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The ravaged pearl of the Aegean

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  • The ravaged pearl of the Aegean

    Morning Star, UK
    May 5, 2008 Monday

    Feature - The ravaged pearl of the Aegean

    by Gordon Parsons


    Paradise Lost
    by Giles Milton (Hodder and Stoughton, £20)


    The total annihilation of Smyrna, the modern Izmir, by Kemal Ataturk's
    Turkish forces triumphing over the defeated Greek army in 1922 was
    described by one eyewitness as having "scarcely a parallel in the
    history of the world for hideousness and danger."

    The grotesque record of the rest of the 20th century surely makes the
    claim appear extravagant. Nevertheless, Giles Milton's detailed,
    day-by-day account, largely compiled from personal diaries and
    contemporary reports of the ravaging of this cosmopolitan "pearl of
    the Aegean" which, even through the first world war, had remained an
    Edwardian enclave of summer balls, tea dances and family picnics - at
    least for the privileged Levantine, Greek and Armenian merchants -
    depicts a modern Pandemonium, outrivalling that of the author's
    classic namesake.

    The turning of blind eyes to the human tragedy on the part of the
    great European powers, busily weighing up their own interests in the
    face of a rising Turkish nationalism, comes as no surprise in the
    light of recent history.

    The Turkish government, still today denying the earlier Armenian
    genocide, will not welcome this forensic revelation of the barbarity
    of their national hero who saw his way to power and the destruction of
    the Greek dreams of a greater Greece that hoped to encompass large
    portions of Asia Minor "with the great city of Smyrna at its heart."
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