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  • Turkey's Global City

    TURKEY'S GLOBAL CITY
    By Philip Mansel

    Le Monde Diplomatique
    http://mondediplo.com/2008/03/12globa l
    March 3 2008
    France

    After almost of century of Turkish dominance, and decades of ruination
    followed by neglect, Izmir has regained its modern, Mediterranean,
    international identity. Europe and Asia intertwined here in the past,
    and maybe will do so again in the future.

    Izmir - Asian and European, Greek and Turkish, Christian and Muslim -
    cannot be categorised. Even its name is of mixed origin. As Istanbul
    comes from the Greek eis teen polis, into the city, so Izmir comes
    from eis teen Smyrna, into Smyrna. Legendarily founded by ancient
    Greek colonists, Smyrna became one of the most brilliant of their
    cities in Anatolia, a nursery of mathematics. It was the largest and
    most Romanised of the cities of Asia Minor under the Romans, with
    many temples and a vast theatre, "the joy of Asia and the ornament
    of the Empire". Saint Paul founded an early church there on his visit
    in 53-56 AD.

    Pillage and decay were to be its fate - attacked by Seljuk Turks
    (1082), the Genoese (1261), the Knights of Saint John (1344), Timur
    (1402), and Venice (1472); after the 15th century Izmir dwindled to
    a small market town in the Ottoman empire, serving the surrounding
    region. In 1580 it had just 2,000 inhabitants.

    Izmir owed its rebirth after 1600 to its geographical position, at the
    end of a long gulf on the coast of Anatolia where the Mediterranean
    projects deepest into the westernmost point of Asia.

    The gulf has some of the finest anchorage on the coast and can
    receive the largest ships. So Izmir enjoyed a second golden age, as
    the pearl of the Levant and the eye of Asia. Merchants made Izmir;
    they wanted to evade the Ottoman government's customs dues and price
    restrictions. As early as 1574 Istanbul suffered shortages because
    Ottoman ships, sailing from Egypt with provisions for the capital,
    unloaded them at Izmir, where they could get better prices than those
    imposed at official weighing-stations.

    Then, as now, cotton and figs were Izmir's principal products.

    Ripened in the valleys of Anatolia, figs were, and still are, dried,
    packed and exported from Izmir to Istanbul and Europe. From the
    start, the overseas trade was dominated by foreigners. On his way to
    Jerusalem in 1621, Louis Deshayes de Courmenin noted that while Turks,
    Greeks and Jews lived inland in separate districts, foreign merchants'
    residences lined the seafront and they lived in great freedom.

    'Smyrna, what wealth!' The arrival of consuls confirmed that Izmir
    was becoming international and by 1630 it had Venetian, Dutch, English
    and French consuls. The French consul lived like a king, with his own
    Janissary guards, keeping open house for visiting Frenchmen and running
    an elaborate and profitable system to buy back Turkish slaves captured
    by the Knights of Malta. In the 1670s the great Ottoman writer Evliya
    Celebi was impressed by the wealth of the Franks and the power of the
    consuls: "The ships of the Franks come so often that half of the city
    of Izmir is like Firengistan [Europe]. If someone hits an infidel,
    everyone immediately surrounds him and takes him and brings him to
    the consular judge or the infidels execute him... the Muslim people
    become invisible so... it seems a dark Frank place."

    Evliya praised Izmir as the most celebrated port in the empire because
    of the number of ships loading and unloading. When foreign fleets
    sailed in from Marseille, Amsterdam or London, thousands of small
    boats rushed out, eager to cut out the middle man, and exchange the
    produce of Asia - silk and camel hair, opium, fresh mastic, grapes
    and figs - for the manufactures of Europe: cloth, tin and household
    goods such as mirrors, plates, needles and knives. Izmir was where
    Asia came shopping for Europe, and vice versa. It was also the hub
    of a vast network of land routes by camel and mule train.

    Caravans from Aleppo or Persia might have 1,500 camels. People had to
    stand aside in the lanes as they passed, or knelt for unloading. But
    even the main street of the Frank district, parallel to the coast,
    was dirty, ill-paved and narrow with a gutter down the middle. There
    were no large streets or squares.

    Izmir was always a city of churches and synagogues, as well as
    mosques, and astonished Europeans with its apparent complete freedom of
    religion (also true of other cities of the Levant). By 1700 it had 19
    mosques, three Latin, two Greek and two Armenian churches, and eight
    synagogues. In Frank Street you might be in a Christian country, and
    some European merchants never learnt Turkish since they did business
    in Italian through Jewish intermediaries. Izmir's taverns were famous,
    especially during carnival. People danced in French, Turkish or Greek
    styles with such frenzy that some Turks thought them mad. Izmir's
    women, combining the grace of Italians, the vivacity of Greeks, and the
    stately tournure of Ottomans, had an almost irresistible fascination.

    The population grew from 5,000 in 1600 to 100,000 in 1700 - perhaps
    seven Turks to two Greeks, one Armenian and one Jew. In the 18th
    century, France dominated the foreign trade, as it did the foreign
    relations, of the Ottoman empire. Between 1748 and 1789 one in four
    ships leaving Marseille went to Izmir - the biggest of all ports for
    French international trade, and the largest and wealthiest port in
    the Ottoman empire. (There are still businessmen living in Izmir,
    members of the Guys, Pagy and Giraud families, whose ancestors came
    there in the 18th century; though they now feel they are the last of
    their kind.) "Smyrna, what wealth!" said Tsar Alexander I to Napoleon
    I's ambassador in 1808, as they were planning the partition of the
    Ottoman empire.

    The need to reinvent itself Izmir was also a city of earthquakes,
    plagues, fires and massacres so frequent that only its inhabitants'
    resilience, and the unsuitability of rival ports, can explain its
    success. There were constant plague outbreaks - that of 1739-42
    killed 20% of the population; another between 1759 and 1765 about
    50%; between 1812-15 45,000 died. There were earthquakes in 1688,
    and 1788 (in which 15,000 died). Fires swept the city in 1742, 1752
    and 1763. Other disasters were man-made.

    Below the smiling surface lay a volcano.

    The French orientalist Antoine Galland, who visited in 1673, attributed
    the relative peace in which the different communities co-existed
    to the rigour of Ottoman laws: in their hearts even Christians of
    different sects, as well as Muslims, Christians and Jews, hated
    each other mortally and all the more fiercely for being obliged to
    pretend not to. Three reigns of terror by Muslim mobs or soldiers, in
    1770, 1797 and 1821, were provoked by Christian acts of aggression -
    a Russian naval victory in the Aegean, a murder, and the Greek war
    of independence. Thousands of Christians were killed, proving the
    fragility of Levantine cities.

    Yet Izmir always reinvented itself. On pilgrimage to Jerusalem
    in 1806, Francois-Rene Chateaubriand compared Izmir to Paris, "an
    oasis of civilization, a Palmyra in the middle of the deserts of
    barbarism." Izmir was also becoming a great Greek city. Trade in the
    Ottoman empire was the basis of the Greek revival. Greek merchants of
    Izmir became rich enough to found modern schools and companies there.

    Even after the proclamation of Greek independence in 1829, thousands
    of Greeks came to work in Izmir. They preferred groaning under the
    Turkish yoke and making a decent living to independence in poverty.

    By the mid 19th century, for the first time since the 14th century,
    the number of Greeks in Izmir surpassed the number of Turks - 55,000
    to 45,000 (plus 13,000 Jews, 12,000 Franks and 5,000 Armenians). The
    Turks called it Gavur Izmir (infidel Izmir), the Greeks sweet-smelling
    Smyrna.

    Lighthouse of the empire As it became richer and larger in the 19th
    century, Izmir began to regard itself as the lighthouse of the Ottoman
    empire. Against British opposition, a new quay and port were was built
    by the great French firm of Dussaud Frères in 1869-75; the biggest such
    project in Ottoman history. Soon the Cordon was lined with warehouses,
    offices and elegant hotels, cafes and theatres: Cafe de Paris, the
    Sporting Club, the Hotel Kraemer, the Hôtel des Deux Augustes.

    Colonel Playfair wrote in 1881: "The quay recently constructed of
    massive stonework 60 foot wide and nearly 2 miles in length is the
    favourite promenade in the evenings and up to a late hour at night.

    The numerous cafes along it are brilliantly lit up and form the
    rendezvous of motley costumed crowds while strains of oriental as
    well as European music are heard on all sides." Cafes offered Turkish,
    Arab, Armenian and European music to please customers.

    Izmir had the Ottoman empire's first local newspaper, first American
    schools, first racecourse, first railway, first football team,
    first motor car and first cinema. Old postcards show the frenetic
    shipping activity. The shops along Frank Street - Bon Marche, Petit
    Louvre - were so good that Istanbul brides came to Izmir to buy
    their trousseaux.

    Turks were also becoming rich through the trade of Izmir: for example,
    the Ushakizade family, one of whom, the writer Halid Ziya, became the
    sultan's principal secretary. Another, Muammar Bey, became mayor in
    1911 and lived in an elegant French-style villa - now a museum -in the
    suburb of Goztepe. His daughter Latife Hanim married Mustafa Kemal -
    Ataturk. In no city in the world, remembered the US consul George
    Horton, "did East and West mingle physically in so spectacular a
    manner as at Smyrna".

    Poison of nationalism But Izmir contained the seeds of its own
    destruction and history illustrates the poison of nationalism. As
    they prospered, some Izmir Greeks became more open in their desire
    to undermine the Ottoman empire. In 1897 many volunteered for the
    Greek army in a war against the Ottoman empire. Greeks also started
    frequent anti-Jewish riots, caused by rumours of the ritual murder
    of Greek children. In 1872 the governor had to cordon off the Jewish
    quarter with police to protect it from Greek bands who had already
    killed several Jews.

    The empire generally ruled with a light hand. On some 14 July
    celebrations, French consuls boasted, there were so many French
    flags and orchestras playing the Marseillaise that Izmir appeared to
    be a French city. French-connected families included the Armenian
    Balladurs: Edouard Balladur, who became prime minister of France,
    was born in Izmir in 1929.

    Nevertheless, after the Turkish defeat in the Balkan wars in
    1912-13 and the settlement of thousands of Turks from the Balkans
    in Anatolia, tensions increased. The end for Gavur Izmir began with
    the arrival on 15 May 1919 of ships with 13,000 Greek troops under
    British protection. Playing with nations, Lloyd George believed in
    "a new Greek empire in the East friendly to Britain". The Greek prime
    minister Eleftherios Venizelos believed that "Greece can only find
    her real future from the moment when she is astride the Aegean".

    After the Greeks landed, hundred of Turkish troops were slaughtered
    and humiliated along the quay. Each community thought of its national
    interests, not of the future of the city. The Greek occupation of
    Izmir and the advance of Greek forces deep into Anatolia was the best
    recruiting agent for Ataturk, who had landed at Samsun, on the Black
    Sea, four days after the Greeks in Izmir. Without it, he later said,
    Turks might have gone on sleeping.

    In 1920 Greek officials formally took over administration of the
    city and province, although the latter had a Turkish majority. The
    outlook seemed brilliant. Of the 27 newspapers published in Izmir
    in 1919, 11 were in Greek, seven Turkish, five Jewish (Hebrew or
    Ladino), five in Armenian and five in French. That year 7,000 ships
    docked. The city had 15 cinemas, 513 cafes, 226 tavernas, 43 beer
    halls and eight dance halls. But a British intelligence report said
    "the fundamental hostility existing between the two races has been
    much intensified by the mere presence of the Greeks [in occupation]".

    In August 1922 the Greek army in Anatolia, which had almost reached
    Ankara, was defeated by Mustafa Kemal. Greek soldiers, divided,
    demoralised and desperate to get home, burnt and looted Turkish towns
    and villages, including Manisa and Aydin, killing many inhabitants.

    In Izmir life had continued as normal. The fig crop was being unloaded
    on the quay. Rigoletto and La Traviata were being performed at the
    Sporting Club by a visiting Italian troupe.

    The arrival of Ataturk News of the Greek rout filled the city with
    dread. The rich began to leave. On 8 September the Greek authorities
    and army embarked with their archives, abandoning those they had
    come to liberate. On 9 September Mustafa Kemal's army entered the
    city, as photographs make clear, in perfect order. The next day Kemal
    entered the city. He had a drink at the Hotel Kraemer on the Cordon,
    visited the Konak to confer with Nurettin Pasha whom he had placed
    in command of the city, then withdrew to a villa in Karshiyaka,
    the other side of the bay.

    Looting and killing by Turks began in the Armenian quarter.

    On 13 September a fire broke out near the Armenian quarter - possibly
    started, certainly encouraged, by Turkish soldiers, regular and
    irregular. The Turkish authorities blamed Armenians or Greeks. The
    fire brigade was shot at as it tried to put out the fire. A change in
    wind and a firestorm helped it spread. Soon the warehouses, hotels
    and offices lining the quay, including the Sporting Club and the
    Hotel Kraemer, were a wall of fire 4km long and 30 metres high.

    As they had during massacres in 1821 and 1797, Christians fled to the
    quay, where most Izmir Armenians and many Greeks were killed. The
    screams of refugees from inland Anatolia as well as from Izmir and
    the rattle of pistol and rifle shots could not drown out the roar
    of the fire and the crash of falling buildings. Britain, America,
    France and Italy had already evacuated their nationals. Finally, in
    some cases compelled by their horrified crews, the foreign battleships
    in the harbour took on board those refugees who did not drown while
    trying to reach them.

    Throughout September, about 221,000 refugees were taken off the
    Cordon. Within a month the city had changed character. Surveying the
    flames from the Ushakizades' villa where he was courting Latife Hanim
    and celebrating his victory, Mustafa Kemal said, (according to his
    recent biographer Andrew Mango): "Let it burn. Let it crash down."

    The Turkish journalist Falih Rifki Atay, who had come to interview
    Kemal, noted: "Although the burning of the city was a grievous loss,
    Muslim Izmir did not lose any of the joy of victory." Turkish flags
    were hung in the streets.

    Mustafa Kemal later wrote: "Why were we burning down Izmir? Were we
    afraid that if waterfront mansions, hotels and restaurants stayed in
    place we would not be free of the minorities?" This was not a simple
    urge to destroy. Part of it depended on a feeling of inferiority -
    as if anywhere that resembled Europe was destined to remain Christian
    and foreign and be denied to the Turks, although previously the Ottoman
    government and Muslim population had enjoyed, protected and profited
    from Gavur Izmir.

    Another reason was fear. The Greek army had nearly won. The minority
    problem could be eliminated forever. After 15 October thousands of
    remaining Greek and Armenian men were marched into the interior in
    labour battalions, in theory to rebuild villages the Greek army had
    destroyed. Most were never seen again.

    Greek refugees from Izmir brought many things to Nea Smyrna (a suburb
    of Athens where they settled), and elsewhere: radical views which
    helped overthrow the monarchy and establish the Greek Communist party;
    the haunting Sufi-influenced rembetiko music of Anatolia; commercial
    skills; and memories of a paradise lost.

    The centre of the city was ruin and rubble for years, but in all only
    14,000 of 43,000 houses had been destroyed. Slowly trade revived with
    government encouragement. By 1925 the president of the Izmir Chamber
    of Commerce stated that Turkish businessmen had opened 54 new stores.

    A trade fair started in 1932, in the culture park laid out where the
    Greek district had been. The centre was given a more spacious layout
    (in part due to the great French urbanist Henri Prost), and new
    street names.

    Today, with a population of three million, Izmir has recovered its
    prosperity and identity. The cafe-lined Cordon has more in common
    with other Mediterranean, even Greek, cities than with some inland
    Turkish cities. Izmir is one of the few cities in Turkey to have
    voted against the current post-Islamist government and in favour
    of the Republican People's Party, the heir to Kemal's modernising
    secularism. It is again, as it was for most of the past 400 years,
    both a great Turkish and a great European city.

    --Boundary_(ID_vXAf0qc88fEZfUVBlcHxvw)--
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