Author: Mark Mazower
Publisher: Allen Lane, 2021 (First)
ISBN: 9780241004104
Pages: 574
The
roots of Western Civilisation run deep into the form and content of the ancient
Greek Civilisation. Every aspect of western thought derives its inspiration
from the orators, politicians, historians and litterateurs of the Hellenic
world. With a sense of this deep attachment in mind, tourists scour the modern
Greek nation and marvel at the architectural remains and reeve the thread of association
which they think to be unbroken over the vast length of time. Little do they
realise that Greece, the country tourists visit today, was born out of the
revolution which began in 1821. And that
the glorious city of Athens was a quiet Ottoman backwater that had been left in
ruins. The Greek people underwent much tribulation after they ended up under
the Ottoman yoke. Under a strict interpretation of the sharia law, Greek
Christians lived a subhuman existence with all avenues of progress blocked and
even basic human rights denied. They had no freedom of religion. In fact,
churches were not even allowed to toll their bells for worship. Muslim slave
traders raided the territories to capture slaves for sale in the slave markets
of Turkey, Syria and Egypt. Ottoman grandees chose Greek women for their harems
at will. After centuries of patient suffering, the Greeks rose up in revolt in
1821 against the barbaric Ottoman rule and claimed independence with generous
European support. Coming close on the heels of Napoleonic Wars, the events led
to solidification of principles that founded the idea of modern Europe such as public opinion, international aid and peace-keeping forces. This book tells
the story of this great transformation of the Greeks from medieval savagery to
modern enlightenment. Mark Mazower is a professor of history at Columbus
University and specializes in subjects on Greece and the Balkans.
The
Greeks had an affinity to Russia as it was the stronger partner sharing the
Orthodox Christian faith. A group of Greek patriots in Russia formed the Filiki Etaireia (Friendly Society) under
Alexander Ypsilantis to wage war against the Porte. But this was a motley crowd
of volunteers who lacked unity and discipline. The rebellion was initiated by
this committee in the Danubian Principalities but was soon crushed. The banner
was then kept aloft in the Peloponnese and Rumeli under the guise of the rebel
Ottoman governor Ali Pasha of Jannina who had turned himself against the sultan.
Even though Ali Pasha was later killed, the Ottoman rule in Greece hung in the
balance. But the Greeks possessed no strong leadership and were grouped under
several chieftains who had only local priorities to keep. The Turks retaliated
by killing prominent Greeks residing in Constantinople, the Ottoman capital.
Their spiritual leader, the 84-year old patriarch Gregorios V was publicly
hanged and his body kept dangling there for days as a humiliation and warning.
Non-Muslims were nothing more than hostages in Ottoman lands. If the sultan’s
troops were attacked elsewhere by their co-religionists, they suffered the full
punishment as if they were the perpetrators of the act. Ottomans regained the
territory by combining their forces with Mehmed Ali Pasha of Egypt and fighting
under his son Ibrahim Pasha. Ibrahim’s reprisals were merciless and brutal in
the extreme. Apart from the usual killings, rape, loot and enslavement, he cut
down the orchards and fruit trees to make Greece a desert similar to his home
province of Egypt. At this point, Europe’s patience ran out and England, France
and Russia intervened militarily. Ottoman resistance was soon wiped out and
Greece was made independent.
Mazower
gives a brief report of the highhandedness with which the Ottomans ran their
dictatorship over the Greeks. The Muslims were in a minority in the province,
but the Greeks were unmistakably suppressed as inferior. Any Greek meeting a
Muslim on the road had to dismount as a mark of respect. Christian violence
against Muslims was taken very seriously, but the Porte did not bother with
violence among Christians themselves, leaving their religious bodies to resolve
the issue. Greeks were mistreated and scorned for centuries by their Ottoman
masters. The desire for revenge brought out casual ferocity and vindictive rage
when the rebels overran Muslim settlements. The return attacks were
blood-curdling. When Turks subdued the island of Chios which rebelled, they
killed 25,000 men and 45,000 women and children were taken as slaves out of a
population of 100,000. Soldiers cut the heads and ears off the corpses for
payment from the Pasha’s accountants.
The
crusades were the desperate attempt of European Christianity to liberate the
Holy Land from Muslims in the eleventh-thirteenth centuries CE. The author has
not addressed the question of how deep the spirit of crusades or religious
unity had percolated into the European mind in arriving at their decision to
come to the aid of Greeks even at the cost of military encounter with the
powerful Ottomans. He provides many hints however. A sense of Christian
solidarity allowed monarchists and republicans in Europe to bury their
differences and coalesce around a culturalist argument akin to the spirit of
the crusades. The prospect of communal death at the hands of Ottomans was a
fear shared by the Greeks in the Peloponnese, Rumeli and Asia Minor. It was
unquestionably one of the ways in which an idea of the Greek nation emerged.
The Greek constitution, which was drafted by politicians and thinkers trained
in Europe in 1822 declared Orthodox Christianity to be the ruling faith of the
Greek state. Only Christians could be Greek citizens. The document was prefaced
with the words ‘in the name of the Holy and Indissoluble Trinity’. There was a
report in 2018 that the ruling Greek party was trying to separate church from
the state and so it seems that even after many revisions, the constitution is
still not secular in the modern sense. Whichever way you look at it, Orthodox
belief has been the starting point of modern Greek consciousness. The Ottoman
past has been completely eradicated from Peloponnese.
Mazower
displays a surprising lack of empathy to the Greek cause in the narrative. The
bad aspects of all Greek national leaders find prominent mention in the
biographical sketches. On the other hand, the Ottoman warlords who had killed
and enslaved thousands of innocents do not get the censure they deserve. Every
nation glorifies their national movement and iron over wrinkles and differences
of opinion especially when non-homogeneous groups are involved. This author’s
irreverent approach inflates the issues of contention and ignores the points of
unanimity. Lack of unity and mutual distrust among the leaders and regions are
blown out of proportion. The revolution itself is portrayed as a lucky accident
rather than the result of a valiant fight. “Putting off decision until it was
clear who’ll prevail”, ‘wanted to avoid conflict but forced into action” are
some of the author’s choice phrases to mark the Greeks in a poor light. The
Greeks were short of men, material, money and resources on all fronts. In spite
of this, Mazower ridicules the fighters and reports their occasional
depredations against their own flock due to severe shortage of resources. All
these fallacious arguments try to reinforce the conception that the Greeks did
not deserve to win self-determination and that the Ottomans were unfairly
wronged. This is epitomized in his narrative on the rudimentary Greek navy
which was initially nothing but retrofitted commercial fleet. There was no
discipline in them as the sailors were volunteers who deserted as they pleased.
Needs of national strategy took second place and they reverted to ferry cargo
for profit at times. They even indulged in piracy (p.140). At the slightest
prospect of defeat, the Greek contingents looted each other. This is how the
book portrays the Greek effort. The author also exhibits an Ottoman bias. Even
when the Greeks were being crushed as a subhuman race of infidels, he claims
that Christian women sometimes turned to Ottoman judges to obtain satisfaction
when their own communal law fell short (p.124).
The
book vividly highlights the change in European perception of the conflict that
finally triggered a military response that decimated the Ottomans. Without that
crucial intervention, all Greeks would undoubtedly have been killed or forcibly
converted. The support arose in the trickle of philhellenes from Europe who was
motivated by the study of classical Greece and the incumbent desire to somehow
restore its past glory. The real contribution of these philhellenic volunteers
was that they marked Europe’s concern and alignment of public opinion to the
Greek cause. However, many of them were disillusioned after arriving in Greece
and fighting on their side. In the next stage, specially chartered consignments
of supplies and material reached the insurgents from wealthy Europeans and
sympathetic groups. Lord Byron was the most famous volunteer and his death from
natural causes in 1824 was a sensation across Europe. The surge in Europe’s
sympathy was rooted in a tradition of educated veneration for ancient Greece.
Supporting the Greeks also meant signaling disapproval of the continent’s
conservative masters and their intolerance of the rights of nations. This was
significant after Waterloo when the restored European monarchy abhorred
revolutionary movements anywhere. The monarchs maintained neutrality or
resigned indifference to the continuation of Ottoman dominance in the first few
years of the revolution.
As
is common with many European and American writers, this author also tries his
best to laud the Ottomans. Apart from vignettes of their rule mentioned above,
Mazower goes one step further to eulogize the life of slaves under Ottomans
because, as he says, sometimes staffing the highest levels of imperial
governance was with slave recruits. For this author, getting caught and
separated from their own families to become a slave is like clearing the civil
service examination! But the victims never thought so as we see them often
committing suicide to prevent capture. The life of a female slave was much more
hellish as sexual violation was also involved. Not that the young male slaves
were also not completely free from this threat. She would be extremely
fortunate if she could end up as one among the hundreds of concubines in an
Ottoman Pasha’s harem. The narrative is rather drab and uninspiring. After
1826, the pace quickens and in a few chapters Ottomans go down, a new king
appears from Bavaria and a constitution comes into
effect. With its mission of cutting Greek revolutionary leaders down to size,
the book is designed to cast away the feeling of euphoria from modern Greeks and
to nip off respect towards the nation’s founding fathers. The book tells of
European military experts called to train Ottoman soldiers going over to their
army and fighting against their fellows. This author is a successor to them in
spirit.
The
book is recommended.
Rating:
2 Star
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