Paradise Lost: Smyrna 1922
by Giles Milton
Sceptre, HK$320
It is axiomatic that history repeats itself and while Giles Milton is too subtle a writer to underline a moral, the catastrophe that overtook Smyrna in 1922 is echoed by more recent events in Rwanda and Darfur, to name but two degraded places.
The city now called Izmir occupied a unique position on the Aegean coast in the aftermath of the first world war. Thanks to an indulgent arrangement with the Turkish government, it enjoyed the status of a special economic zone and a bevy of merchant princes turned it into one of the most prosperous entrepots of the time.
Cosmopolitan and tolerant, Smyrna's numerous nationalities existed side by side, watched over
by paternalistic, dynastic Levantine families who intermingled and intermarried, socialised and traded with one another in a latter-day Arcadia. But the idyll was not to last.