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Smyrna, 1922: End of an era

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  • Smyrna, 1922: End of an era

    http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_id =11288325 <http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?stor y_id=11288325>



    Smyrna, 1922

    End of an era

    May 1st 2008
    The Economist print edition


    WHEN Smyrna-modern Izmir-fell to the Turkish army in 1922, and much of
    it was destroyed by fire, the city's role as a bastion of Greek and
    Christian culture, going back nearly 2,000 years, came to an abrupt
    end. Before that, the port had been home to a diverse and cosmopolitan
    population; by the standards of the region, it was a beacon of
    tolerance and prosperity.

    In addition to the Greeks, Armenians, Jews and Turks, there were also
    Americans and Britons and what Giles Milton calls the "Levantines",
    rich families of European descent, who spoke half a dozen languages
    and occupied vast villas. Their dynasties dominated the trade and
    industry of the region. Some (like the Whittalls) retained British
    nationality over generations of Ottoman life, and it is their
    English-language diaries, letters and documents that provide Mr Milton
    with his best material. Although this slant is unrepresentatively
    British and privileged-lots of parties and picnics-it allows the
    author to be fair towards the Greeks and the Turks, who still blame
    one another entirely for the disaster.

    The city's destruction-still known in Greece as "the catastrophe"-had
    its roots in the first world war and the effort by the great powers
    to grab pieces of the disintegrating Ottoman empire.

    Britain, America and France backed Greece's charismatic leader,
    Eleftherios Venizelos, in his pursuit of the megali idea ("great
    idea"), the dream of creating a greater Greece by occupying Smyrna and
    swathes of Anatolia. Having licensed a war by proxy, the allies in
    varying degrees turned cool on it. They looked on passively as Mustafa
    Kemal (later Ataturk, republican Turkey's founder) and his troops
    routed the Greeks from Anatolia and reoccupied Smyrna, bent on revenge
    for Greek atrocities in the city and further east.

    The port was ransacked and looted for days. Women were raped and
    mutilated, children were beheaded and more than 100,000 people
    killed. Meanwhile, 21 allied warships sat in the harbour. Hundreds of
    thousands of refugees were trapped on the city's quayside, yet
    officers on the ships still dressed for dinner and ordered louder
    music to drown out the screams. "Paradise Lost" is a timely reminder
    of the appalling cost of expansionist political ambitions; it tells a
    fascinating story with clarity and insight.
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