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Christos Papoutsy Dispels Myths Of 1922 Catastrophe

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  • Christos Papoutsy Dispels Myths Of 1922 Catastrophe

    CHRISTOS PAPOUTSY DISPELS MYTHS OF 1922 CATASTROPHE

    Hellenic News of America
    Sept 18 2009

    "The facts about Smyrna have always been sketchy," said Christos
    Papoutsy in the preface of his book "Ships of Mercy: The True Story of
    the RESCUE OF THE GREEKS Smyrna, September 1922. "Did events really
    unfold as many Greeks and others believe? We decided to find out
    the truth, as we believe that all sides need to know, without doubt,
    what occurred in Smyrna during September 1922."

    The current Modern Greek perspective is that American warships were
    in the Smyrna harbor and turned a blind eye. Japanese ships rescued
    civilians. America and the WWI allies double-crossed the Modern Greek
    government by ordering them to march into Anatolia . Then, the major
    powers abandoned them when the Turks pushed the Greek army back to
    the coast.

    Official documents uncovered by Mr. Papoutsy reveal Asa Jennings,
    a former Methodist pastor for ten years, was the real hero. In 1922,
    he was secretary for boy�s work at the YMCA in Smyrna . According
    to the 1923 Saturday Post, Jennings was "an average person risen
    to extraordinary heights by circumstance." Mr. Papoutsy believes "
    Jennings knew he was facing the greatest challenge of his life. Could
    he, one man work a miracle and save hundreds of thousands of innocent
    people?"

    "Jennings formed the American Relief Committee to house the most
    vulnerable, feed as many as possible, and protect where they could the
    helpless from the Turks," said grandson Roger Jennings. "U.S. Consul
    George Horton was requested by Jennings and the Committee to take
    action on behalf of the refugees, but did nothing. When the foreign
    community was ordered to leave the city on ships, all left except
    Jennings. Jennings put his wife and three children on a U.S. Navy
    destroyer, and drove through the violence at great risk of his own
    life to the Turkish Army camp. Jennings got a meeting with Kemal Pasha
    (later known as Ataturk) and worked out the terms for the evacuation of
    the refugees. Jennings then returned to the port, and was provided with
    a boat and coxswain by the U.S. Navy to visit ships in the harbor."

    "Jennings first went to a French ship, but the captain refused
    to get involved and sailed off with an empty ship," continued
    his grandson. "Then Jennings was able to begin the coordination of
    removing Smyrna refugees from the quay, by bribing an Italian Captain
    to land them in Mytilene. After overcoming obstacle after obstacle,
    Jennings was able to get the Greek Prime Minister and his Cabinet to
    place all the ships in the Aegean at his disposal. He even evacuated
    refugees from Aivali and Tseme. The rescue would not have been possible
    without very significant help from Captain Theofanidis of the Greek
    battleship Kilkis."

    Roger Jennings, the grandson and archivist of Asa Jennings official
    sources, believes the "Italian ship captain was soliciting a
    bribe. This was a rescue situation. For example, at Dunkirk , the
    British citizens who took their boats to rescue British soldiers
    did not demand payment. My grandfather, Asa Jennings raised money
    to pay the Italian captain who demanded more. AKJ (Asa Jennings)
    answered with a proposal that he go on the ship to Greek territory
    to negotiate the disembarkation of the refugees from the ship. That
    trip led AKJ to see Greek soldiers and empty ships. However, the
    Italian�s character was deplorable."

    "Asa Jennings was never commissioned an Admiral by the Greek
    government," explained Roger Jennings. "Persons called him Admiral. He
    did not wear the uniform of the Greek Navy, receive any money from
    the Greek Government, take orders from the Greek Government or in
    any way appear as an official of the Greek Government. He was called
    Admiral, because he commanded 26 ships at first and 55 ships after
    Smyrna was evacuated."

    According to grandson Roger Jennings, "AKJ blackmailed the Greek Prime
    Minister after they refused to make ships available to save 300,000
    Greeks in Smyrna who were at risk of death. His blackmail was a last
    resort only when all other efforts to get the ships to rescue the
    Greeks had failed. The ultimatum was that AKJ would send his next
    message without putting the message in code so all the world would
    know the Greek Government allowed the Turks to kill 300,000 Greeks
    in Smyrna ."

    During a personal interview with Roger Jennings, he revealed to me
    that "Asa Jennings evacuated 350,000 persons from Smyrna . The most
    amazing part of his story should encourage anyone not to give up in
    the face of physical handicaps. My grandfather, Asa, was stricken at
    the age of twenty-eight years with typhoid that left him weak with
    a fever and a curvature that lost 3 inches in height (in plain words
    a hunchback). He was supposed to die. His wife opened the Bible and
    read St. John�s 11th chapter, 4th verse that says �This sickness
    is not to end in death, but is for the honor of God, that through
    it the Son of God may be honored�. That was 1906. Asa Jennings
    survived. There is no coincidence. Redemption was in September 1922,
    when he evacuated the Smyrna refugees. AJK was born on September 20,
    1877 and died January 27, 1933. He was 55 at the time of his death."

    "This is a story about human character," said grandson Roger
    Jennings. "There were many people who could have helped the refugees,
    but did not. Those who put their own interests before those refugees,
    who wanted to avoid the most unspeakable of crimes and death included:
    George Horton, the Italian captain, French ship captain, General
    Frankou, the Greek Prime Minister and his cabinet. Those who put the
    lives of others before all other interests were Asa K. Jennings and
    Captain J. Theofanides of the ship Kilkis. Captain Theofanides' help
    in beginning the first evacuation by a Greek ship and his personal
    intervention with the Greek Government, makes him a Greek hero,
    who is unknown by the Greek public today."

    "When AKJ would walk the streets of Greece , people would kneel out
    of respect and kiss his hand and feet," said Roger Jennings. "At
    the Treaty of Lausanne, Asa K. Jennings represented both the Greek
    and Turkish sides for the exchange of prisoners of war. He was the
    only person respected by both sides. The Greek government awarded
    him their highest medals of honor."

    The belief that the United States did not act to save civilians
    is false, according to his research. Mr. Papoutsy has investigated
    accounts from captains� and ship logs that describe the role of
    Jennings and the United States Navy. "The Destroyer Litchfield in
    particular evacuated Greek and Armenian refugees after September 12,
    1922," said the author. "Destroyers assisted civilian relief agencies,
    attempting to feed and evacuate thousands from famine and war." This
    is all cited from the Records of the Office of the Chief of Naval
    Operations, Naval History Division in Washington D.C. U.S. Rear
    Admiral Mark Bristol commanded the American naval detachment in
    Smyrna . Admiral Bristol, in a report to the Secretary of Navy,
    said Mr. A.K. Jennings of the YMCA demanded Greek ships from the
    Greek Prime Minister for evacuation. Amazingly, Jennings stated that
    he would publish facts to the world that the Greeks and the Greek
    government refused to render assistance to Greek refugees in Smyrna ,
    if they did not act. They relented. Jennings commanded the Greek ships.

    I personally was amazed to discover that Marjorie Housepian Dobbins�
    account in " Smyrna 1922: Destruction of a City" was inaccurate,
    regarding Japan �s assistance in evacuating refugees. This
    assumption is based on oral records of survivors, without specifying
    particular Japanese ships, or records. Mr. Papoutsy stated that
    numerous popular books written about the Smyrna Catastrophe repeat
    their statements. Every single captain�s logs documentation
    from the nations present record each nation�s participation in
    evacuating Greeks in varying degrees. Research shows, according
    to Christos Papoutsy, "that the Japanese naval ships were not the
    primary rescuers of the Greeks...but Japanese naval ships were not
    even present in Smyrna Harbor during September 1922, never mind
    leading the rescue." This is documented by the following: three
    Japanese governments; Japanese Military History Department, the
    Japanese National Institute for Defense Studies and the Information
    and Culture Center of the Japanese Embassy. All these sources say no
    Japanese military or merchant vessels were in these waters.

    In fact, Japan sympathized with the Turkish government. The author
    believes stories of Japanese rescue ships origin will never be
    known. He believes "that a Japanese fishing boat or merchant ship was
    present in a nearby harbor.....such a vessel provided some help. But,
    clearly, there were not a large number of Japanese ships leading
    the rescue."

    Many of us, almost a century later are unaware that "the refugee
    population was unique in that it was largely women and children, the
    ill and the elderly," according to the writer. Mr. Papoutsy claims
    Greece accomplished an extraordinary achievement. Six years after
    the 1922 Catastrophe wrecked human lives were sheltered, medically
    healed, given homes, land. Greece accomplished a unique humanitarian
    effort. "Yet the world at large has heard nothing about it," he said.

    The author sheds new information on the Asia Minor refugees that
    isn�t widely known in English, historical sources. "The Greeks of
    Turkey were different from the Greeks of Greece," he explains. "These
    Greeks were direct descendants of the Ionian Greeks, who settled the
    Aegean coast of Asia Minor , more than a thousand years ago. They
    were a strong, dynamic part of the population, largely controlling
    the banking, shipping and general mercantile business......to become
    penniless refugees, living in tents and driven to accept the most
    menial work, was a huge emotional shock......so many overcame these
    circumstances is a testament to the Greek spirit. Not only were people
    horribly wronged, but an entire region was changed as well.

    The "Ships of Mercy" reveals that the Smyrna Catastrophe, plight of
    the refugees was forgotten with the onset of WWII, remembered only by
    the disposed. Jennings role in the Lausanne conference is ignored by
    all history books. He unofficially arranged for an exchange of forty
    thousand prisoners between the Greeks and Turks. He was trusted by
    both sides. He defended the U.S.A. and explained to the U.S. public
    its humanitarian efforts. He died young at 56 years old in 1933, during
    the Great Depression. Mr. Papoutsy concludes his book by saying the "
    U.S. did not forget Greece . By June 1923, the U.S. spent more than
    18 million dollars in relief work in the Near East, with more than
    half going to Greece . America �s contribution was eight times that
    of other nations."

    Christos and Mary Papoutsy gave an extraordinary lecture in October
    2008 on their research at the Kimisis Tis Theotokou of Southampton Asia
    Minor lecture. "Over one hundred persons attended the lecture," said
    Dimitri Hagistavrou, president of the parish Council and a descendant
    of Smyrna refugees. I am personally impressed with the time and money
    spent researching the facts with his wife, Mary. Mrs. Papoutsy recited
    a beautiful poem on Smyrna that was in Horton�s Book (The Blight of
    Asia). Bill Theodosakis showed his extensive photo collection of the
    Asia Minor Catastrophe." Christos Papoutsy acknowledged the assistance
    of Theodosakis, who is the Director of the Memorial Committee of Asia
    Minor 1922, in the Acknowledgments of "Ships of Mercy"

    The Statue of the Mikrasiatiki Mother with her three children at
    lies at Mytilene�s Harbor is on the back cover of his book. It is a
    deeply moving photograph, revealing Mytilene as a heroic island. Byron
    Kanaris, of the Transfiguration of Christ Church in Mattituck, Long
    Island said "my Father, Antonis, was mayor of Mytilene during the
    Catastrophe. He did all in his power to help."

    In 2009, an educated public wants to know the truth. Not only do
    the Christian descendants of 1922 Catastrophe feel the sorrow. The
    European Muslims, who now live on the coast of Asia Minor , feel
    the pain of being uprooted from ancestral homes in the exchange of
    population in 1922. During my three visits in six years to different
    areas in the state of Smyrna , the middle class Turks in the business
    community spoke about their grandparents who were Greek. They believe
    their families were victims in the uprooting of communities based
    on religion. It is a pain that remains. Asa K. Jennings did not
    merely save the refugees of 1922 Smyrna , but allowed these persons
    to root their families in Greece . Each time a child was born to a
    Mikrasiatic family in the following generations Asa K. Jennings will
    be responsible in thought and by word. Christos Papoutsy�s book
    "Ships of Mercy" is a masterpiece that will reshape the history of
    the 1922 Smyrna Catastrophe.
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