Hmm... Nah, ECTYApart. Smaller cake, more slices. Who wants that?
All things aside, I don't think Enes has a lot to learn from Memo.
Offense: Memo was a uniquely talented shooter for a 5 and Sloan used him to spread the floor. (10 times more pick&pops than pick&rolls with Deron.) His biggest strength was the 3-ball. (Remember Money?) The rest of what he did was usually in slo-mo. His O-IQ was higher than Enes's is right now, but that's not saying much.
In the paint, Enes already has more tricks up his sleeve than Memo ever did.
What's more, I suspect Enes doesn't have a lot to learn about being clutch either. That comes with personality & experience.
He already has a soft touch and I believe he will be a 3-pt threat someday. (Corbin!!)
Defense: Memo was a good one-on-one defender, but he was slow on help defense. He relied mainly on his size and was immovable most of the time; nevertheless, he struggled against faster/shooter bigs. Not much to learn there either.
On the whole, even though I'm still a Memo homer, I don't think he will have exclusive wisdom to share with Enes. Another big can teach Enes how to pass out of double teams, how to rotate, how to box out...
As for the big brother thing, there's a catch: Memo has openly spoken against the Islamist government and taken the secular side during the 2013 protests, whereas Enes has started a fresh affiliation with the Islamist "Hocaefendi movement." There's no guarantee they'll get along.