Date
Tanıl Tuncel Annette Kelebek 1986-91
Haluk Karamanoğlu Family Deriska 1988-93
Eralp Akkoyunlu Yosun 1988-95
Zuhal Atasoy Osman Atasoy Uzaklar 1992-97
Erkan Gürsoy Barış 1993-95
Göran Clarmo Ayfer Er Cantana III 1993-98
Mehmet Selis Elaine Zarafet 1995-2009
Selçuk Karamanoğlu Turquoise 2000-03
Alim Sür Hattaya Sür My Chance 2003-08
Rahmi Koç Nazenin IV 2004-06
Ayça Kirişçioğlu Levent Kirişçioğlu Yol 2004-07
Ekrem İnözü Anouk 2004-07
Hakan Öge Sophie Hunter Mardek 2004-07
Turkan Yöney Kerem Tayla Katama 2005-08
Özkan Gülkaynak Kayıtsız III 2006-09
Cumhur Gökova Mayisa Gökova Gökova 2010-12
Haldun Karagöz Amanin 2012-14

References

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External links