In 1926, Levi Eshkol, who would later be prime minister of Israel during the 1967 war, visited Western Thrace, and observed the settlement of Greek refugees from the 1923 Greek-Turkish population exchange. He remarked at the time that it was an "‘an enormous and interesting project," which could provide a model for the creation of the Israeli state. In this presentation, I draw together some of the unlikely similarities between Greek, Turkish, and Israeli nationalism. Focusing on the impact of Hellenization on the Jewish community of Salonica after the Greek invasion of 1912, I argue that nationalisms which claim to be mutually antagonistic, often converged when it came to the re-arrangement of people and re-definition of their ethnic identity.



Addeddate 2015-01-11 02:55:28 Identifier thriceastranger Scanner Internet Archive HTML5 Uploader 1.6.0