×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Saturday
17
Jan 2026
weather symbol
Athens 11°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> Culture

May 18: Remembering the Pontic Greek genocide (warning: distressing photos)

Turkey refuses to recoginse any genocide its forebearers have committed

Newsroom May 19 02:46

Many people are aware of the Armenian genocide in 1915 by the Ottoman Empire, but a massive ethnic cleansing perpetrated again by the Ottomans and Turkey which has remained relatively unknown was that of the genocide of the Pontic Greeks who lived on the shores of the Black Sea and in the Pontic Mountains of northeastern Anatolia.

pont2

 Greek civilians mourn their dead relatives, Great Fire of Smyrna, 1922

May 19 has been designated by the Greek parliament as an official Day of Remembrance for the Pontic Greeks who were the victims of this genocide by the crumbling Ottoman Empire and its emerging successor-state Turkey at the start of the 20th century (1919).

pont3

Phocaea in flames, during the massacre perpetrated by Turkish irregulars in June 1914.

The leader of the emerging nationalist group called “Young Turks”, Mustafa Kemal (Ataturk) landed in Samsun on the Black Sea shores on May 19, 1919, and intensified the brutal campaign of ethnic cleansing that had already been in motion by massacring Pontic Greeks under the guidance of German and Soviet advisers. By the time of the Asia Minor Catastrophe of 1922, the number of Pontians who died had exceeded 200,000; some historians put the figure at 350,000.

pont5
Translation: Elderly and Children Were Not Spared

Those who managed to escape the deadly persecution fled to the Russian Empire as refugees while the remaining Pontic Greeks who still lived in the Ottoman Empire were uprooted and transferred to Greece under the terms of a population treaty between Greece and Turkey after the end of the (1919-22) war and the Asia Minor Catastrophe.

pont6
Smyrna, 1922. Translation: No Children Were Allowed to Live

The systematic genocide of the Christian Ottoman Greek population was similar in planning to that of the Armenian population in Anatolia. During the summer of 2014 the Special Organization (Teşkilat-ı Mahsusa), assisted by government and army officials, conscripted Greek men of military age from Thrace and western Anatolia into Labour Battalions in which hundreds of thousands died. Sent hundreds of miles into the Interior of Anatolia, these conscripts were employed in road-making, building, tunnel excavating and other field work but their numbers were heavily reduced through either privations and ill-treatment or by outright massacre by their Ottoman guards.

>Related articles

X is down, thousands report problems

The Cypriot stewardess who did not board the fatal Falcon with the Libyan general was released by the Turkish authorities

The Syrian army bombs Kurdish neighborhoods in Aleppo and calls on Kurdish fighters to surrender

pont4
“Turks Slaughter Christian Greeks”, Lincoln Daily Star, 19 October 1917

pont10
Smyrna citizens trying to reach the Allied ships during the Smyrna fire, 1922. The photo had been taken from the launch boat of a US battleship

In December 2007 the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS) passed a resolution affirming that the 1914–23 campaign against Ottoman Greeks constituted genocide. Utilising the term “Greek Genocide”, the resolution affirmed that alongside the Assyrians, Ottoman Greeks were subject to a genocide “qualitatively similar” to the Ottoman genocide of the Armenians. IAGS President Gregory Stanton urged the Turkish government to finally acknowledge the three genocides: “The history of these genocides is clear, and there is no more excuse for the current Turkish government, which did not itself commit the crimes, to deny the facts.” Drafted by Canadian scholar Adam Jones, the resolution was adopted on 1 December 2007 with the support of 83% of all voting IAGS members.

www.Greek-Genocide.org -- Copyright Protected Image
Newspaper published by The Scotsman on 20 July 1915 entitled, “Greek Population of Turkey, A Crisis At Aivali”

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#Greek genocide#Ottoman Empire#Pontic genocide#turkey
> More Culture

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

Mitsotakis on the Karystianou party: “There is a long distance between being the parent of a tragedy victim and being the leader of a political party”

January 17, 2026

Patras in carnival mode – This evening, the city’s official opening ceremony

January 17, 2026

Greenland as the first line ofdefense for the U.S. and NATO:

January 17, 2026

Changes at top universities: Oxford abolishes the term ‘doctores’ for inclusion reasons

January 17, 2026

Where affordable housing falls short in Greece: IOBE proposes a cap on rent increases

January 17, 2026

Weather: Noticeable drop in temperature from today – Where it will snow and at which altitudes

January 17, 2026

One dead after train–bus collision at the Port of Hamburg – see photos

January 16, 2026

President of Air Traffic Controllers: Another communications blackout possible in the near future

January 16, 2026
All News

> World

Greenland as the first line ofdefense for the U.S. and NATO:

See the maps that explain why Trump Is so eager to acquire

January 17, 2026

Changes at top universities: Oxford abolishes the term ‘doctores’ for inclusion reasons

January 17, 2026

One dead after train–bus collision at the Port of Hamburg – see photos

January 16, 2026

Trump threatens tariffs against those who oppose U.S. plans for Greenland

January 16, 2026

X is down, thousands report problems

January 16, 2026
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2026 Πρώτο Θέμα