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Book Review: The story of Smyrna

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  • Book Review: The story of Smyrna

    Canberra Times (Australia)
    July 27, 2008 Sunday
    Final Edition


    The story of Smyrna

    by ALEV ADIL

    Smyrna, the wealthiest of Ottoman cities, embodied that empire's best
    qualities of cosmopolitanism and religious tolerance. The city, now
    Izmir in Turkey, boasted some of the most luxurious department stores,
    cinemas and opera houses in the world.

    "The feminine element from the age of about 13 overdresses like a
    professional," a British officer observed in 1918. While Greeks
    predominated, the city also housed sizeable Armenian, Jewish, Turkish,
    European and American populations. The Levantines were by far the
    richest community, with the largest stake in every commercial
    activity. They were of British and European descent and had lived in
    Smyrna since the reign of George III.

    Giles Milton's Paradise Lost: Smyrna 1922 is an engrossing account of
    the events leading up to the destruction of the city in 1922, based
    largely on the previously unpublished letters and diaries of these
    Levantine dynasties. The Whitalls, Girauds and Van der Zees led a
    charmed existence.

    Life was a glittering round of tennis parties, balls, yachting and
    picnics accompanied by bouzouki players. Smyrna had been largely
    untouched by the tragedies of the Great War.

    The city's Ottoman governor, Rahmi Bey, a genial Anglophile, even
    protected the Armenian population from the deportations and massacres
    of 1915 and tried to broker a coup d'e{aac}tat with the British. His
    affections were not returned.

    "For more than five centuries, the presence of the Turk in Europe has
    been a source of distraction, intrigue and corruption," Lord Curzon
    declared. "Let not this occasion ...

    be missed of purging the earth of one of its most pestilent roots of
    evil."

    The victorious Allies gave the Greeks the go-ahead to invade. News of
    the occupation of Smyrna in 1919 and of ensuing Greek atrocities
    stirred nascent Turkish nationalism and resistance. The failure of the
    Greek occupation three years later evoked no great panic. The citizens
    of Smyrna, confident that the warships of the Allied fleet would
    protect them, were unprepared for the horror unleashed upon them.

    Eye-witness accounts of carnage make for stomach-churning reading, but
    faith in human nature is restored by Milton's accounts of the heroism
    of individuals like Asa Jennings. An American employee of the YMCA,
    his efforts stirred the Allies and the Greek government into rescuing
    half a million refugees. Milton's book celebrates the heroism of
    individuals who put lives before ideologies.

    Independent Paradise Lost: Smyrna 1922. By Giles Milton.

    Sceptre. 426pp. $35.
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