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11:53am Thursday 28th August 2008
Paradise Lost: Smyrna 1922
Giles Milton (Sceptre, £20)
While British soldiers were losing their lives in Gallipoli, life in the Ottoman Empire was exceptionally good just a short distance away. The city of Smyrna - now Ismir in Turkey - had all the blessings of a peaceful history bestowed on it. Its cosmopolitan citizens, including fabulously rich Levantine families, Jews, Armenians and Greeks, enjoyed a social life of opera and yachting unrivalled anywhere in the world.
In one of the greatest massacres in modern history, all this came to an end in 1922 when Turkish soldiers - reacting to occupation by the Greeks - wiped out the city with an orgy of looting, rape and arson.
Milton puts us right into the smoke and fire of this European tragedy, superbly contrasting the halcyon days of a contented population under the amiable Ottoman governor Rahmi Bey to one of colossal disaster. Believing that Allied warships would protect them, the community of Smyrna became as vulnerable as the victims of the later Balkan genocide. The city died in a week.
Next week is The Oxford Times Wine Club Christmas Tasting and, with just four weeks to go until Christmas Day, it is an excellent opportunity to sample a specially-selected range of wines for the festive season.
One of the pictures on this page gives a good impression of the delights to be enjoyed at the Mole and Chicken on one of those sunny days that now seem as far as can be from our present situation.
I had trouble shifting my +1 for the musical Imagine This, which opened last week at the New London Theatre. No-one was interested (one German friend would have come, but funnily enough I hadn’t thought to ask him), and while nobody actually said, “Sounds like a gas”, there were plenty of unprintable responses, averaging out at: “Holocaust – the musical? Um, no thanks . . . ”
Another winter rolls in and, to cheer our spirits, Oxfordshire Touring Theatre Company travel hither and yon through the county with colour, music and fun trailing in their wake. For those of us who live in villages these harbingers of the festive season are a welcome sight.
Applications to be the next manager of Oxford United have been pouring in.
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