Twice A Stranger: How Mass Expulsion Forged Modern Greece and Turkey

'Twice A Stranger: How Mass Expulsion Forged Modern Greece and Turkey' is a book by Bruce Clark published in 2006 concerning the population exchange between Greece and Turkey which took place in the early 1920s, following the Treaty of Lausanne.

As well as giving a detailed account of the background to the exchange, its implementation and immediate consequences, the author examines the continuing effects which it has had on the politics, culture and national identity of both the states concerned. He focuses particularly on the ambivalent feelings of the few surviving expellees and their descendants towards their former homelands.

Contents

Structure of the book

In the preface, the author reflects on the phenomenon of nationalism as it manifested itself in these events and on parallels and contrasts with other later situations such as the Expulsion of Germans after World War II, the "Palestinian exodus" and the parallel Jewish exodus from Arab lands, the population movements in Bosnia in the 1990s and the ongoing situation in Northern Ireland.

  1. Ayvalik and its ghosts (p.21-41)
  2. The road to Lausanne (p.42-64)
  3. Lost brothers, lost sisters: from Samsun to Drama (p.65-86)
  4. Who goes, who stays: the Lausanne bargain (p.87-107)
  5. Hidden faiths, hidden ties: the fate of Ottoman Trebizond (p.108-130)

    There then follows 12 pages (not numbered) of 14 photographs

    • "The great monastery of Panayia Soumela, the spiritual heart of Christian Pontus" has similar image (13) available at Sümela Monastery
    • "The cathedral of Ayia Sofia in Trebizond, now a museum" has similar image (14) available at Trabzon
  6. Out of Constantinople (p.131-157)
  7. Saying farewell to Salonika: the Muslims sail away (p.138-179)
  8. Adapting to Anatolia (p.180-200)
  9. The pursuit of clarity (p.210-222)
  10. The price of success (p.223-246)

Publication Details

Awards

See also

External links