Film Casts Light On Dark Chapter Of Turkish Past

FILM CASTS LIGHT ON DARK CHAPTER OF TURKISH PAST
By Ayla Jean Yackley

Reuters
Feb 20 2009
UK

ISTANBUL (Reuters) – Mihail Vasiliadis’s friends warned the teenager
to leave work early and go home to his family on September 6, 1955.

Within hours, mobs were attacking thousands of shops, churches and
homes throughout Istanbul in a rampage against ethnic Greeks that
eventually led thousands to leave Turkey.

"It was the shock of a lifetime, but it was something that wasn’t
talked about for 50 years," said Vasiliadis, who was aged 15 at the
time and is now one of just 2,800 or so Greeks left in Istanbul. He
is now the editor of Apoyevmatimi, Istanbul’s last Greek-language
newspaper.

Now a film entitled "Guz Sancisi," or "The Pain of Autumn," tells the
story of that night more than half a century ago, the first time a
Turkish movie has tackled the events that Istanbul Greeks call their
"Kristallnacht."

The fictional love story of Behcet and Elena, a Turkish man and
a Greek woman, is set against the tension that culminated in the
real-life destruction of 5,300 businesses and houses owned by Greeks,
Armenians and Jews.

More than 500,000 people have seen the film since its release last
month, according to its distributor Ozen Film.

Television talk shows and newspapers have covered both the film and
the discussion of the events on which it is based.

Its makers say the public debate is a result of an easing of curbs
on freedom of expression accompanying Turkey’s drive to meet European
Union membership standards.

"This film couldn’t have been made 10 years ago," said Etyen Mahcupyan,
who wrote the screenplay and is editor of the Armenian community
newspaper Agos.

"Though the laws on the books still limit free speech, the reality
is there’s less and less that can’t be criticised."

PHOTOGRAPHS VANDALISED

As recently as 2005, demonstrators stormed an Istanbul gallery and
vandalised photographs on exhibit from a prosecutor’s investigation
into the 1955 events.

"Until now, we’ve either used silence or shouted to block out the
past," said Murat Belge, literature professor at Bilgi University
and a political columnist, who was prosecuted in 2006 for criticising
Turkey’s treatment of minorities. "It’s a major shift that we’re now
using art to examine it."

On the night in question, thousands of protesters converged on central
Istanbul, incited by news reports that Greeks in Thessaloniki had
bombed the childhood home of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of
modern Turkey. It emerged later that the reports were false.

Tension between Turkey and its historical rival Greece was high at
the time over Cyprus.

Police and soldiers stood by when the protest turned
violent. Cemeteries were desecrated, churches were looted and about
a dozen people died, said Dilek Guven, a historian and author of a
2005 book on the subject, "The September 6-7 Events." Hundreds of
women were raped, she said.

Damage was estimated at $50 million, or about $400 million in today’s
terms. Most of the attacks were against Greek-owned targets, but
almost a third were aimed at property owned by Armenians and Jews.

More than 5,000 people were arrested and most were later acquitted.

Prime Minister Adnan Menderes and two members of his government,
deposed in a 1960 military coup, were found guilty the following year
of violating the constitution and executed.

During the trial, one of the principal charges the judges heard was
that the Menderes government was behind the 1955 events.

Research by Guven and others has shown the conspiracy ran deeper,
involving the military and the intelligence service, and was aimed at
pressuring minorities to abandon their property and leave the country.

NEVER DISCUSSED

"A film like this might be just a film in another country," said
Mahcupyan. "Because there’s been a vacuum and this issue was never
discussed, the film now fulfils an important mission."

Today, 60 percent of Greeks living in Istanbul, seat of the
Greek-dominated Byzantine Empire for 1,000 years until 1453, are
aged over 55, says the Rev. Dositheos Anagnostopulous, a spokesman
for the Greek Orthodox Church in Istanbul.

One and a half million Greeks left Turkey for Greece in 1923, when the
Turkish republic was established, and thousands more emigrated when a
"wealth tax" imposed on minorities in 1942 wiped out their fortunes
before it was repealed two years later.

About 120,000 Greeks were living in Istanbul in 1955, said
Anagnostopulous. After the attacks 50,000 more left, and the final blow
was in 1964 after fighting between Turkish and Greek Cypriots. By 1966,
just 30,000 Greeks remained, he said.

Istanbul, a city of 15 million people, is also home today to about
60,000 Armenians and fewer than 20,000 Jews.

"September 6-7 was our Kristallnacht," Anagnostopulous said,
referring to the Nazi pogrom of 1938. "The chances of something like
this happening again are slim, because Turkish youth today are more
critical in their thinking. But to be sure, they need to learn that
this catastrophe occurred, that’s why the film is important."

The Ecumenical Patriarchate, the spiritual centre of the world’s
250 million Orthodox Christians, is still based in Istanbul. The
EU has criticised the Turkish government’s refusal to recognise the
patriarchate’s legal status and its ban on the training of Orthodox
clergy.

Anagnostopulous said a 2006 change in the law on non-Muslim foundations
has relaxed restrictions on Greeks’ property rights. However, the
government has returned only one of the handful of buildings that the
European Court of Human Rights has ruled it had illegally seized over
the years.

The Turkish government has never formally apologised for the state’s
role in the violence 54 years ago.

"We are aware in Turkey of what we have done, but we fail to confront
it, and we keep repeating it," Belge said. "This is a society that
fails to bury its dead, and so you have a lot of ghosts roaming
around."