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Legends of little men

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  • Legends of little men

    The Times (London)
    July 17, 2004, Saturday

    Legends of little men

    by Maureen Freely


    BIRDS WITHOUT WINGS
    BY LOUIS DE BERNIERES
    Secker & Warburg
    £17.99; 640pp
    ISBN 0 436 20549 1
    £14.39 (p&p £2.25)
    0870 1608080

    During the Ottoman Empire -before the Turks called themselves Turks
    -Istanbul and the Aegean coast of Anatolia were as Christian as they
    were Muslim. The populations of Crete, the Aegean Islands, and large
    parts of the Greek mainland were similarly mixed. The Treaty of
    Laus-anne changed all that: almost overnight, the Christians of
    Anatolia and most Muslim Greeks were forced from their homes and
    dispatched across the border.

    On paper, the population exchange made sense. It came at the end of a
    war that had seen the Greeks invade Anatolia and the Turks push them
    into the sea. There was a strong desire to prevent a sequel -and to
    end the massacres, death marches and mass expulsions that had ravaged
    both Christian and Muslim communities throughout the region for many
    decades. On the ground, though, the story was rather different.
    Thousands of peaceful fishing and farming communities were abruptly
    ripped asunder and millions made homeless. Eighty years later, their
    descendants still carry the memory of what Louis de Bernieres (below)
    calls their "absolute destitution and sense of injustice" -as anyone
    familiar with the area will know.

    He dedicates Birds Without Wings to these forgotten millions and also
    to his maternal grandfather, who was wounded at Gallipoli. It is, in
    effect, two novels for the price of one. The first is a long and
    meandering tale set in a village in hills behind the town now known
    as Fethiye. Floating above it and swooping down at brutally regular
    intervals to destroy its peace is a second, leaner tale about Mustafa
    Kemal, the intrepid Salonica-born soldier-hero who went on to found
    the Turkish Republic.

    Holding it all together is the mournful, all-knowing narrator that
    won this author's previous books so many devoted readers. His
    characters do not just speak: they asseverate. When they asseverate
    out of turn, he is quick to put them in their place. Thus, when
    Leonidas the schoolteacher attends a meeting of a clandestine society
    aiming to restore to Greece all the lands lost to the Ottomans, de
    Bernieres is quick to remind us that his dreams are "predicated on
    the absolute belief" that his own people are superior to all others
    and that "such people, even those as insignificant as Leonidas, are
    the motor of history, which is finally nothing but a sorry edifice
    constructed from hacked flesh in the name of great ideas".

    He's right, of couse. Which is why he gets away with it. Well, we'll
    see. It is never clear where the truth about Mustafa Kemal ends and
    the embroidery begins.

    His Turkish spelling is eccentric and makes you wonder how carefully
    he's checked his facts. Although his account of the Great Game seems
    judicious and even handed (he saves his most righteous rage for Lloyd
    George), he deviates from both Greek and Turkish official history in
    ways that could be controversial. If he's thinking of visiting either
    country in the near future, he should pack dark glasses.

    Although his account of Gallipoli is inspired -rarely has the ugly
    face of war been so lovingly described -his heart belongs to the
    smaller canvas, and his portrayal of sleepy, multi-ethnic village
    life before, during, and after the First World War is a magnificent
    achievement. Here the sonorous narrator pulls back for long stretches
    to let the characters describe the complex web of friendships,
    passions, betrayals and heroic acts that bind together its
    inhabitants.

    They judge themselves by their own standards, which means we must
    suspend ours. So the first time we meet Rustem Bey, the village
    landlord, he is saving a Greek woman from the town gossips. The
    second time we meet him, he is inviting a crowd to stone Tamara, his
    unfaithful wife, to death. It may be the penalty laid down by Sharia,
    but it is the imam who stops the stoning, shames Rustem Bey, and
    saves Tamara's life. In a village that serves more than one god,
    there is always more than one right way of doing things.

    That life without blind faith is difficult is clear from the
    chequered careers of Levon the Armenian apothecary, Ali the
    Snowbringer, Leyla the concubine, Ibrahim the Mad, and Iskandar the
    Potter and his son Karatavuk, who ends up fighting with Mustafa Kemal
    at Gallipoli. All make terrible mistakes and some are driven by
    bigotry. But because they know each other first as neighbours, they
    sometimes rise above themselves, and their most generous acts are on
    behalf of those marked as enemies. Until one day, when a group of
    statesmen gather together to sign a peace treaty. If you're going to
    a beach anywhere on the Aegean this summer, and want to know a bit
    more about the local history, read this book and weep.
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