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France: Afternoon Armenian-Greek dancing for successful Ucfaf Valence (Drôme)

October 12, 2015 By administrator

Greek-armenian-Dance-PSSunday, October 11, the Ucfaf (French Cultural Union of Armenians of France) Valencia proposed to the room of La Valentine (Bourg-Les-Valence) an Armenian-Greek dancing afternoon with the delivery of a Greek dance troupe coming from Grenoble monitoring Armenian dances. Vartkes Vartanian the president of the Valencia-Ucfaf first thanked the audience -more than 200 people- come to this appointment which was a first. He was accompanied by many members of which Ucfaf Sonia Sarkissian, Zarmig Nourissian, Bédig or Hermine Ohanian Kéchichian. In the audience, many personalities, among them the father Andranik Maldjian, Khosrof Iliozer (President of the Association of Malatia), Krikor Amirzayan (President of “Arménia”). Greek dancing troupe performed several traditional dances from various regions of Greece (Peloponnese, Thrace, Macedonia) as well as Anatolia and Armenia … with the dance “Tanzara” popular dance Kharpert region. Then the troupe led the public to perform some sirtakis and Greek dances that look elsewhere lot “Kotchari” Armenian traditional dance. Chaining kotcharis and some Greek dancing on the dance floor the atmosphere was at most. Bédig Ohanian has even performed in a Greek dance around a glass placed on the ground …

The public, at the tables of Armenian specialties, appreciated this friendly event. The singer Koko Bardakjian synthesizer accompanied by Sonia Vartanian Vasken Alachian and then animated the Armenian dances. Vartkes Vartanian has to his credit two discs of Armenian pop songs also sang for the greatest pleasure of the public. Koko Bardakjian then held the audience on the dance floor late into the evening. A beautiful afternoon of Ucfaf that continued late into the evening.

Krikor Amirzayan in Valence (Drôme) text and photo-reportage

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: Armenian, dance, France, Greek

Davutoglu The God-father of Islamic state calls on US Turks to fight against Armenian, Jewish, Greek, diaspora

September 28, 2015 By administrator

Davutoglu-NATO-ISISPrime Minister of Turkey Ahmet Davutoğlu, who had previously stated that the Armenian diaspora is also the diaspora of Turkey, urged the Turks living in the US to fight against the Armenian diaspora.

Davutoğlu, who is attending the 70th Regular Session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York City, also met with representatives of the Turkish NGOs in the US, reported Agos Armenian bilingual weekly of Istanbul, Turkey.

At the talk, the Turkish PM called on those in attendance to fight against the Armenian, Jewish, Greek and several other lobbyists.

Ahmet Davutoğlu also thanked the American Turks for holding April 24 rallies supporting Armenian Genocide denial.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: against, Armenian, Davutoglu, fight, Greek, Jewish, US-Turk

Ermenilerin, Rumların, Kürtlerin çocukları mıyız? Turkish writer says there is no real Turk, mixed with Greeks, Kurds and Armenians

August 6, 2015 By administrator

ermenilerin-rumlarin-kurtlerin-ortak-miyizErdoğan’ın sözleriyle başlayan tartışma devam ediyor. Ahmet Altan da bugün Erdoğan’ın sözleri üzerinden ‘Ecdat’ başlıklı bir köşe yazısı kaleme aldı. Osmanlı’ya ilişkin ayrıntılara yer verdi. ‘Özbeöz Türk müyüz yoksa Türklerle Anadolu’da o zamanlarda yaşayan Bizanslıların, Ermenilerin, Rumların, Kürtlerin ortak çocukları mıyız. Sahip olduğunuz tarihin zenginliğiyle övünün, palavralarla övünmekten daha iyidir.’ dedi.

TIMETURK / Haber Merkezi
İşte Altan’ın o yazısı..
Kabul edelim ki biz Türkler pek bir şey “icat” edemeyiz ama iyi uydururuz.

Belki en palavracıları en yukarılara çıkarmamızın nedeni de budur, belki de siyaseti de bir uydurma yarışması sanıyoruz.

En iyi uydurduğumuz şeylerin arasında herhalde “tarih” güzide bir yer tutar.

“Ecdadımız” palavraları kabul edeyim ki ben en çok sevdiklerim arasındadır.

Bizim “ecdadımız” dediğimiz halifelerimiz efendilerimizin, o “attan inmeyen” padişahlarımızın hemen hemen hepsinin dedesinin Hıristiyan olduğunu hatta bir kısmının da papaz olduğunu biliyorsunuz değil mi?

Aranızdan bir kişinin, Başbakan da dâhil, Kanunî’nin dedesinin adını bilmediğine eminim.

II. Bayezid diye öyle öyle bilgiç bilgiç gülümsemeyin, o babasının babası, annesinin babası kimdi?

Peki, halife efendilerimizin sarayı Topkapı’nın bahçesinde neden bir kilise var?

Peki, bizim ecdadımız dediğimiz Osmanlı’dan önceki atalarımız kimler?

Osmanlı kim peki?

Osmanlı’nın Kayı Aşireti’nden çıktığını biliyorsunuz diyelim, Kayı Aşireti hakkında ne biliyorsunuz?

Çok fazla bir bilginiz olamaz çünkü tarihte de çok fazla bir bilgi yok, Kayı Aşireti’nin varlığı bile kuşkulu.

Biraz daha geriye gidelim.

Osmanlı 1299’da kuruldu, Türkler Anadolu’ya 1071’de geldi.

Alparslan’la birlikte Anadolu’ya kaç Türk geldi?

“Türkler kim” sorusunu atlayıp başka soruya geçelim.

Bugün “Türk” olduğunu söylediğimiz 70 milyon insan Alparslan’la birlikte gelen “Türklerin” özbeöz çocukları mı?

Yoksa biz o gelen Türklerle Anadolu’da o zamanlarda yaşayan Bizanslıların, Ermenilerin, Rumların, Kürtlerin ortak çocukları mıyız?

Nasıl oluyor da “ecdadımız” sadece Türkler ve Müslümanlar oluyor o zaman?

Ecdadımız arasında Bizanslılar yok mu?

“Kahpe Bizans” demek neden ecdadımıza hakaret sayılmıyor?

Çünkü tarihi uyduruyoruz.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Greek, Kurd, Turks

Greek Bailout: Germany Cuts Own Throat by Twisting Greece’s Arm

July 18, 2015 By administrator

1020203930Germany has shot itself in the foot by persuading Greece to accept its new highly unpopular bailout deal and now “Europe as it is, is over,” according to Tyler Durden, an analyst for the financial website Zero Hedge.

The Italians, Spanish, and French anxiously watched how Germany and the Troika twisted Greece’s arm in an Italian mob-style, Tyler Durden, an analyst for the financial website Zero Hedge pointed out, adding that the EU as it is, is over now.

“The Germans just made their biggest mistake in a long time (how about some 75 years) over the weekend. Now, when all you have to bring to a conversation slash negotiation is bullying and strong arming and brute force, that should perhaps not be overly surprising. But it’s a behemoth failure all by itself regardless,” the analyst noted.

The author underscored that Greek Prime Minister Tsipras failed to introduce an alternative currency in Greece and has ultimately given in to the Troika not because he lost his nerve, but because he was actually “made an offer he couldn’t refuse.”

In other words, the Troika was ready to turn Greece into a “failed state.”

The analyst pointed to some of Tsipras’ remarks he made after the new deal had been concluded.

“We took the responsibility for the decision to avert the most extreme plans by conservative circles in Europe… We resisted demands for the transfer of state assets abroad and averted a banking collapse which had been meticulously planned… I promise you that as hard as we fought here, we will now fight at home, to finish the oligarchy which brought us to this state,” Tsipras stated.

Germany has obviously cut its own throat by undermining the trust of the EU member states which were closely watching the negotiations. Berlin’s era of economic strength is now over the hill, since “without trust you have nothing,” the analyst underscored.

It goes without saying that “the people here in Greece are being forced to pay for years for something they were never a part of, and that they never profited from.” Their profits went to Germany-backed investment banks and Greece’s corrupt elite. Such a business model is doomed, according to the author.

Indeed, Greece’s creditors have completely ignored the results of the Greek national referendum, turning a deaf ear to the plea of the people. The new bailout agreement concluded between Athens, Germany and the Troika can be called a “full colonization” of Greece by the West, Dimitrios Patelis, professor at the Technical University of Crete, noted.

This mob-style way of doing business is a distinguishing feature of the “fascist capitalism,” US publicist Eric Zuesse underscored in his article earlier this week. “This is not democratic capitalism. It is not socialism. It is, instead, fascism. It is dictatorial capitalism,” he stated.

On Monday, the Eurozone leaders agreed to provide Athens with a three-year 86-billion-euro loan to bolster the Greek economy in exchange for tough reforms to the country’s pension system, VAT and labor laws.

Source: sputniknews.com

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: bailout, Germany, Greek

Greek Finance Minister Abruptly Resigns

July 6, 2015 By administrator

07Greece-SS6-master675-v5Yanis Varoufakis, Greece’s combative finance minister, who took a strong stand in demanding that creditors write off some of his country’s debts, abruptly resigned on Monday morning.
Mr. Varoufakis had played a key role in rallying votes for a resounding “no” on a referendum on Sunday that asked Greeks whether they were willing to accept an arrangement with creditors that would require considerable further austerity, such as pension cuts. Mr. Varoufakis had threatened last week to resign if a “yes” vote passed, and his decision to resign after he and his allies prevailed in the referendum was unexpected.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: FM, Greek, resigns

Athens 1944: Britain’s dirty secret Report The Guardian

July 4, 2015 By administrator

A day that changed history: the bodies of unarmed protestors shot by the police and the British army in Athens on 3 December 1944. Photograph: Dmitri Kessel/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images

A day that changed history: the bodies of unarmed protestors shot by the police and the British army in Athens on 3 December 1944. Photograph: Dmitri Kessel/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images

When 28 civilians were killed in Athens, it wasn’t the Nazis who were to blame, it was the British. Ed Vulliamy and Helena Smith reveal how Churchill’s shameful decision to turn on the partisans who had fought on our side in the war sowed the seeds for the rise of the far right in Greece today.

By Ed Vulliamy and Helena Smith

  • This article is the subject of a column by the readers’ editor.

“I can still see it very clearly, I have not forgotten,” says Títos Patríkios. “The Athens police firing on the crowd from the roof of the parliament in Syntagma Square. The young men and women lying in pools of blood, everyone rushing down the stairs in total shock, total panic.”

And then came the defining moment: the recklessness of youth, the passion of belief in a justice burning bright: “I jumped up on the fountain in the middle of the square, the one that is still there, and I began to shout: “Comrades, don’t disperse! Victory will be ours! Don’t leave. The time has come. We will win!”

“I was,” he says now, “profoundly sure, that we would win.” But there was no winning that day; just as there was no pretending that what had happened would not change the history of a country that, liberated from Adolf Hitler’s Reich barely six weeks earlier, was now surging headlong towards bloody civil war.

Even now, at 86, when Patríkios “laughs at and with myself that I have reached such an age”, the poet can remember, scene-for-scene, shot for shot, what happened in the central square of Greek political life on the morning of 3 December 1944.

This was the day, those 70 years ago this week, when the British army, still at war with Germany, opened fire upon – and gave locals who had collaborated with the Nazis the guns to fire upon – a civilian crowd demonstrating in support of the partisans with whom Britain had been allied for three years.

The crowd carried Greek, American, British and Soviet flags, and chanted: “Viva Churchill, Viva Roosevelt, Viva Stalin’” in endorsement of the wartime alliance.

Twenty-eight civilians, mostly young boys and girls, were killed and hundreds injured. “We had all thought it would be a demonstration like any other,” Patríkios recalls. “Business as usual. Nobody expected a bloodbath.”

Britain’s logic was brutal and perfidious: Prime minister Winston Churchill considered the influence of the Communist Party within the resistance movement he had backed throughout the war – the National Liberation Front, EAM – to have grown stronger than he had calculated, sufficient to jeopardise his plan to return the Greek king to power and keep Communism at bay. So he switched allegiances to back the supporters of Hitler against his own erstwhile allies.

There were others in the square that day who, like the 16-year-old Patríkios, would go on to become prominent members of the left. Míkis Theodorakis, renowned composer and iconic figure in modern Greek history, daubed a Greek flag in the blood of those who fell. Like Patríkios, he was a member of the resistance youth movement. And, like Patríkios, he knew his country had changed. Within days, RAF Spitfires and Beaufighters were strafing leftist strongholds as the Battle of Athens – known in Greece as the Dekemvriana – began, fought not between the British and the Nazis, but the British alongside supporters of the Nazis against the partisans. “I can still smell the destruction,” Patríkios laments. “The mortars were raining down and planes were targeting everything. Even now, after all these years, I flinch at the sound of planes in war movies.”

And thereafter Greece’s descent into catastrophic civil war: a cruel and bloody episode in British as well as Greek history which every Greek knows to their core – differently, depending on which side they were on – but which remains curiously untold in Britain, perhaps out of shame, maybe the arrogance of a lack of interest. It is a narrative of which the millions of Britons who go to savour the glories of Greek antiquity or disco-dance around the islands Mamma Mia-style, are unaware.

The legacy of this betrayal has haunted Greece ever since, its shadow hanging over the turbulence and violence that erupted in 2008 after the killing of a schoolboy by police – also called the Dekemvriana – and created an abyss between the left and right thereafter.

“The 1944 December uprising and 1946-49 civil war period infuses the present,” says the leading historian of these events, André Gerolymatos, “because there has never been a reconciliation. In France or Italy, if you fought the Nazis, you were respected in society after the war, regardless of ideology. In Greece, you found yourself fighting – or imprisoned and tortured by – the people who had collaborated with the Nazis, on British orders. There has never been a reckoning with that crime, and much of what is happening in Greece now is the result of not coming to terms with the past.”

Before the war, Greece was ruled by a royalist dictatorship whose emblem of a fascist axe and crown well expressed its dichotomy once war began: the dictator, General Ioannis Metaxas, had been trained as an army officer in Imperial Germany, while Greek King George II – an uncle of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh – was attached to Britain. The Greek left, meanwhile, had been reinforced by a huge influx of politicised refugees and liberal intellectuals from Asia Minor, who crammed into the slums of Pireaus and working-class Athens.

Both dictator and king were fervently anti-communist, and Metaxas banned the Communist Party, KKE, interning and torturing its members, supporters and anyone who did not accept “the national ideology” in camps and prisons, or sending them into internal exile. Once war started, Metaxas refused to accept Mussolini’s ultimatum to surrender and pledged his loyalty to the Anglo-Greek alliance. The Greeks fought valiantly and defeated the Italians, but could not resist the Wehrmacht. By the end of April 1941, the Axis forces imposed a harsh occupation of the country. The Greeks – at first spontaneously, later in organised groups – resisted.

But, noted the British Special Operations Executive (SOE): “The right wing and monarchists were slower than their opponents in deciding to resist the occupation, and were therefore of little use.”

Britain’s natural allies were therefore EAM – an alliance of left wing and agrarian parties of which the KKE was dominant, but by no means the entirety – and its partisan military arm, ELAS.

There is no overstating the horror of occupation. Professor Mark Mazower’s book Inside Hitler’s Greece describes hideous bloccos or “round-ups” – whereby crowds would be corralled into the streets so that masked informers could point out ELAS supporters to the Gestapo and Security Battalions – which had been established by the collaborationist government to assist the Nazis – for execution. Stripping and violation of women was a common means to secure “confessions”. Mass executions took place “on the German model”: in public, for purposes of intimidation; bodies would be left hanging from trees, guarded by Security Battalion collaborators to prevent their removal. In response, ELAS mounted daily counterattacks on the Germans and their quislings. The partisan movement was born in Athens but based in the villages, so that Greece was progressively liberated from the countryside. The SOE played its part, famous in military annals for the role of Brigadier Eddie Myers and “Monty” Woodhouse in blowing up the Gorgopotomas viaduct in 1942 and other operations with the partisans – andartes in Greek.

By autumn 1944, Greece had been devastated by occupation and famine. Half a million people had died – 7% of the population. ELAS had, however, liberated dozens of villages and become a proto-government, administering parts of the country while the official state withered away. But after German withdrawal, ELAS kept its 50,000 armed partisans outside the capital, and in May 1944 agreed to the arrival of British troops, and to place its men under the officer commanding, Lt Gen Ronald Scobie.

On 12 October the Germans evacuated Athens. Some ELAS fighters, however, had been in the capital all along, and welcomed the fresh air of freedom during a six-day window between liberation and the arrival of the British. One partisan in particular is still alive, aged 92, and is a legend of modern Greece.

Read more on The Guardian

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: dirty secret, Greek, UK

British intelligence ‘spied on German Greek plans’ – Wikileaks

July 2, 2015 By administrator

By Matthew Holehouse, in Brussels

German Chancellor Angela Merkel's personal mobile phone may have been monitored by the US (Reuters)

German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s personal mobile phone may have been monitored by the US (Reuters)

 (The telegraph) British intelligence spied on German leaders as they discussed how to bailout Greece in 2011, newly released cables purport to show.

British officials passed intelligence to the US National Security Agency on proposals by Germany to ask developing nations to help rescue Athens.

• Greece crisis live – Polls suggest vote will go down to the wire

The claim was made by Wikileaks, the anti-secrecy website, in the latest release of US cables from the US spy agency. The website did not give a source for the documents, but it follows the leak of thousands of cables by Edward Snowden, a former contractor who is now living in Russia.

The documents also appear to show that the US was intercepting calls of Angela Merkel and a raft of her senior officials.

Reports two years ago that Merkel’s phone had been targeted by the NSA prompted diplomatic friction between Berlin and Washington, but German prosecutors recently dropped their probe into the case citing lack of concrete evidence.

WikiLeaks said the new, partially-redacted list of 69 phone and fax numbers belonged to senior officials at Germany’s economy and finance ministries, among others.

• Wikileaks documents reveal US spied on French leaders

Sigmar Gabriel, the economy minister, and Oskar Lafontaine the former finance minister, are on the list. Suddeutsche Zeitung said some of the numbers are still active.

Wikileaks published two documents it claimed were summaries of conversations intercepted – one involving Merkel and a second involving a senior aide – concerning the Greek debt crisis.

A conversation involving Niklaus Meyer-Landrut was intercepted by British intelligence, which passed it to the NSA, according to WikiLeaks. In it, Mr Meyer-Landrut discloses that “the Germans would support a special IMF fund into which the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) nations would pool funds for the purpose of bolstering eurozone bailout activities”.

The revelations about US espionage in Germany provoked outrage in a country still haunted by the memory of mass surveillance by the East German Stasi.

In 2013 Mrs Merkel publicly rebuked President Obama over the affair. “Spying between friends, that’s just not done,” she said.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Brithis, german, Greek, intelligence, spied

Turkey A Greek Orthodox Church door set ablaze in Istanbul

June 10, 2015 By administrator

n_83753_1A Greek Orthodox church’s door was set ablaze in the evening of June 9 in the Kadıköy district on Istanbul’s Anatolia side.

A door of the Hagia Triada Greek Orthodox Church was set on fire on June 9 by Muhammed Şimdi, 25, who reportedly suffers from a mental illness. The church is located on Nispetiye Street, a side street of Bahariye, Kadıköy’s main thoroughfare.

The perpetrator rolled around the church holding a paper box of paint thinner, which he used to set one of the church’s unused doors on fire at around 8:30 p.m. after he jumped over the walls of the church compound.

The door immediately caught fire and the perpetrator attempted to escape shouting “Allahu Akbar.”

He was captured by officers of the municipal police and the people who saw the flames at the time. The fire was extinguished by the locals near the scene.

Şimdi was reported to have a criminal record and to be suffering from some form of mental illness, as he had previously undergone mental treatment in the Erenköy Mental Hospital, according to police records.

Konstantin Kiracopolos, an employee working for the foundation running the church, told reporters the perpetrator set the door on fire after claiming he saw Jesus Christ in a dream. The foundation has filed a complaint against the perpetrator, Kiracopolos added.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: ablaze, Church, Greek, Turkey

How Greeks’ attempt to send Cilician Armenians weapons failed in 1913

May 27, 2015 By administrator

192850An interesting episode in the history of Armenian-Greek friendship and military cooperation turned to be fatal on the threshold of the Armenian Genocide.

During that period in 1910-1915 prominent political figure Eleftherios Venizelos (1864 – 1936) was the Greek Prime Minister, who, being one of the best friends of the Armenian people, attached great importance to supporting and cooperating with them against the Turkish rule, armeniangenocide100.org reports.

According to Mshak newspaper, a Greek steamship, loaded with weapons and ammunition (some sources say 7000 rifles) departed for Cilicia in November 1913, to give them to Armenians. Learning about this, the commander of the German naval forces in the Mediterranean Sea left for Cilician coast to prevent the unloading. On the threshold of the World War I, Germany, the ally of the Ottoman Empire, could not allow armament of the Armenians.

But things did not lead to German intervention. According to Mshak, Armenians, “obeying their religious authorities’ warnings and not thinking about rebellion in general,” did not go to accept the weapons. Thus, the steamship approached the shores near Mersin and left as no one came to meet.

Before that, however, the local Turks had already learnt about the steamship’s arrival and its purpose and started to threaten Armenians: the latter were afraid that the 1909 Adana massacres could repeat. Although the German admiral could not stop the Greek steamer, he heard of Turks’ anti-Armenian activities, visited the governor of Adana and reportedly threatened to bombard the province in case Armenians were slaughtered and said “Germany will stop supporting Turkey against Russia.” It is unknown how the German command would really act in case Armenians were slaughtered then. However, in the period when the reforms in the Armenian provinces in Turkey were in the center of diplomatic dispute in European superpowers, Germany, previously passive and mainly supportingTurkey, came to support reforms. It aimed to bereave Russia, Great Britain and France to rule the reform process on the one hand, and to divert the Western Armenians’ sympathy to its side on the other. (The German-Armenian society was established in 1914 in Germany, presided over by prominent social activist and humanist Johannes Lepsius).

Already in 1915, Germany pursued a policy of indifference and permissiveness towards its military ally in the issue concerning the massacres and forced deportation of Armenians.

As Mshak reported, citing Greek sources, the ship conveying the weapons belonged to a private person and no political meaning was attached to it appearing on Mersin shores.

Although the fact of declining the Greek military support refutes one of the widely spread theses of Turkish denialism, i.e. the Armenians’ rebellion, it should be noted that the Armenians had the full moral and legal right to take up arms and fight against the Turkish dictatorship and the policy of extermination after the state anti-Armenian genocidal policy was implemented in the era of Abdul Hamid.

Events, however, took a different course and due to certain reasons the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, including those in Cilicia chose to rely on authorities on the eve of the WWI in order not anger them and solve the Armenian Question through the implementation of reforms. And the incident in Cilicia only proves, unfortunately, that Armenians were not ready to protect themselves against physical extermination and deportations ahead of the impending Genocide.

Related links:

Armeniangenocide100. How Greeks’ attempt to send weapons to Cilician Armenians failed in 1913

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, Greek, weapons

Book on American saving 250,000 Armenians comes out in US “The Great Fire” Smyrna,

May 18, 2015 By administrator

Turkish nationalist Army entered Smyrna, set it on fire,

Turkish nationalist Army entered Smyrna, set it on fire,

On occasion of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the former Maine journalist Lou Ureneck published a new book about the events that happened after almost a decade of killings and dislocations.

The book is called “The Great Fire,” and details the efforts of an American who may have saved a quarter of a million lives, MPBN reports.

According to Ureneck, “Smyrna was the richest, most sophisticated and most cosmopolitan city of the Ottoman Empire, a city of about a half-a-million people on the Aegean coast, the west coast of Turkey.  The story takes place in 1922, which is the conclusion of 10 years of religious cleansing. The Armenian Genocide fits into that.  In September of 1922, the Turkish nationalist Army entered Smyrna, set it on fire, and began a slaughter of its Christian residents. Smyrna was principally a Christian city. Many different peoples lived there:  Greek Christians, Armenian Christians, Jews, Turks, Europeans, but it was predominantly a Christian city and a Greek Christian city.  So a slaughter was commenced and a terrible humanitarian situation developed.  People were starving, they were without water, disease was rampant in the city.  The Turkish Army separated men from women and they were marching the men into the interior of Turkey, not unlike what had happened in 1915 and 1916 to the Armenians during those deportations.՞

The author of the book also said: “ The great powers at the time, principally the United States, Britain, France, and Italy, all had warships in the harbor, but they all elected not to get involved. And, at that point, miraculously really, a minister, a small town minister from upstate New York who had a minor job with the YMCA in Smyrna, came forward.  He felt moved to do something to save the people who he was watching suffer:  Asa Jennings.  And he set in motion a series of events that ended with the evacuation of a quarter million people.  He first paid a bribe to an Italian ship captain and he was able to transport 2,000 people out of the city.  And, I don’t want to give too much of the story away, but in time, he came to lead a flotilla of 50 ships.  He was able to rescue at least a quarter of a million people from the city of Smyrna, who otherwise probably would have died.”

Filed Under: Articles, Books, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, book, Greek, smyrna, The-Great-Fire

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