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Greeks in Turkey

The Greeks in Turkey (Turkish: Rumlar) constitute a small population of Greek and Greek-speaking Eastern Orthodox Christians who mostly live in Istanbul, as well as on the two islands of the western entrance to the Dardanelles: Imbros and Tenedos (Turkish: Gökçeada and Bozcaada). Greeks are one of the four ethnic minorities officially recognized in Turkey by the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne, together with Jews, Armenians,[6][7][8] and Bulgarians.[9][10][11]

Greeks in Turkey
Έλληνες στην Τουρκία
Türkiye'deki Rumlar
Total population
3,000–5,000 (0.006% of population)[1][2][3]
(not incl. Muslim Greeks[4][5] or Greek Muslims)
Regions with significant populations
Istanbul, İzmir, Çanakkale (Gökçeada and Bozcaada)
Languages
Greek (first language of the majority), Turkish (first language of the minority or second language)
Religion
Greek Orthodoxy
Related ethnic groups
Greek Muslims, Pontic Greeks, Antiochian Greeks
Phanar Greek Orthodox College is a Greek minority school that was founded in the Ottoman Empire in 1454.

They are the remnants of the estimated 200,000 Greeks who were permitted under the provisions of the Convention Concerning the Exchange of Greek and Turkish Populations to remain in Turkey following the 1923 population exchange,[12] which involved the forcible resettlement of approximately 1.5 million Greeks from Anatolia and East Thrace and of half a million Turks from all of Greece except for Western Thrace. After years of persecution (e.g. the Varlık Vergisi and the Istanbul Pogrom), emigration of ethnic Greeks from the Istanbul region greatly accelerated, reducing the Greek minority population from 119,822 before the attack[13] to about 7,000 by 1978.[14] The 2008 figures released by the Turkish Foreign Ministry places the current number of Turkish citizens of Greek descent at the 3,000–4,000 mark.[2] However, according to the Human Rights Watch the Greek population in Turkey is estimated at 2,500 in 2006. The Greek population in Turkey is collapsing as the community is now far too small to sustain itself demographically, due to emigration, much higher death rates than birth rates and continuing discrimination.[15]

Since 1924, the status of the Greek minority in Turkey has been ambiguous. Beginning in the 1930s, the government instituted repressive policies forcing many Greeks to emigrate. Examples are the labour battalions drafted among non-Muslims during World War II, as well as the Fortune Tax (Varlık Vergisi) levied mostly on non-Muslims during the same period. These resulted in financial ruination and death for many Greeks. The exodus was given greater impetus with the Istanbul Pogrom of September 1955 which led to thousands of Greeks fleeing the city, eventually reducing the Greek population to about 7,000 by 1978 and to about 2,500 by 2006. According to the United Nations, this figure was much smaller in 2012 and reached 2,000. As of 2023, according to The Economist, "Turkey’s Greeks are on the verge of extinction".[16]

A minority of Muslim Pontic Greek speakers, using a dialect called "Romeyka" or "Ophitic", still live in the area around Of.[17][18][19]

Name edit

The Greeks of Turkey are referred to in Turkish as Rumlar, meaning "Romans". This derives from the self-designation Ῥωμαῖος (Rhomaîos, pronounced ro-ME-os) or Ρωμιός (Rhomiós, pronounced ro-mee-OS or rom-YOS) used by Byzantine Greeks, who were the continuation of the Roman Empire in the east.

The ethnonym Yunanlar is exclusively used by Turks to refer to Greeks from Greece and not for the population of Turkey.

In Greek, Greeks from Asia Minor are referred to as Greek: Μικρασιάτες or Greek: Ανατολίτες (Mikrasiátes or Anatolítes, lit. "Asia Minor-ites" and "Anatolians"), while Greeks from Pontos (Pontic Greeks) are known as Greek: Πόντιοι (Póntioi).

Greeks from Istanbul are known as Greek: Κωνσταντινουπολίτες (Konstantinoupolítes, lit. "Constantinopolites"), most often shortened to Greek: Πολίτες (Polítes, pronounced po-LEE-tes). Those who arrived during the 1923 population exchange between Greece and Turkey are also referred to as Greek: Πρόσφυγες (Prósfyges, i. e. "Refugees").

History edit

Background edit

 
Distribution of Anatolian Greeks in 1910. Demotic Greek speakers in yellow. Pontic in orange. Cappadocian Greek in green.[20] Shaded regions do not indicate that Greek-speakers were a majority.
 
Agia Triada Greek Orthodox church in Beyoğlu, Istanbul

Greeks have been living in what is now Turkey continuously since the middle 2nd millennium BC. Following upheavals in mainland Greece during the Bronze Age Collapse, the Aegean coast of Asia Minor was heavily settled by Ionian and Aeolian Greeks and became known as Ionia and Aeolia. During the era of Greek colonization from the 8th to the 6th century BC, numerous Greek colonies were founded on the coast of Asia Minor, both by mainland Greeks as well as settlers from colonies such as Miletus. The city of Byzantium, which would go on to become Constantinople and Istanbul, was founded by colonists from Megara in the 7th century BC.

Following the conquest of Asia Minor by Alexander the Great, the rest of Asia Minor was opened up to Greek settlement. Upon the death of Alexander, Asia Minor was ruled by a number of Hellenistic kingdoms such as the Attalids of Pergamum. A period of peaceful Hellenization followed, such that the local Anatolian languages had been supplanted by Greek by the 1st century BC. Asia Minor was one of the first places where Christianity spread, so that by the 4th century AD it was overwhelmingly Christian and Greek-speaking. For the next 600 years, Asia Minor and Constantinople, which eventually became the capital of the Byzantine Empire, would be the centers of the Hellenic world, while mainland Greece experienced repeated barbarian invasions and went into decline.

Following the Battle of Manzikert in 1071, the Seljuk Turks swept through all of Asia Minor. While the Byzantines would recover western and northern Anatolia in subsequent years, central Asia Minor was settled by Turkic peoples and never again came under Byzantine rule. The Byzantine Empire was unable to stem the Turkic advance, and by 1300 most of Asia Minor was ruled by Anatolian beyliks. Smyrna (Turkish: İzmir) fell in 1330, and Philadelphia (Turkish: Alaşehir), fell in 1398. The last Byzantine Greek kingdom in Anatolia, the Empire of Trebizond, covering the Black Sea coast of north-eastern Turkey to the border with Georgia, fell in 1461.

Ottoman Empire edit

 
Pontian Greek ladies and children of Trebizond, early 20th century

Constantinople fell in 1453, marking the end of the Byzantine Empire. Beginning with the Seljuk invasion in the 11th century, and continuing through the Ottoman years, Anatolia underwent a process of Turkification, its population gradually changing from predominantly Christian and Greek-speaking to predominantly Muslim and Turkish-speaking.

Ottoman Empire followed the Sharia rules and there were restrictions regarding the building and restoration of churches. Ottoman documents display that restriction on non-Muslims applied differently depending on the regions. After the Tanzimat reforms in 1839, the Christians could get a permission to repair an old church easier, but still they had to follow specific procedures and were supervised by the local Muslim authorities and population.[21]

A class of moneyed ethnically Greek merchants (they commonly claimed noble Byzantine descent) called Phanariotes emerged in the latter half of the 16th century and went on to exercise great influence in the administration in the Ottoman Empire's Balkan domains in the 18th century. They tended to build their houses in the Phanar quarter of Istanbul in order to be close to the court of the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, who under the Ottoman millet system was recognized as both the spiritual and secular head (millet-bashi) of all the Orthodox subjects (the Rum Millet, or the "Roman nation") of the Empire, often acting as archontes of the Ecumenical See. For all their cosmopolitanism and often western (sometimes Roman Catholic) education, the Phanariots were aware of their Hellenism; according to Nicholas Mavrocordatos' Philotheou Parerga: "We are a race completely Hellenic".[22]

 
The Greek Kingdom and the Greek diaspora in the Balkans and western Asia Minor, according to Professor G. Soteiriadis, 1919

The first Greek millionaire in the Ottoman era was Michael Kantakouzenos Shaytanoglu, who earned 60.000 ducats a year from his control of the fur trade from Russia;[23] he was eventually executed on the Sultan's order. It was the wealth of the extensive Greek merchant class that provided the material basis for the intellectual revival that was the prominent feature of Greek life in the second half of the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th century. Greek merchants endowed libraries and schools; on the eve of the Greek War of Independence the three most important centres of Greek learning, schools-cum-universities, were situated in Chios, Smyrna and Aivali, all three major centres of Greek commerce.[24]

The outbreak of the Greek War of Independence in March 1821 was met by mass executions, pogrom-style attacks, the destruction of churches, and looting of Greek properties throughout the Empire. The most severe atrocities occurred in Constantinople, in what became known as the Constantinople Massacre of 1821. The Orthodox Patriarch Gregory V was executed on April 22, 1821 on the orders of the Ottoman Sultan, which caused outrage throughout Europe and resulted in increased support for the Greek rebels.[25]

By the late 19th and early 20th century, the Greek element was found predominantly in Constantinople and Smyrna, along the Black Sea coast (the Pontic Greeks) and the Aegean coast, the Gallipoli peninsula and a few cities and numerous villages in the central Anatolian interior (the Cappadocian Greeks). The Greeks of Constantinople constituted the largest Greek urban population in the Eastern Mediterranean.[26]

In the first half of 1914, the Ottoman authorities expelled more than 100,000 Ottoman Greeks to Greece.[27]

 
1914 document showing the official figures from the 1914 population census of the Ottoman Empire. The total population (sum of all the millets) was given at 20,975,345, and the Greek population was given at 1,792,206.

World War I and its aftermath edit

Given their large Greek populations, Constantinople and Asia Minor featured prominently in the Greek irredentist concept of Megali Idea (lit. "Great Idea") during the 19th century and early 20th century. The goal of Megali Idea was the liberation of all Greek-inhabited lands and the eventual establishment of a successor state to the Byzantine Empire with Constantinople as its capital. The Greek population amounted to 1,777,146 (16.42% of population during 1910).[28]

During World War I and its aftermath (1914–1923), the government of the Ottoman Empire and subsequently the Turkish National Movement, led by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, instigated a violent campaign against the Greek population of the Empire.[29] The campaign included massacres, forced deportations involving death marches, and summary expulsions. According to various sources, several hundreds of thousand Ottoman Greeks died during this period.[30] Some of the survivors and refugees, especially those in Eastern provinces, took refuge in the neighbouring Russian Empire.

Following Greece's participation on the Allied side in World War I, and the participation of the Ottoman Empire on the side of the Central Powers, Greece received an order to land in Smyrna by the Triple Entente as part of the planned partition of the Ottoman Empire.

On May 15, 1919, twenty thousand[31] Greek soldiers landed in Smyrna, taking control of the city and its surroundings under cover of the Greek, French, and British navies. Legal justifications for the landings was found in the article 7 of the Armistice of Mudros, which allowed the Allies "to occupy any strategic points in the event of any situation arising which threatens the security of Allies."[32] The Greeks of Smyrna and other Christians greeted the Greek troops as liberators. By contrast, the majority of the Muslim population saw them as an invading force.

Subsequently, the Treaty of Sèvres awarded Greece Eastern Thrace up to the Chatalja lines at the outskirts of Constantinople, the islands of Imbros and Tenedos, and the city Smyrna and its vast hinterland, all of which contained substantial Greek populations.

 
Greek soldiers taking their posts in Smyrna amidst the jubilant ethnic Greek population of the city, 15 May 1919.

During the Greco-Turkish War, a conflict which followed the Greek occupation of Smyrna[33][34] in May 1919 and continued until the Great Fire of Smyrna in September 1922, atrocities were perpetrated by both the Greek and Turkish armies.[35][36] For the massacres that occurred during the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–1922, British historian Arnold J. Toynbee wrote that it was the Greek landings that created the Turkish National Movement led by Mustafa Kemal:[37] "The Greeks of 'Pontus' and the Turks of the Greek occupied territories, were in some degree victims of Mr. Venizelos's and Mr. Lloyd George's original miscalculations at Paris."

After the end of the Greco-Turkish War, most of the Greeks remaining in the Ottoman Empire were transferred to Greece under the terms of the 1923 population exchange between Greece and Turkey. The criteria for the population exchange were not exclusively based on ethnicity or mother language, but on religion as well. That is why the Karamanlides (Greek: Καραμανλήδες; Turkish: Karamanlılar), or simply Karamanlis, who were a Turkish-speaking (while they employed the Greek alphabet to write it) Greek Orthodox people of unclear origin, were deported from their native regions of Karaman and Cappadocia in Central Anatolia to Greece as well. On the other hand, Cretan Muslims who were part of the exchange were re-settled mostly on the Aegean coast of Turkey, in areas formerly inhabited by Christian Greeks. Populations of Greek descent can still be found in the Pontos, remnants of the former Greek population that converted to Islam in order to escape the persecution and later deportation. Though these two groups are of ethnic Greek descent, they speak Turkish as a mother language and are very cautious to identify themselves as Greeks, due to the hostility of the Turkish state and neighbours towards anything Greek.

Republic of Turkey edit

 
The main targets of the Istanbul pogrom; 6–7 September 1955.

Due to the Greeks' strong emotional attachment to their first capital as well as the importance of the Ecumenical Patriarchate for Greek and worldwide orthodoxy, the Greek population of Constantinople was specifically exempted and allowed to stay in place. Article 14 of the Treaty of Lausanne (1923) also exempted Imbros and Tenedos islands from the population exchange and required Turkey to accommodate the local Greek majority and their rights. For the most part, the Turks disregarded this agreement and implemented a series of contrary measures which resulted in a further decline of the Greek population, as evidenced by demographic statistics.

In 1923, the Ministry of Public Works asked from the private companies in Turkey to prepare lists of employees with their religion and later ordered them to fire the non-Muslim employees and replace them with Muslim Turks.[38] In addition, a 1932 parliamentary law, barred Greek citizens living in Turkey from a series of 30 trades and professions from tailoring and carpentry to medicine, law and real estate.[39] In 1934, Turkey created the Surname Law which forbade certain surnames that contained connotations of foreign cultures, nations, tribes, and religions. Many minorities, including Greeks, had to adopt last names of a more Turkish rendition.[40][41][42][43] As from 1936, Turkish became the teaching language (except the Greek language lessons) in Greek schools.[44] The Wealthy Levy imposed in 1942 also served to reduce the economic potential of Greek businesspeople in Turkey.[45] When the Axis attacked on Greece during WW2 hundreds of volunteers from the Greek community of Istanbul went to fight in Greece with the approval of Turkish authorities.[46]

In 6–7 September 1955 an anti-Greek pogrom were orchestrated in Istanbul by the Turkish military's Tactical Mobilization Group, the seat of Operation Gladio's Turkish branch; the Counter-Guerrilla. The events were triggered by the news that the Turkish consulate in Thessaloniki, north Greece—the house where Mustafa Kemal Atatürk was born in 1881—had been bombed the day before.[45] A bomb planted by a Turkish usher of the consulate, who was later arrested and confessed, incited the events. The Turkish press conveying the news in Turkey was silent about the arrest and instead insinuated that Greeks had set off the bomb. Although the mob did not explicitly call for Greeks to be killed, over a dozen people died during or after the pogrom as a result of beatings and arson. Jews, Armenians and others were also harmed. In addition to commercial targets, the mob clearly targeted property owned or administered by the Greek Orthodox Church. 73 churches and 23 schools were vandalized, burned or destroyed, as were 8 asperses and 3 monasteries.

The pogrom greatly accelerated emigration of ethnic Greeks from Turkey, and the Istanbul region in particular. The Greek population of Turkey declined from 119,822 persons in 1927,[13] to about 7,000 by 1978. In Istanbul alone, the Greek population decreased from 65,108 to 49,081 between 1955 and 1960.[13]

In 1964 Turkish prime minister İsmet İnönü unilaterally renounced the Greco-Turkish Treaty of Friendship of 1930 and took actions against the Greek minority that resulted in massive expulsions.[47][48] Turkey enforced strictly a long‐overlooked law barring Greek nationals from 30 professions and occupations. For example, Greeks could not be doctors, nurses, architects, shoemakers, tailors, plumbers, cabaret singers, iron-smiths, cooks, tourist guides, etc.[47] Many Greeks were ordered to give up their jobs after this law.[49] Also, Turkish government ordered many Greek‐owned shops to close leaving many Greek families destitute.[47] In addition, Turkey has suspended a 1955 agreement granting unrestricted travel facilities to nationals of both countries. A number of Greeks caught outside Turkey when this suspension took effect and were unable to return to their homes at Turkey.[47] Moreover, Turkey once again deported many Greeks. They were given a week to leave the country, and police escorts saw to it that they make the deadline. Deportees protested that it was impossible to sell businesses or personal property in so short a time. Most of those deported were born in Turkey and they had no place to go in Greece.[47] Greeks had difficulty receiving credit from banks. Those expelled, in some cases, could not dispose of their property before leaving.[49] Furthermore, it forcefully closed the Prinkipo Greek Orthodox Orphanage,[50][51][52] the Patriarchate's printing house[49] and the Greek minority schools on the islands of Gökçeada/Imbros[53] and Tenedos/Bozcaada.[54] Furthermore, the farm property of the Greeks on the islands were taken away from their owners.[54] Moreover, university students were organizing boycotts against Greek shops.[49] Teachers of schools maintained by the Greek minority complained of frequent "inspections" by squads of Turkish officers inquiring into matters of curriculum, texts and especially the use of the Greek language in teaching.[49] In late 1960, the Turkish treasure seized the properties of the Balıklı Greek Hospital. The hospital sued the treasury on the ground that the transfer of its property was illegal, but the Turkish courts were in favor of the Turkish treasure.[55] On August 4, 2022, a fire broke out on the roof of the Balıklı Greek Hospital. The roof was completely destroyed and the upper floor was also destroyed except for the exterior walls. However, the ground floor of the hospital remained unscathed from the fire.

In 1965 the Turkish government established on Imbros an open agricultural prison for Turkish mainland convicts; farming land was expropriated for this purpose. Greek Orthodox communal property was also expropriated and between 1960 and 1990 about 200 churches and chapels were reportedly destroyed. Many from the Greek community on the islands of Imbros and Tenedos responded to these acts by leaving.[56] In addition, at the same year the first mosque was built in the island. It was named Fatih Camii (Conqueror's Mosque) and was built on an expropriated Greek Orthodox communal property at the capital of the island.[57]

In 1991, Turkish authorities ended the military "forbidden zone" status on the island of Imbros.[56]

In 1992, Panimbrian Committee mentioned, that members of the Greek community are "considered by the authorities to be second class citizens" and that the local Greeks are afraid to express their feelings, to protest against certain actions of the authorities or the Turkish settlers, or even to allow anybody to make use of their names when they give some information referring to the violation of their rights, fearing the consequences which they will have to face from the Turkish authorities.[56] The same year the Human Rights Watch report concluded that the Turkish government has denied the rights of the Greek community on Imbros and Tenedos in violation of the Lausanne Treaty and international human rights laws and agreements.[56]

In 1997, the Turkish state seized the Prinkipo Greek Orthodox Orphanage which had been forcefully closed in 1964.[58] After many years of court battles, Turkey returned the property to the Greek community in 2012.[59][58]

In August 2002, a new law was passed by the Turkish parliament to protect the minorities rights, because of Turkey's EU candidacy. With this new law, it prevented the Turkish treasury from seizing community foundations properties.[55]

In 15 August 2010, a ritual was held for the Assumption of Mary at the Sumela Monastery after a 88 years old ban. This annual ritual continues, although it often sparks debate in Turkey for “keeping foreign traditions alive on the day Trabzon was captured by the Turks.”.[60]

Current situation edit

 
Greek population in Istanbul (1844-1997) and percentage of the total city population
 
Ethno-religious groups in Istanbul (1896-1965). A multicultural city in 1896, with a 50.5% Muslim population, turned into a predominantly Muslim one after 1925.

Today most of the remaining Greeks live in Istanbul. In the Fener district of Istanbul where the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople is located, fewer than 100 Greeks live today. A handful also live in other cities of Anatolia. Most are elderly.

Another location where the Greek community lives is the islands Imbros and Tenedos near the Dardanelles, but this community diminished rapidly during the 20th century and only 200 elderly Greeks have remained there, less than 2%. In the 1950s, an estimated 98% of the island was Greek. In the last years the condition of the Greek community in these islands seems to be slightly improving.[61][62]

The Antiochian Greeks (Rum) living in Hatay are the descendants of the Ottoman Levant's and southeast Anatolia's Greek population and are part of the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch. They did not emigrate to Greece during the 1923 population exchange because at that time the Hatay province was under French control. The majority of the Antiochian Greeks moved to Syria and Lebanon at 1939, when Turkey took control of the Hatay region, however a small population remained at this area. After a process of Arabization and Turkification that took place in the 20th century, today almost their entirety speaks Arabic as a mother language. This has made them hard to distinguish from the Arab Christians and some argue that they have become largely homogenized. Their majority doesn't speak Greek at all, the younger generation speaks Turkish, and some have Turkish names now. Their population is about 18,000,[63] and they are faithful to the Patriarchate of Antiochia, although ironically it is now in Damascus. They reside largely in Antakya and/or the Hatay province, but a few are also in Adana province.

The Greek minority continues to encounter problems relating to education and property rights. A 1971 law nationalized religious high schools, and closed the Halki seminary on Istanbul's Heybeli Island which had trained Orthodox clergy since the 19th century. A later outrage was the vandalism of the Greek cemetery on Imbros on October 29, 2010. In this context, problems affecting the Greek minority on the islands of Imbros and Tenedos continue to be reported to the European Commission.[64]

In July 2011, Istanbul's Greek minority newspaper Apoyevmatini declared that it would shut down due to financial difficulties. The four-page Greek-language newspaper faced closure due to financial problems that had been further aggravated by the economic crisis in Greece, when Greek companies stopped publishing advertisements in the newspaper and the offices have already been shut down. This ignited campaign to help the newspaper. Among the supporters were students from Istanbul Bilgi University who subscribed to the newspaper. The campaign saved the paper from bankruptcy for the time being. Because the Greek community is close to extinction, the obituary notices and money from Greek foundations, as well as subscriptions overwhelmingly by Turkish people, are the only sources of income. This income covers only 40 percent of the newspaper expenditures.[65]

That event was followed in September 2011 by a government cash grant of 45,000 Turkish liras to the newspaper through the Turkish Press Advertisement Agency, as part of a wider support of minority newspapers.[66] The Turkish Press Advertisement Agency also declared intention to publish official government advertisements in minority newspapers including Greek papers Apoyevmatini and IHO.[67]

As of 2007, Turkish authorities have seized a total of 1,000 immovables of 81 Greek organizations as well as individuals of the Greek community.[68] On the other hand, Turkish courts provided legal legitimacy to unlawful practices by approving discriminatory laws and policies that violated fundamental rights they were responsible to protect.[69] As a result, foundations of the Greek communities started to file complaints after 1999 when Turkey's candidacy to the European Union was announced. Since 2007, decisions are being made in these cases; the first ruling was made in a case filed by the Phanar Greek Orthodox College Foundation, and the decision was that Turkey violated Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which secured property rights.[69]

A government decree published on 27 August 2011, paves the way to return assets that once belonged to Greek, Armenian, Assyrian, Kurd or Jewish trusts and makes provisions for the government to pay compensation for any confiscated property that has since been sold on, and in a move likely to thwart possible court rulings against the country by the European Court of Human Rights.[70][71]

Since the vast majority of properties confiscated from Greek trusts (and other minority trusts) have been sold to third parties, which as a result cannot be taken from their current owners and be returned, the Greek trusts will receive compensation from the government instead. Compensation for properties that were purchased or were sold to third parties will be decided on by the Finance Ministry. However, no independent body is involved in deciding on compensation, according to the regulations of the government decree of 27 August 2011. If the compensation were judged fairly and paid in full, the state would have to pay compensation worth many millions of Euros for a large number of properties. Another weakness of the government decree is that the state body with a direct interest in reducing the amount of compensation paid, which is the Finance Ministry, is the only body permitted to decide on the amount of compensation paid. The government decree also states that minority trusts must apply for restitution within 12 months of the publication of the government decree, which was issued on 1 October 2011, leaving less than 11 months for the applications to be prepared and submitted. After this deadline terminates on 27 August 2012, no applications can be submitted, in which the government aims to settle this issue permamenetly on a legally sound basis and prevent future legal difficulties involving the European Court of Human Rights.[72]

Demographics of Greeks in Istanbul edit

 
Greek population in Istanbul and percentages of the city population (1844–1997). The Turkish policies, after 1923, led virtually to the elimination of the Greek community.

The Greek community of Istanbul numbered 67,550[13] people in 1955. However, after the Istanbul Pogrom orchestrated by Turkish authorities against the Greek community in that year, their number was dramatically reduced to only 48,000.[73] Today, the Greek community numbers about 2,000 people.[74]

Year People
1897 236,000[75]
1923 100,000[76]
1955 48,000
1978 7,000[77]
2006 2,500[15]
2008 2,000[78]
2014 2,200[79]–2,500[15]

Notable people edit

  • Patriarch Bartholomew I (1940): current patriarch of Constantinople. Born in Imbros as Dimitrios Arhondonis.
  • Elia Kazan (1909-2003): American film director. Born Elias Kazancıoğlu in Istanbul
  • Archbishop Elpidophoros of America (1967): current archbishop of America. Born in Bakırköy, Istanbul as Ioannis Lambriniadis.
  • Patriarch Benedict I of Jerusalem (1892-1980): Patriarch of Jerusalem from 1957 to 1980. Born in Bursa as Vasileios Papadopoulos.
  • Gilbert Biberian (1944-2023): guitarist and composer. Born in Istanbul from a Greek-Armenian family.
  • Chrysanthos Mentis Bostantzoglou (1918-1995): cartoonist known as Bost, born in Istanbul.
  • Thomas Cosmades (1924-2010): evangelical preacher and translators of the New Testament in Turkish. Born in Istanbul.
  • Patriarch Demetrios I of Constantinople (1914-1991): patriarch of Constantinople from 1972 to 1991. Born in Istanbul.
  • Antonis Diamantidis (1892-1945): musician. Born in Istanbul.
  • Savas Dimopoulos (1952): particle physicist at Stanford University. Born in Istanbul.
  • Aleksandros Hacopulos (1911-1980): politician, member of Grand National Assembly twice
  • Violet Kostanda (1958): former volleyball player for Eczacıbaşı and the Turkish National Team. She was born in Istanbul from a Greek-Romani family. Her father Hristo played football for Beşiktaş.
  • Minas Gekos (1959): basketball player and coach who played mainly in Greece. Born in Kurtuluş district of Istanbul.
  • Patroklos Karantinos (1903-1976): modernism architect. Born in Istanbul.
  • Kostas Kasapoglou (1935-2016): footballer player, once capped for the Turkish National Team. Born in Istanbul, he was known with his Turkishized name Koço Kasapoğlu.
  • Konstantinos Spanoudis (1871-1941): politician, founder and first president of AEK Athens. Born in Istanbul, was forced to relocate to Athens.
  • Antonis Kafetzopoulos (1951): actor. Born in Istanbul moved in Greece in 1964.
  • Michael Giannatos (1941-2013): actor. Born in Istanbul moved in Greece in 1964
  • Kostas Karipis (1880-1952): rhebetiko musician. Born in Istanbul.
  • Nikos Kovis (1953): former Turkish football international. Born in Istanbul.
  • Lefteris Antoniadis (1924-2012): Fenerbahçe legend and member of the Turkish national football team. He was born in Büyükada island near Istanbul and was known in Turkey as Lefter Küçükandonyadis.
  • Ioanna Koutsouranti (1936): philosopher and Maltepe University Academic. Born in Istanbul from a Greek (Rum) family, she's known in Turkey as İoanna Kuçuradi.
  • Sappho Leontias (1832-1900): writer, feminist and educationist. Born in Istanbul.
  • Petros Markaris (1937): writer. Born in Istanbul.
  • Kleanthis Maropoulos (1919-1991): Greek international footballer. Born in Istanbul, fled to Greece during the Greek-Turks population exchange when he was 3 years old.
  • Yannis Vasilis, a former ultra-nationalist Turk turned pacifist and promoter of Greek heritage in Turkey after finding out his Greek heritage.

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ a b . Today's Zaman. 2008-12-15. Archived from the original on 2010-05-01. Retrieved 2008-12-15.
  3. ^ "Greeks Living in Turkey". ΜΕΓΑ ΡΕΥΜΑ. Retrieved 2021-03-23.
  4. ^ Türkyılmaz, Zeynep (2016-12-01). "Pontus'un kripto-hristiyan Rumları, İslam ve Hıristiyanlık arasında". REPAIR - Türkiye, Ermenistan ve Ermeni diasporası sivil toplumları arasında kültürlerarası diyalog projesi (in Turkish). Retrieved 2021-03-23.
  5. ^ "saygi-ozturk/13-ilimiz-daha-gitti". www.sozcu.com.tr. 2018. Retrieved 2021-03-23.
  6. ^ Kaya, Nurcan (2015-11-24). "Teaching in and Studying Minority Languages in Turkey: A Brief Overview of Current Issues and Minority Schools". European Yearbook of Minority Issues Online. 12 (1): 315–338. doi:10.1163/9789004306134_013. ISSN 2211-6117. Turkey is a nation–state built on remnants of the Ottoman Empire where non-Muslim minorities were guaranteed the right to set up educational institutions; however, since its establishment, it has officially recognised only Armenians, Greeks and Jews as minorities and guaranteed them the right to manage educational institutions as enshrined in the Treaty of Lausanne. [...] Private language teaching courses teach 'traditionally used languages', elective language courses have been introduced in public schools and universities are allowed to teach minority languages.
  7. ^ Toktas, Sule (2006). "EU enlargement conditions and minority protection : a reflection on Turkey's non-Muslim minorities". East European quarterly. 40: 489–519. ISSN 0012-8449. Turkey signed the Covenant on 15 August 2000 and ratified it on 23 September 2003. However, Turkey put a reservation on Article 27 of the Covenant which limited the scope of the right of ethnic, religious or linguistic minorities to enjoy their own culture, to profess and practice their own religion or to use their own language. This reservation provides that this right will be implemented and applied in accordance with the relevant provisions of the Turkish Constitution and the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne. This implies that Turkey grants educational right in minority languages only to the recognized minorities covered by the Lausanne who are the Armenians, Greeks and the Jews.
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Further reading edit

  • Alexandrēs, Alexēs. "The Greek minority of Istanbul and Greek-Turkish relations, 1918-1974." Center for Asia Minor Studies, 1983.
  • Grigoriadis, Ioannis N. (2021). "Between citizenship and the millet: the Greek minority in republican Turkey". Middle Eastern Studies. 57 (5): 741–757. doi:10.1080/00263206.2021.1894553. hdl:11693/77359. S2CID 233588979.

External links edit

  • Istanbul Greek Minority Information Portal for present Greek Minority of Turkey in Greek, Turkish and English
  • Greeks of Istanbul (İstanbul Rumları) (Video)
  • Greeks Living in Turkey Today
  • Turkey - Greeks

greeks, turkey, this, article, about, greek, communities, after, establishment, republic, turkey, 1923, 1923, greek, communities, ottoman, greeks, also, history, anatolia, classical, antiquity, byzantine, greeks, pontic, greeks, pontic, greeks, eastern, anatol. This article is about the Greek communities after the establishment of the Republic of Turkey in 1923 For the pre 1923 Greek communities see Ottoman Greeks See also History of Anatolia Classical Antiquity Byzantine Greeks Pontic Greeks Pontic Greeks Eastern Anatolia Greeks and Caucasus Greeks The Greeks in Turkey Turkish Rumlar constitute a small population of Greek and Greek speaking Eastern Orthodox Christians who mostly live in Istanbul as well as on the two islands of the western entrance to the Dardanelles Imbros and Tenedos Turkish Gokceada and Bozcaada Greeks are one of the four ethnic minorities officially recognized in Turkey by the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne together with Jews Armenians 6 7 8 and Bulgarians 9 10 11 Greeks in TurkeyEllhnes sthn ToyrkiaTurkiye deki RumlarTotal population3 000 5 000 0 006 of population 1 2 3 not incl Muslim Greeks 4 5 or Greek Muslims Regions with significant populationsIstanbul Izmir Canakkale Gokceada and Bozcaada LanguagesGreek first language of the majority Turkish first language of the minority or second language ReligionGreek OrthodoxyRelated ethnic groupsGreek Muslims Pontic Greeks Antiochian GreeksPhanar Greek Orthodox College is a Greek minority school that was founded in the Ottoman Empire in 1454 They are the remnants of the estimated 200 000 Greeks who were permitted under the provisions of the Convention Concerning the Exchange of Greek and Turkish Populations to remain in Turkey following the 1923 population exchange 12 which involved the forcible resettlement of approximately 1 5 million Greeks from Anatolia and East Thrace and of half a million Turks from all of Greece except for Western Thrace After years of persecution e g the Varlik Vergisi and the Istanbul Pogrom emigration of ethnic Greeks from the Istanbul region greatly accelerated reducing the Greek minority population from 119 822 before the attack 13 to about 7 000 by 1978 14 The 2008 figures released by the Turkish Foreign Ministry places the current number of Turkish citizens of Greek descent at the 3 000 4 000 mark 2 However according to the Human Rights Watch the Greek population in Turkey is estimated at 2 500 in 2006 The Greek population in Turkey is collapsing as the community is now far too small to sustain itself demographically due to emigration much higher death rates than birth rates and continuing discrimination 15 Since 1924 the status of the Greek minority in Turkey has been ambiguous Beginning in the 1930s the government instituted repressive policies forcing many Greeks to emigrate Examples are the labour battalions drafted among non Muslims during World War II as well as the Fortune Tax Varlik Vergisi levied mostly on non Muslims during the same period These resulted in financial ruination and death for many Greeks The exodus was given greater impetus with the Istanbul Pogrom of September 1955 which led to thousands of Greeks fleeing the city eventually reducing the Greek population to about 7 000 by 1978 and to about 2 500 by 2006 According to the United Nations this figure was much smaller in 2012 and reached 2 000 As of 2023 according to The Economist Turkey s Greeks are on the verge of extinction 16 A minority of Muslim Pontic Greek speakers using a dialect called Romeyka or Ophitic still live in the area around Of 17 18 19 Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Background 2 2 Ottoman Empire 2 3 World War I and its aftermath 2 4 Republic of Turkey 2 5 Current situation 3 Demographics of Greeks in Istanbul 4 Notable people 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksName editMain article Names of the Greeks The Greeks of Turkey are referred to in Turkish as Rumlar meaning Romans This derives from the self designation Ῥwmaῖos Rhomaios pronounced ro ME os or Rwmios Rhomios pronounced ro mee OS or rom YOS used by Byzantine Greeks who were the continuation of the Roman Empire in the east The ethnonym Yunanlar is exclusively used by Turks to refer to Greeks from Greece and not for the population of Turkey In Greek Greeks from Asia Minor are referred to as Greek Mikrasiates or Greek Anatolites Mikrasiates or Anatolites lit Asia Minor ites and Anatolians while Greeks from Pontos Pontic Greeks are known as Greek Pontioi Pontioi Greeks from Istanbul are known as Greek Kwnstantinoypolites Konstantinoupolites lit Constantinopolites most often shortened to Greek Polites Polites pronounced po LEE tes Those who arrived during the 1923 population exchange between Greece and Turkey are also referred to as Greek Prosfyges Prosfyges i e Refugees History editBackground edit nbsp Distribution of Anatolian Greeks in 1910 Demotic Greek speakers in yellow Pontic in orange Cappadocian Greek in green 20 Shaded regions do not indicate that Greek speakers were a majority nbsp Agia Triada Greek Orthodox church in Beyoglu IstanbulGreeks have been living in what is now Turkey continuously since the middle 2nd millennium BC Following upheavals in mainland Greece during the Bronze Age Collapse the Aegean coast of Asia Minor was heavily settled by Ionian and Aeolian Greeks and became known as Ionia and Aeolia During the era of Greek colonization from the 8th to the 6th century BC numerous Greek colonies were founded on the coast of Asia Minor both by mainland Greeks as well as settlers from colonies such as Miletus The city of Byzantium which would go on to become Constantinople and Istanbul was founded by colonists from Megara in the 7th century BC Following the conquest of Asia Minor by Alexander the Great the rest of Asia Minor was opened up to Greek settlement Upon the death of Alexander Asia Minor was ruled by a number of Hellenistic kingdoms such as the Attalids of Pergamum A period of peaceful Hellenization followed such that the local Anatolian languages had been supplanted by Greek by the 1st century BC Asia Minor was one of the first places where Christianity spread so that by the 4th century AD it was overwhelmingly Christian and Greek speaking For the next 600 years Asia Minor and Constantinople which eventually became the capital of the Byzantine Empire would be the centers of the Hellenic world while mainland Greece experienced repeated barbarian invasions and went into decline Following the Battle of Manzikert in 1071 the Seljuk Turks swept through all of Asia Minor While the Byzantines would recover western and northern Anatolia in subsequent years central Asia Minor was settled by Turkic peoples and never again came under Byzantine rule The Byzantine Empire was unable to stem the Turkic advance and by 1300 most of Asia Minor was ruled by Anatolian beyliks Smyrna Turkish Izmir fell in 1330 and Philadelphia Turkish Alasehir fell in 1398 The last Byzantine Greek kingdom in Anatolia the Empire of Trebizond covering the Black Sea coast of north eastern Turkey to the border with Georgia fell in 1461 Ottoman Empire edit Main articles Ottoman Greeks and Phanariotes nbsp Pontian Greek ladies and children of Trebizond early 20th centuryConstantinople fell in 1453 marking the end of the Byzantine Empire Beginning with the Seljuk invasion in the 11th century and continuing through the Ottoman years Anatolia underwent a process of Turkification its population gradually changing from predominantly Christian and Greek speaking to predominantly Muslim and Turkish speaking Ottoman Empire followed the Sharia rules and there were restrictions regarding the building and restoration of churches Ottoman documents display that restriction on non Muslims applied differently depending on the regions After the Tanzimat reforms in 1839 the Christians could get a permission to repair an old church easier but still they had to follow specific procedures and were supervised by the local Muslim authorities and population 21 A class of moneyed ethnically Greek merchants they commonly claimed noble Byzantine descent called Phanariotes emerged in the latter half of the 16th century and went on to exercise great influence in the administration in the Ottoman Empire s Balkan domains in the 18th century They tended to build their houses in the Phanar quarter of Istanbul in order to be close to the court of the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople who under the Ottoman millet system was recognized as both the spiritual and secular head millet bashi of all the Orthodox subjects the Rum Millet or the Roman nation of the Empire often acting as archontes of the Ecumenical See For all their cosmopolitanism and often western sometimes Roman Catholic education the Phanariots were aware of their Hellenism according to Nicholas Mavrocordatos Philotheou Parerga We are a race completely Hellenic 22 nbsp The Greek Kingdom and the Greek diaspora in the Balkans and western Asia Minor according to Professor G Soteiriadis 1919The first Greek millionaire in the Ottoman era was Michael Kantakouzenos Shaytanoglu who earned 60 000 ducats a year from his control of the fur trade from Russia 23 he was eventually executed on the Sultan s order It was the wealth of the extensive Greek merchant class that provided the material basis for the intellectual revival that was the prominent feature of Greek life in the second half of the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th century Greek merchants endowed libraries and schools on the eve of the Greek War of Independence the three most important centres of Greek learning schools cum universities were situated in Chios Smyrna and Aivali all three major centres of Greek commerce 24 The outbreak of the Greek War of Independence in March 1821 was met by mass executions pogrom style attacks the destruction of churches and looting of Greek properties throughout the Empire The most severe atrocities occurred in Constantinople in what became known as the Constantinople Massacre of 1821 The Orthodox Patriarch Gregory V was executed on April 22 1821 on the orders of the Ottoman Sultan which caused outrage throughout Europe and resulted in increased support for the Greek rebels 25 By the late 19th and early 20th century the Greek element was found predominantly in Constantinople and Smyrna along the Black Sea coast the Pontic Greeks and the Aegean coast the Gallipoli peninsula and a few cities and numerous villages in the central Anatolian interior the Cappadocian Greeks The Greeks of Constantinople constituted the largest Greek urban population in the Eastern Mediterranean 26 In the first half of 1914 the Ottoman authorities expelled more than 100 000 Ottoman Greeks to Greece 27 nbsp 1914 document showing the official figures from the 1914 population census of the Ottoman Empire The total population sum of all the millets was given at 20 975 345 and the Greek population was given at 1 792 206 World War I and its aftermath edit Main articles Greek genocide and Asia Minor Campaign Given their large Greek populations Constantinople and Asia Minor featured prominently in the Greek irredentist concept of Megali Idea lit Great Idea during the 19th century and early 20th century The goal of Megali Idea was the liberation of all Greek inhabited lands and the eventual establishment of a successor state to the Byzantine Empire with Constantinople as its capital The Greek population amounted to 1 777 146 16 42 of population during 1910 28 During World War I and its aftermath 1914 1923 the government of the Ottoman Empire and subsequently the Turkish National Movement led by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk instigated a violent campaign against the Greek population of the Empire 29 The campaign included massacres forced deportations involving death marches and summary expulsions According to various sources several hundreds of thousand Ottoman Greeks died during this period 30 Some of the survivors and refugees especially those in Eastern provinces took refuge in the neighbouring Russian Empire Following Greece s participation on the Allied side in World War I and the participation of the Ottoman Empire on the side of the Central Powers Greece received an order to land in Smyrna by the Triple Entente as part of the planned partition of the Ottoman Empire On May 15 1919 twenty thousand 31 Greek soldiers landed in Smyrna taking control of the city and its surroundings under cover of the Greek French and British navies Legal justifications for the landings was found in the article 7 of the Armistice of Mudros which allowed the Allies to occupy any strategic points in the event of any situation arising which threatens the security of Allies 32 The Greeks of Smyrna and other Christians greeted the Greek troops as liberators By contrast the majority of the Muslim population saw them as an invading force Subsequently the Treaty of Sevres awarded Greece Eastern Thrace up to the Chatalja lines at the outskirts of Constantinople the islands of Imbros and Tenedos and the city Smyrna and its vast hinterland all of which contained substantial Greek populations nbsp Greek soldiers taking their posts in Smyrna amidst the jubilant ethnic Greek population of the city 15 May 1919 During the Greco Turkish War a conflict which followed the Greek occupation of Smyrna 33 34 in May 1919 and continued until the Great Fire of Smyrna in September 1922 atrocities were perpetrated by both the Greek and Turkish armies 35 36 For the massacres that occurred during the Greco Turkish War of 1919 1922 British historian Arnold J Toynbee wrote that it was the Greek landings that created the Turkish National Movement led by Mustafa Kemal 37 The Greeks of Pontus and the Turks of the Greek occupied territories were in some degree victims of Mr Venizelos s and Mr Lloyd George s original miscalculations at Paris After the end of the Greco Turkish War most of the Greeks remaining in the Ottoman Empire were transferred to Greece under the terms of the 1923 population exchange between Greece and Turkey The criteria for the population exchange were not exclusively based on ethnicity or mother language but on religion as well That is why the Karamanlides Greek Karamanlhdes Turkish Karamanlilar or simply Karamanlis who were a Turkish speaking while they employed the Greek alphabet to write it Greek Orthodox people of unclear origin were deported from their native regions of Karaman and Cappadocia in Central Anatolia to Greece as well On the other hand Cretan Muslims who were part of the exchange were re settled mostly on the Aegean coast of Turkey in areas formerly inhabited by Christian Greeks Populations of Greek descent can still be found in the Pontos remnants of the former Greek population that converted to Islam in order to escape the persecution and later deportation Though these two groups are of ethnic Greek descent they speak Turkish as a mother language and are very cautious to identify themselves as Greeks due to the hostility of the Turkish state and neighbours towards anything Greek Republic of Turkey edit nbsp The main targets of the Istanbul pogrom 6 7 September 1955 Due to the Greeks strong emotional attachment to their first capital as well as the importance of the Ecumenical Patriarchate for Greek and worldwide orthodoxy the Greek population of Constantinople was specifically exempted and allowed to stay in place Article 14 of the Treaty of Lausanne 1923 also exempted Imbros and Tenedos islands from the population exchange and required Turkey to accommodate the local Greek majority and their rights For the most part the Turks disregarded this agreement and implemented a series of contrary measures which resulted in a further decline of the Greek population as evidenced by demographic statistics In 1923 the Ministry of Public Works asked from the private companies in Turkey to prepare lists of employees with their religion and later ordered them to fire the non Muslim employees and replace them with Muslim Turks 38 In addition a 1932 parliamentary law barred Greek citizens living in Turkey from a series of 30 trades and professions from tailoring and carpentry to medicine law and real estate 39 In 1934 Turkey created the Surname Law which forbade certain surnames that contained connotations of foreign cultures nations tribes and religions Many minorities including Greeks had to adopt last names of a more Turkish rendition 40 41 42 43 As from 1936 Turkish became the teaching language except the Greek language lessons in Greek schools 44 The Wealthy Levy imposed in 1942 also served to reduce the economic potential of Greek businesspeople in Turkey 45 When the Axis attacked on Greece during WW2 hundreds of volunteers from the Greek community of Istanbul went to fight in Greece with the approval of Turkish authorities 46 In 6 7 September 1955 an anti Greek pogrom were orchestrated in Istanbul by the Turkish military s Tactical Mobilization Group the seat of Operation Gladio s Turkish branch the Counter Guerrilla The events were triggered by the news that the Turkish consulate in Thessaloniki north Greece the house where Mustafa Kemal Ataturk was born in 1881 had been bombed the day before 45 A bomb planted by a Turkish usher of the consulate who was later arrested and confessed incited the events The Turkish press conveying the news in Turkey was silent about the arrest and instead insinuated that Greeks had set off the bomb Although the mob did not explicitly call for Greeks to be killed over a dozen people died during or after the pogrom as a result of beatings and arson Jews Armenians and others were also harmed In addition to commercial targets the mob clearly targeted property owned or administered by the Greek Orthodox Church 73 churches and 23 schools were vandalized burned or destroyed as were 8 asperses and 3 monasteries The pogrom greatly accelerated emigration of ethnic Greeks from Turkey and the Istanbul region in particular The Greek population of Turkey declined from 119 822 persons in 1927 13 to about 7 000 by 1978 In Istanbul alone the Greek population decreased from 65 108 to 49 081 between 1955 and 1960 13 In 1964 Turkish prime minister Ismet Inonu unilaterally renounced the Greco Turkish Treaty of Friendship of 1930 and took actions against the Greek minority that resulted in massive expulsions 47 48 Turkey enforced strictly a long overlooked law barring Greek nationals from 30 professions and occupations For example Greeks could not be doctors nurses architects shoemakers tailors plumbers cabaret singers iron smiths cooks tourist guides etc 47 Many Greeks were ordered to give up their jobs after this law 49 Also Turkish government ordered many Greek owned shops to close leaving many Greek families destitute 47 In addition Turkey has suspended a 1955 agreement granting unrestricted travel facilities to nationals of both countries A number of Greeks caught outside Turkey when this suspension took effect and were unable to return to their homes at Turkey 47 Moreover Turkey once again deported many Greeks They were given a week to leave the country and police escorts saw to it that they make the deadline Deportees protested that it was impossible to sell businesses or personal property in so short a time Most of those deported were born in Turkey and they had no place to go in Greece 47 Greeks had difficulty receiving credit from banks Those expelled in some cases could not dispose of their property before leaving 49 Furthermore it forcefully closed the Prinkipo Greek Orthodox Orphanage 50 51 52 the Patriarchate s printing house 49 and the Greek minority schools on the islands of Gokceada Imbros 53 and Tenedos Bozcaada 54 Furthermore the farm property of the Greeks on the islands were taken away from their owners 54 Moreover university students were organizing boycotts against Greek shops 49 Teachers of schools maintained by the Greek minority complained of frequent inspections by squads of Turkish officers inquiring into matters of curriculum texts and especially the use of the Greek language in teaching 49 In late 1960 the Turkish treasure seized the properties of the Balikli Greek Hospital The hospital sued the treasury on the ground that the transfer of its property was illegal but the Turkish courts were in favor of the Turkish treasure 55 On August 4 2022 a fire broke out on the roof of the Balikli Greek Hospital The roof was completely destroyed and the upper floor was also destroyed except for the exterior walls However the ground floor of the hospital remained unscathed from the fire In 1965 the Turkish government established on Imbros an open agricultural prison for Turkish mainland convicts farming land was expropriated for this purpose Greek Orthodox communal property was also expropriated and between 1960 and 1990 about 200 churches and chapels were reportedly destroyed Many from the Greek community on the islands of Imbros and Tenedos responded to these acts by leaving 56 In addition at the same year the first mosque was built in the island It was named Fatih Camii Conqueror s Mosque and was built on an expropriated Greek Orthodox communal property at the capital of the island 57 In 1991 Turkish authorities ended the military forbidden zone status on the island of Imbros 56 In 1992 Panimbrian Committee mentioned that members of the Greek community are considered by the authorities to be second class citizens and that the local Greeks are afraid to express their feelings to protest against certain actions of the authorities or the Turkish settlers or even to allow anybody to make use of their names when they give some information referring to the violation of their rights fearing the consequences which they will have to face from the Turkish authorities 56 The same year the Human Rights Watch report concluded that the Turkish government has denied the rights of the Greek community on Imbros and Tenedos in violation of the Lausanne Treaty and international human rights laws and agreements 56 In 1997 the Turkish state seized the Prinkipo Greek Orthodox Orphanage which had been forcefully closed in 1964 58 After many years of court battles Turkey returned the property to the Greek community in 2012 59 58 In August 2002 a new law was passed by the Turkish parliament to protect the minorities rights because of Turkey s EU candidacy With this new law it prevented the Turkish treasury from seizing community foundations properties 55 In 15 August 2010 a ritual was held for the Assumption of Mary at the Sumela Monastery after a 88 years old ban This annual ritual continues although it often sparks debate in Turkey for keeping foreign traditions alive on the day Trabzon was captured by the Turks 60 Current situation edit nbsp Greek population in Istanbul 1844 1997 and percentage of the total city population nbsp Ethno religious groups in Istanbul 1896 1965 A multicultural city in 1896 with a 50 5 Muslim population turned into a predominantly Muslim one after 1925 Today most of the remaining Greeks live in Istanbul In the Fener district of Istanbul where the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople is located fewer than 100 Greeks live today A handful also live in other cities of Anatolia Most are elderly Another location where the Greek community lives is the islands Imbros and Tenedos near the Dardanelles but this community diminished rapidly during the 20th century and only 200 elderly Greeks have remained there less than 2 In the 1950s an estimated 98 of the island was Greek In the last years the condition of the Greek community in these islands seems to be slightly improving 61 62 The Antiochian Greeks Rum living in Hatay are the descendants of the Ottoman Levant s and southeast Anatolia s Greek population and are part of the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch They did not emigrate to Greece during the 1923 population exchange because at that time the Hatay province was under French control The majority of the Antiochian Greeks moved to Syria and Lebanon at 1939 when Turkey took control of the Hatay region however a small population remained at this area After a process of Arabization and Turkification that took place in the 20th century today almost their entirety speaks Arabic as a mother language This has made them hard to distinguish from the Arab Christians and some argue that they have become largely homogenized Their majority doesn t speak Greek at all the younger generation speaks Turkish and some have Turkish names now Their population is about 18 000 63 and they are faithful to the Patriarchate of Antiochia although ironically it is now in Damascus They reside largely in Antakya and or the Hatay province but a few are also in Adana province The Greek minority continues to encounter problems relating to education and property rights A 1971 law nationalized religious high schools and closed the Halki seminary on Istanbul s Heybeli Island which had trained Orthodox clergy since the 19th century A later outrage was the vandalism of the Greek cemetery on Imbros on October 29 2010 In this context problems affecting the Greek minority on the islands of Imbros and Tenedos continue to be reported to the European Commission 64 In July 2011 Istanbul s Greek minority newspaper Apoyevmatini declared that it would shut down due to financial difficulties The four page Greek language newspaper faced closure due to financial problems that had been further aggravated by the economic crisis in Greece when Greek companies stopped publishing advertisements in the newspaper and the offices have already been shut down This ignited campaign to help the newspaper Among the supporters were students from Istanbul Bilgi University who subscribed to the newspaper The campaign saved the paper from bankruptcy for the time being Because the Greek community is close to extinction the obituary notices and money from Greek foundations as well as subscriptions overwhelmingly by Turkish people are the only sources of income This income covers only 40 percent of the newspaper expenditures 65 That event was followed in September 2011 by a government cash grant of 45 000 Turkish liras to the newspaper through the Turkish Press Advertisement Agency as part of a wider support of minority newspapers 66 The Turkish Press Advertisement Agency also declared intention to publish official government advertisements in minority newspapers including Greek papers Apoyevmatini and IHO 67 As of 2007 Turkish authorities have seized a total of 1 000 immovables of 81 Greek organizations as well as individuals of the Greek community 68 On the other hand Turkish courts provided legal legitimacy to unlawful practices by approving discriminatory laws and policies that violated fundamental rights they were responsible to protect 69 As a result foundations of the Greek communities started to file complaints after 1999 when Turkey s candidacy to the European Union was announced Since 2007 decisions are being made in these cases the first ruling was made in a case filed by the Phanar Greek Orthodox College Foundation and the decision was that Turkey violated Article 1 of Protocol No 1 of the European Convention on Human Rights which secured property rights 69 A government decree published on 27 August 2011 paves the way to return assets that once belonged to Greek Armenian Assyrian Kurd or Jewish trusts and makes provisions for the government to pay compensation for any confiscated property that has since been sold on and in a move likely to thwart possible court rulings against the country by the European Court of Human Rights 70 71 Since the vast majority of properties confiscated from Greek trusts and other minority trusts have been sold to third parties which as a result cannot be taken from their current owners and be returned the Greek trusts will receive compensation from the government instead Compensation for properties that were purchased or were sold to third parties will be decided on by the Finance Ministry However no independent body is involved in deciding on compensation according to the regulations of the government decree of 27 August 2011 If the compensation were judged fairly and paid in full the state would have to pay compensation worth many millions of Euros for a large number of properties Another weakness of the government decree is that the state body with a direct interest in reducing the amount of compensation paid which is the Finance Ministry is the only body permitted to decide on the amount of compensation paid The government decree also states that minority trusts must apply for restitution within 12 months of the publication of the government decree which was issued on 1 October 2011 leaving less than 11 months for the applications to be prepared and submitted After this deadline terminates on 27 August 2012 no applications can be submitted in which the government aims to settle this issue permamenetly on a legally sound basis and prevent future legal difficulties involving the European Court of Human Rights 72 Demographics of Greeks in Istanbul edit nbsp Greek population in Istanbul and percentages of the city population 1844 1997 The Turkish policies after 1923 led virtually to the elimination of the Greek community The Greek community of Istanbul numbered 67 550 13 people in 1955 However after the Istanbul Pogrom orchestrated by Turkish authorities against the Greek community in that year their number was dramatically reduced to only 48 000 73 Today the Greek community numbers about 2 000 people 74 Year People1897 236 000 75 1923 100 000 76 1955 48 0001978 7 000 77 2006 2 500 15 2008 2 000 78 2014 2 200 79 2 500 15 Notable people editPatriarch Bartholomew I 1940 current patriarch of Constantinople Born in Imbros as Dimitrios Arhondonis Elia Kazan 1909 2003 American film director Born Elias Kazancioglu in Istanbul Archbishop Elpidophoros of America 1967 current archbishop of America Born in Bakirkoy Istanbul as Ioannis Lambriniadis Patriarch Benedict I of Jerusalem 1892 1980 Patriarch of Jerusalem from 1957 to 1980 Born in Bursa as Vasileios Papadopoulos Gilbert Biberian 1944 2023 guitarist and composer Born in Istanbul from a Greek Armenian family Chrysanthos Mentis Bostantzoglou 1918 1995 cartoonist known as Bost born in Istanbul Thomas Cosmades 1924 2010 evangelical preacher and translators of the New Testament in Turkish Born in Istanbul Patriarch Demetrios I of Constantinople 1914 1991 patriarch of Constantinople from 1972 to 1991 Born in Istanbul Antonis Diamantidis 1892 1945 musician Born in Istanbul Savas Dimopoulos 1952 particle physicist at Stanford University Born in Istanbul Aleksandros Hacopulos 1911 1980 politician member of Grand National Assembly twice Violet Kostanda 1958 former volleyball player for Eczacibasi and the Turkish National Team She was born in Istanbul from a Greek Romani family Her father Hristo played football for Besiktas Minas Gekos 1959 basketball player and coach who played mainly in Greece Born in Kurtulus district of Istanbul Patroklos Karantinos 1903 1976 modernism architect Born in Istanbul Kostas Kasapoglou 1935 2016 footballer player once capped for the Turkish National Team Born in Istanbul he was known with his Turkishized name Koco Kasapoglu Konstantinos Spanoudis 1871 1941 politician founder and first president of AEK Athens Born in Istanbul was forced to relocate to Athens Antonis Kafetzopoulos 1951 actor Born in Istanbul moved in Greece in 1964 Michael Giannatos 1941 2013 actor Born in Istanbul moved in Greece in 1964 Kostas Karipis 1880 1952 rhebetiko musician Born in Istanbul Nikos Kovis 1953 former Turkish football international Born in Istanbul Lefteris Antoniadis 1924 2012 Fenerbahce legend and member of the Turkish national football team He was born in Buyukada island near Istanbul and was known in Turkey as Lefter Kucukandonyadis Ioanna Koutsouranti 1936 philosopher and Maltepe University Academic Born in Istanbul from a Greek Rum family she s known in Turkey as Ioanna Kucuradi Sappho Leontias 1832 1900 writer feminist and educationist Born in Istanbul Petros Markaris 1937 writer Born in Istanbul Kleanthis Maropoulos 1919 1991 Greek international footballer Born in Istanbul fled to Greece during the Greek Turks population exchange when he was 3 years old Yannis Vasilis a former ultra nationalist Turk turned pacifist and promoter of Greek heritage in Turkey after finding out his Greek heritage See also editEastern Orthodoxy in Turkey Minorities in Turkey Treaty of Lausanne Population exchange between Greece and Turkey Istanbul Pogrom Imbros Tenedos Greek Muslims Pontic Greeks Antiochian Greeks Cretan Muslims Istanbul Greek dialectReferences edit The Greek minority of Turkey HRI org Retrieved 22 January 2017 a b Foreign Ministry 89 000 minorities live in Turkey Today s Zaman 2008 12 15 Archived from the original on 2010 05 01 Retrieved 2008 12 15 Greeks Living in Turkey MEGA REYMA Retrieved 2021 03 23 Turkyilmaz Zeynep 2016 12 01 Pontus un kripto hristiyan Rumlari Islam ve Hiristiyanlik arasinda REPAIR Turkiye Ermenistan ve Ermeni diasporasi sivil toplumlari arasinda kulturlerarasi diyalog projesi in Turkish Retrieved 2021 03 23 saygi ozturk 13 ilimiz daha gitti www sozcu com tr 2018 Retrieved 2021 03 23 Kaya Nurcan 2015 11 24 Teaching in and Studying Minority Languages in Turkey A Brief Overview of Current Issues and Minority Schools European Yearbook of Minority Issues Online 12 1 315 338 doi 10 1163 9789004306134 013 ISSN 2211 6117 Turkey is a nation state built on remnants of the Ottoman Empire where non Muslim minorities were guaranteed the right to set up educational institutions however since its establishment it has officially recognised only Armenians Greeks and Jews as minorities and guaranteed them the right to manage educational institutions as enshrined in the Treaty of Lausanne Private language teaching courses teach traditionally used languages elective language courses have been introduced in public schools and universities are allowed to teach minority languages Toktas Sule 2006 EU enlargement conditions and minority protection a reflection on Turkey s non Muslim minorities East European quarterly 40 489 519 ISSN 0012 8449 Turkey signed the Covenant on 15 August 2000 and ratified it on 23 September 2003 However Turkey put a reservation on Article 27 of the Covenant which limited the scope of the right of ethnic religious or linguistic minorities to enjoy their own culture to profess and practice their own religion or to use their own language This reservation provides that this right will be implemented and applied in accordance with the relevant provisions of the Turkish Constitution and the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne This implies that Turkey grants educational right in minority languages only to the recognized minorities covered by the Lausanne who are the Armenians Greeks and the Jews Phillips Thomas James 2020 12 16 The In Validity of Turkey s Reservation to Article 27 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights International Journal on Minority and Group Rights 27 1 66 93 doi 10 1163 15718115 02701001 ISSN 1385 4879 The fact that Turkish constitutional law takes an even more restrictive approach to minority rights than required under the Treaty of Lausanne was recognised by the UN Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination CERD in its concluding observations on the combined fourth to sixth periodic reports of Turkey The CERD noted that the treaty of Lausanne does not explicitly prohibit the recognition of other groups as minorities and that Turkey should consider recognising the minority status of other groups such as Kurds 50 In practice this means that Turkey grants minority rights to Greek Armenian and Jewish minority communities while denying their possible impact for unrecognized minority groups e g Kurds Alevis Arabs Syriacs Protestants Roma etc Bayir Derya 2013 Minorities and nationalism in Turkish law Cultural Diversity and Law Farnham Ashgate Publishing pp 88 89 203 204 ISBN 978 1 4094 7254 4 Toktas Sule Aras Bulent 2009 The EU and Minority Rights in Turkey Political Science Quarterly 124 4 697 720 ISSN 0032 3195 Koksal Yonca 2006 Minority Policies in Bulgaria and Turkey The Struggle to Define a Nation Southeast European and Black Sea Studies 6 4 501 521 doi 10 1080 14683850601016390 ISSN 1468 3857 European Commission for Democracy through Law 2002 The Protection of National Minorities by Their Kin State Council of Europe p 142 ISBN 978 92 871 5082 0 Retrieved 2 February 2013 In Turkey the Orthodox minority who remained in Istanbul Imvros and Tenedos governed by the same provisions of the treaty of Lausanne was gradually shrunk from more than 200 000 in 1930 to less than 3 000 today a b c d Le3eis kleidia www demography lab prd uth gr Retrieved 2021 03 23 Kilic Ecevit 2008 09 07 Sermaye nasil el degistirdi Sabah in Turkish Retrieved 2008 12 25 6 7 Eylul olaylarindan once Istanbul da 135 bin Rum yasiyordu Sonrasinda bu sayi 70 bine dustu 1978 e gelindiginde bu rakam 7 bindi a b c According to the Human Rights Watch the Greek population in Turkey is estimated at 2 500 in 2006 From Denying Human Rights and Ethnic Identity series of Human Rights Watch Archived 2006 07 07 at the Wayback Machine The uncertain future of Greeks in Turkey The Economist ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 2023 11 13 Against all odds archaic Greek in a modern world University of Cambridge July 2010 Retrieved 2013 03 31 Jason and the argot land where Greek s ancient language survives The Independent Monday 3 January 2011 Ozkan Hakan 2013 The Pontic Greek spoken by Muslims in the villages of Beskoy in the province of present day Trabzon Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 37 1 130 150 doi 10 1179 0307013112z 00000000023 Dawkins R M 1916 Modern Greek in Asia Minor A study of dialect of Silly Cappadocia and Pharasa Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1 THE OTTOMAN POLICY TOWARDS CHURCH CONSTRUCTION THE ISSUE OF CHURCH CONSTRUCTION AND RESTORATION INANTAKYA ANTIOCH IN THE 18TH AND 19TH CENTURIES Osmanli nin Kilise ĠnGaasina Yonelik Politikasi 18 ve 19 Yuzyilda Antakya da Kilise ĠnGaasi ve Restorasyonu Meselesi Nicolaos Mavrocordatos Philotheou Parerga J Bouchard 1989 p 178 Genos men hmin twn agan Ellhnwn Steven Runciman The Great Church in Captivity Cambridge University Press 1988 page 197 Encyclopaedia Britannica Greek history The mercantile middle class 2008 ed Richard Clogg 20 June 2002 A Concise History of Greece Cambridge University Press p 36 ISBN 978 0 521 00479 4 Retrieved 4 March 2013 Gelina Harlaftis 1996 A History of Greek Owned Shipping The Making of an International Tramp Fleet 1830 to the Present Day Routledge Chapman amp Hall p 50 ISBN 978 0 415 00018 5 Retrieved 31 July 2013 Constantinople contained the largest urban Greek population in the eastern Mediterranean and was the area s biggest commercial banking and maritime centre Gerwarth Robert Horne John 2013 War in Peace Paramilitary Violence in Europe after the Great War Oxford University Press p 175 ISBN 978 0199686056 Pentzopoulos D 2002 The Balkan Exchange of Minorities and Its Impact on Greece Hurst p 28 ISBN 978 1 85065 702 6 Retrieved 2021 03 23 Morris Benny Ze evi Dror 2019 The Thirty Year Genocide Turkey s Destruction of Its Christian Minorities 1894 1924 Harvard University Press p 490 ISBN 978 0 674 24008 7 Jones Adam Genocide A Comprehensive Introduction Routledge 2006 154 155 Kinross Lord 1960 Ataturk The Rebirth of a Nation Weidenfeld amp Nicolson p 154 ISBN 978 0 297 82036 9 Shaw Stanford Jay Shaw Ezel Kural 1977 History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Cambridge University Press p 342 Toynbee p 270 Rummel Chapter 5 Akcam Taner 2006 A Shameful Act The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish Responsibility Macmillan p 322 ISBN 978 0 8050 7932 6 Shenk Robert 2017 America s Black Sea Fleet The U S Navy Amidst War and Revolution 1919 1923 Naval Institute Press p 36 ISBN 978 1 61251 302 7 Toynbee 1922 pp 312 313 Derya Bayir 2016 Minorities and Nationalism in Turkish Law Routledge p 123 ISBN 9781138278844 Vryonis Speros 2005 The Mechanism of Catastrophe The Turkish Pogrom of September 6 7 1955 and the Destruction of the Greek Community of Istanbul New York Greekworks com ISBN 0 9747660 3 8 Ince Basak 2012 04 26 Citizenship and identity in Turkey from Ataturk s republic to the present day London I B Tauris ISBN 9781780760261 Aslan Senem 2009 Incoherent State The Controversy over Kurdish Naming in Turkey European Journal of Turkish Studies 10 doi 10 4000 ejts 4142 Retrieved 16 January 2013 the Surname Law was meant to foster a sense of Turkishness within society and prohibited surnames that were related to foreign ethnicities and nations Suny Ronald Grigor Gocek Fatma Muge Naimark Norman M eds 2011 02 23 A question of genocide Armenians and Turks at the end of the Ottoman Empire Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195393743 Toktas Sule 2005 Citizenship and Minorities A Historical Overview of Turkey s Jewish Minority Journal of Historical Sociology 18 4 394 429 doi 10 1111 j 1467 6443 2005 00262 x S2CID 59138386 Retrieved 7 January 2013 Agri Ulku 2014 Pogrom in Istanbul 6 7 September 1955 Berlin Klaus Schwarz Verlag GmbH p 137 ISBN 9783879974399 a b Guven Dilek 2005 09 06 6 7 Eylul Olaylari 1 Radikal in Turkish Bahcheli Tozun 2021 Greek turkish Relations Since 1955 Westview Press ISBN 9780429712258 a b c d e TURKS EXPELLING ISTANBUL GREEKS Community s Plight Worsens During Cyprus Crisis The New York Times AUG 9 1964 Roudometof Victor Agadjanian Alexander Pankhurst Jerry 2006 Eastern Orthodoxy in a Global Age Tradition Faces the 21st Century AltaMira Press p 273 ISBN 978 0759105379 a b c d e Greeks of Istanbul Unhappy With Both Ankara and Athens The New York Times April 24 1964 RUM ORPHANAGE World Monuments Fund Prinkipo Orphanage Institute of Strategical Thinking Retrieved 11 January 2013 Greek Orthodox orphanage Europe s largest wooden building awaits salvation off Istanbul Turkish mayor invites Greek origin citizens back to Aegean island a b Arat Zehra F Kabasakal April 2007 Human Rights in Turkey University of Pennsylvania Press p 65 ISBN 978 0812240009 a b Ramazan Kilinc 2019 Alien Citizens The State and Religious Minorities in Turkey and France Cambridge University Press p 48 doi 10 1017 9781108692649 ISBN 9781108692649 S2CID 204426327 a b c d DENYING HUMAN RIGHTS AND ETHNIC IDENTITY THE GREEKS OF TURKEY A Helsinki Watch Report 1992 Hirschon Renee 2003 Crossing the Aegean An Appraisal of the 1923 Compulsory Population Exchange between Greece and Turkey Berghahn Books p 120 ISBN 978 1571815620 a b Orthodox Patriarchate in Turkey Wins One Battle Still Faces Struggle for Survival Population decline leaves Rums with Pyrrhic Victory Annual ritual at Sumela Monastery sparks debate H anagennhsh ths Imbroy An8izei 3ana to nhsi toy Patriarxh Bar8olomaioy H Anagennhsh ths ellhnikhs koinothtas ths Imbroy Kanali Ena 90 4 FM in Greek 2015 10 06 Retrieved 2021 03 23 Christen in der islamischen Welt Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte PDF 2008 Archived from the original on May 2 2014 Retrieved June 11 2013 Turkey 2007 Progress Report Enlargement Strategy and Main Challenges 2007 2008 PDF Commission Stuff Working Document of International Affairs p 22 Hurriyet Daily News 12 July 2011 Turkey s sole Greek daily off the hook Dardaki azinlik gazetelerine bayram gecesi yardimi Sabah 8 September 2011 2 Minority Newspaper Meets with The Turkish Press Advertising Agency Greek Europe Reporter 28 July 2011 3 Kurban Hatem 2009 p 48 a b Kurban Hatem 2009 p 33 The Armenian Weekly 28 August 2011 Turkey Decrees Partial Return of Confiscated Christian Jewish Property Update Today s Zaman 28 August 2011 Gov t gives go ahead for return of seized property to non Muslim foundations Wwrn org 6 October 2011 TURKEY What does Turkey s Restitution Decree mean Karimova Nigar Deverell Edward Minorities in Turkey PDF The Swedish Institute of International Affairs p 7 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 05 28 Retrieved 2010 01 20 Gilson George Destroying a minority Turkey s attack on the Greeks Archived 2013 02 18 at archive today book review of Vryonis 2005 Athens News 24 June 2005 Erol Merih 2015 Greek Orthodox Music in Ottoman Istanbul Nation and Community in the Era of Reform Indiana University Press p 4 ISBN 9780253018427 Security Assistance Authorization Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Foreign Assistance Subcommittee on Africa and Subcommittee on Arms Control Oceans and International Environment of the Committee on Foreign Relations United States Senate Ninety fifth Congress First Session on S 1160 U S Government Printing Office 1977 p 250 Kilic Ecevit 2008 09 07 Sermaye nasil el degistirdi Sabah in Turkish Retrieved 2008 12 25 6 7 Eylul olaylarindan once Istanbul da 135 bin Rum yasiyordu Sonrasinda bu sayi 70 bine dustu 1978 e gelindiginde bu rakam 7 bindi Ecumenical Federation of Constantionopolitans Report on the Minoirty Rights of the Greek Orthodox Community of Istanbul September 2008 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2014 10 14 OSCE ODIHR Human Dimension Implementation Meeting 2014 Rights of Persons Belonging to National Minorities Warsaw 29 September 2014Further reading editAlexandres Alexes The Greek minority of Istanbul and Greek Turkish relations 1918 1974 Center for Asia Minor Studies 1983 Grigoriadis Ioannis N 2021 Between citizenship and the millet the Greek minority in republican Turkey Middle Eastern Studies 57 5 741 757 doi 10 1080 00263206 2021 1894553 hdl 11693 77359 S2CID 233588979 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Greeks in Turkey This article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Istanbul Greek Minority Information Portal for present Greek Minority of Turkey in Greek Turkish and English Athens protests latest desecration of Orthodox cemetery in Turkey Greeks of Istanbul Istanbul Rumlari Video The Greeks of Turkey Greek Turkish minorities Greeks Living in Turkey Today Turkey s Greek Community Grapples with adversity Turkey Greeks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Greeks in Turkey amp oldid 1200064486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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