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Books: Paradise Lost: Smyrna 1922

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  • Books: Paradise Lost: Smyrna 1922

    Sunday Age (Melbourne, Australia)
    June 22, 2008 Sunday
    First Edition

    Paradise Lost: Smyrna 1922;
    BOOKS - Cover notes

    by Lucy Sussex

    PARADISE LOST: SMYRNA 1922
    Giles Milton
    Sceptre, $35

    The city of Smyrna (now Turkish Izmir) was a cool place in the early
    1900s. The coffee and food were good, and Turks, Jews, Armenians and
    Greeks co-existed without rancour. The place was Paradise to Giles
    Milton and to its varied inhabitants. Its geography, between West and
    East, would ultimately doom it - and the ending was savage. Milton
    paints a broad canvas here, with characters as diverse as a wily and
    tolerant Turkish governor, Rahmi Bey, wealthy English expatriates, and
    a mild-mannered American YMCA worker, Asa Jennings. He needs the epic
    mode, for a clash of empires is depicted. World War I saw the end of
    the Ottoman empire, and the hope of a resurgent Greek one, the Megali
    idea. Rahmi Bey, a superb diplomat, was able to protect the city when
    in power, but its territory was in dispute. The Greek army invaded,
    with dreams of an Anatolian province, but were defeated by Ataturk.
    His army burnt the city, trapping refugees between an inferno and
    European ships - who were neutral and would not intervene. Jennings
    did, and saved hundreds of thousands. An extraordinary if grim read.
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