Friday, April 27, 2012

How common is it for turkish women to have natural blonde hair?

The Turks in Turkey are a nation, not a race so Turkish people with Black Sea Region, Balkan or Macedonian heritage are approx 70 % blond, whereas people with Kurdish, Arabic, Armenian etc. heritage are approx 90% brunettes.



Then there are a huge amount of 'mix' s like myself who are brunettes with lighter complexion or some blonds with tanned complexion.



Hard to tell actually.



How common is it for turkish women to have natural blonde hair?

eh %10 maybe or a little lower. There are more brunettes than blondes in Turkey.



How common is it for turkish women to have natural blonde hair?

If you mean real blond about 5%, darker blond 10% and many many brunettes and about the same for black (about 40% + 40%)



How common is it for turkish women to have natural blonde hair?

This is like asking how common it is for Swedish women to have dark hair. We don't judge people's ethnicity by color or race or genetics. But to answer your question, I really don't know. There are quite a lot of blonde Turkish ladies.



How common is it for turkish women to have natural blonde hair?

Very common on my mother's side. They are all blondes, as a matter of fact. Even more, the whole village my mother comes from is blond and blue or green eyed.



I don't know how my cousin got her curly red hair, though. Must be from her own mother who is from another village.



How common is it for turkish women to have natural blonde hair?

Hi,



Something About Turkish women;



Please read it;



Since the establishment of the Turkish Republic in the 1920s, women have had equal status with men in Turkish society, at least in law.



But Turkish society was ruled by shari'a (Islamic religious law) and a body of medieval social custom for 500 years during the Ottoman Empire, and significant cultural change does not come overnight.



The status of women in Turkey is different from what it is in your home country. Not "better," not "worse," but different. In some ways, women may seem subservient to men; but Turkey had a female supreme court justice long before the USA did, and Turkey has had a female head of government, something the USA, for all its success in women's liberation, has not yet had.



Men's and women's roles were clearly defined in traditional Turkish society and each gender was more or less sovereign within its appropriate realm. The husband-father was head of the household, but the wife-mother was in charge of the house and family. Men went out of the house to deal with the world of business, government and military; women stayed close to home and tended the crops, the animals and the household.



The ranking, behavior and appropriate attitude for each family member was clearly defined: imperious mother-in-law, submissive youngest child, etc. (It was the same even in the sultan's palace: although the sultan was the monarch, it was his mother, the Valide Sultan, who decided which harem girls he would sleep with, and when!)



Atat鐪塺k's reforms hoped to blast these centuries-old traditions to smithereens, and to liberate women completely so they could participate in every aspect of society equally with men.



The veil was outlawed; civil marriage and divorce were established; Turkish women obtained the right to vote (long before women in Switzerland had that right), to hold political office, and to bequeath and to inherit wealth in their own right.



Though these reforms were dramatically effective, society does not change easily or quickly, and even Atat鐪塺k's bold, foresightful measures could not change everyone's thinking all at once.



Arranged marriages are still common in the countryside and among the more traditional, religious families, although in the cities modern ideas of girl-boy courtship, love and marriage are not uncommon. Female virginity upon marriage is valued (and often expected), though it is not universal anymore.



In Turkey, as in most societies閳ユ攨ven the ones thought to be most liberal in their attitudes toward women閳ユ敎ou'll find a range of attitudes toward women.



If you, a foreign female visitor, observe Turkish cultural norms (ie, behave as a Turkish woman would behave), you will be treated with politeness and respect.



Whether you do this or not, you will probably be in far less physical danger in Turkey than you'd be in many more "liberal" countries.



Ref : http://www.turkeytravelplanner.com/detai...



How common is it for turkish women to have natural blonde hair?

I don't know. I don't walk around counting blond people here.



How common is it for turkish women to have natural blonde hair?

Turkish people also has a mix from Europe.. for example my grandma(mom's mom) is from Bosnia. my dad's mom is from Bulgaria.. so yea that happens..



How common is it for turkish women to have natural blonde hair?

only 2-3% in the whole world are real blondes. so about 1 out of 50.



How common is it for turkish women to have natural blonde hair?

THAT'S IMPOSSIBLE

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