Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Paradise Lost Smyrna: The Destruction of Islam's City of Tolerance

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Paradise Lost Smyrna: The Destruction of Islam's City of Tolerance

    Paradise Lost Smyrna 1922: The Destruction of Islam's City of Tolerance
    by Giles Milton
    A powerful account of one of the most horrific humanitarian disasters
    of the 20th century

    The Sunday Times/UK
    June 15, 2008


    The Sunday Times review by William Dalrymple

    For centuries, the great city of Smyrna was a European foothold on the
    Anatolian coast. The British Levantine Company had had a factory there
    since 1667, trading in raisins and carpets, and even then the place was
    renowned for its lively social life. Francesco Lupazzoli, the priapic
    Venetian consul, lived on a diet of fruit, bread and water and a few
    slices of unseasoned meat, yet survived until the age of 114, and
    fathered 126 children on his five wives and innumerable Smyrniot
    mistresses.

    By the end of the 19th century, Smyrna had grown into one of the
    largest, richest and most cosmopolitan cities in the Mediterranean. It
    contained large Armenian and Jewish communities, plus at least twice as
    many Greeks as then lived in Athens. There were 11 Greek newspapers
    available in the city, as well as seven in Turkish, five in Armenian,
    four in French and five in Hebrew. Smyrna was also home to a collection
    of amazingly rich Anglo-Levantine families. The Girauds owned the
    Oriental Carpet Manufacturing Company, which employed 150,000 people,
    while the Whittalls controlled an even larger fruit exporting empire.
    These clans inhabited vast palaces and were serviced by a string of
    opera houses, theatres, department stores and brasseries. According to
    one visitor, even their hair salons `were reminiscent of ballrooms'.
    There were no fewer than 17 companies dealing with Parisian luxuries
    for these families. It is the lives of these dynasties, recorded in
    their diaries and letters, that form the focus for Giles Milton's
    brilliant re-creation of the last days of Smyrna.

    In the course of the late 19th century, the Ottoman empire lurched from
    disaster to disaster, slowly and bloodily shedding its Greek, Bulgarian
    and Egyptian fringes. To make matters worse, it backed the wrong side
    in the first world war, thus losing its remaining possessions in the
    Hejaz, Palestine and Syria. Yet through all this, Smyrna flourished as
    if on a separate planet. Protected by Rahmi Bey, its liberal Ottoman
    governor, Smyrna continued to prosper while nearby the caliphate
    collapsed, the Armenians were led off to their genocide and allied
    troops died in their tens of thousands trying to capture Gallipoli.
    Pictures taken in 1917 show the Smyrna Opera packed to bursting with
    Edwardian gentlemen in black tie, enjoying Rigoletto only a few miles
    from the landing beaches where so many of their compatriots had died.

    Then quite suddenly, in 1922, four years after the end of the first
    world war, Smyrna was snuffed out in a single week of mass-murder,
    rape, looting, pillage and one of the greatest acts of arson in the
    20th century. At the end of it, the New York Times ran the headline:
    `Smyrna wiped out.' As Milton points out: `It was not hyperbole; it was
    a bold statement of fact.'

    Britain played an important role in this disaster. Lloyd George hated
    Muslims, and especially the Turks. In the course of the Paris
    conference, at the same time as he casually handed over Palestine (then
    90% Arab) to the Zionist movement, he encouraged the ambitions of his
    friend Eleftherios Venizelos, the prime minister of Greece, to annex
    chunks of Anatolia. When Venizelos dined at Downing Street, Lloyd
    George proposed the toast: `May the Turk be turned out of Europe and
    sent to . . . where he came from.' Lord Curzon agreed: `For more than
    five centuries, the presence of the Turk in Europe has been a source of
    distraction, intrigue, and corruption . . . Let not this occasion be
    missed of purging the earth of one of its most pestilent roots of
    evil.'

    In 1919, while the Paris peace conference continued its deliberations
    on the future of the Middle East, Greek troops landed in Smyrna under
    British protection. Blessed by the Greek bishop Metropolitan
    Chrysostom, they began committing atrocities against the city's Turkish
    inhabitants, killing large numbers of unarmed citizens. The Greek army
    then advanced inland, and was soon pushing back Mustafa Kemal Ataturk's
    new Turkish Republican army.

    Lloyd George dismissed Ataturk as a `carpet seller in a bazaar . . .
    [given to] unnatural sexual intercourse', yet the Turkish leader was
    more than a match for the Greeks. Arming his troops with weapons
    procured from Italy and France, both of whom distrusted this
    Anglo-Greek imperial project, Ataturk stalled the Greek offensive, and
    cut off their supply lines with his cavalry. By August 1922, the Greeks
    were in chaotic retreat, committing further atrocities as they
    staggered back to the Mediterranean. It was Smyrna that paid the price
    for British and Greek miscalculations. When the Turks entered the city
    on September 9, few doubted they would take revenge for what had been
    done to them. Few, however, guessed the scale of the horrors that would
    be meted out on the city. Estimates vary but some suggest that by the
    end of the mayhem 100,000 people had been killed, with many times that
    number turned into homeless refugees.

    Perhaps the only flaw in Milton's powerful and moving narrative is the
    degree to which he depicts Smyrna as somehow an exceptional case: as
    the book's subtitle has it, he believes he is writing about `the
    destruction of Islam's city of tolerance'. In reality, both the
    pre-first-world-war tolerance, and the bloody fragmentation of that
    multicultural world as the empire collapsed, were part of a wider
    pattern across Ottoman lands. What is true of Smyrna was equally true
    of Salonica, Istanbul, Alexandria and Jaffa. For across the Ottoman
    world, eastern Christians, Jews and Muslims lived side by side for
    nearly one and a half millenniums. By modern standards, the Christians
    and Jews (the dhimmi) were often treated as second-class citizens, but
    it was at least a kind of pluralist equilibrium that had no parallel in
    Europe until the 1950s.

    What one historian has called this hybrid `multiconfessional,
    extraordinarily polyglot Ottoman' multiculturalism where even
    `bootblacks commanded a working knowledge of six or seven languages'
    survived until European ideas of the nation state shattered the mosaic
    in the early 20th century. Across the Ottoman empire, the century saw
    the bloody unravelling of that tapestry - most recently in Kosovo and
    Bosnia, but before that in Cyprus, Palestine, Greece and Anatolia. In
    each,pluralism was replaced by a savage polarisation as minorities fled
    or were driven to places where they could be majorities.

    Milton has written a grimly memorable book about one of the most
    important events in this process. It is well paced, even-handed and
    cleverly focused: through the prism of the Anglo-Levantines, he
    reconstructs both the prewar Edwardian glory of Smyrna and its tragic
    end. He also clears up, once and for all, who burnt Smyrna, producing
    irrefutable evidence that the Turkish army brought in thousands of
    barrels from the Petroleum Company of Smyrna and poured them over the
    streets and houses of all but the Turkish quarter. Moreover, it is
    clear that it was done with the full approval of Ataturk, who was
    determined to find a final solution to his `minority problem' to ensure
    the future stability of his fledgling Turkish republic. A relatively
    homogenous Turkish nation state was indeed achieved; but as Milton
    shows, the cost was suffering on an almost unimaginable scale and one
    of the most horrific humanitarian disasters of the 20th century.

    Paradise Lost Smyrna 1922: The Destruction of Islam's City of
    Tolerance, by Giles Milton

    Sceptre £20 pp426

    Buy from Books First for £15.29 with free delivery in the UK
Working...
X