I always see comments here about how TCs will be allowed to fly the Turkish flag (like what GCs do with the Greek flag) and have portraits/statues of Ataturk up in the event of a reunification.
And my question is, will that actually be the case? Will there not be a subset of people who are adamant that we not do that?
KillerPalm on
Will this also not give fuel to the Mainland Turks who like to parrot the ‘GCs don’t care about TCs’ narrative?
Attack4TheWin on
Καλά έγινε, ο πατέρας του έθνους τους, ο σφαγέας του έθνους μας. (μαζί με τους αρμένιδες τζαι ασσύριους)
arinc9 on
> Distaste at Mustafa Kemal Ataturk among Pontic Greeks is sourced from the Greco-Turkish war, during which both sides committed sundry atrocities against one another, including massacres, torturing and the burning of towns and villages.
> Amid those atrocities, Nikos Kapetanidis, a journalist from the Black Sea city of Rize who published a newspaper in Trabzon, was convicted and sentenced to death during the Amasya trials, which were carried out by the Turkish national movement, which at a national level was led by Kemal, in 1921 in the eponymous Black Sea town.
> Kapetanidis was one of hundreds to be sentenced to death in Amasya, convicted of agitating for a Greek-led breakaway of the Black Sea region.
Interesting.
Frankkavir on
Nice
eev200 on
It should be renamed if it upsets the residents of the area who are refugees.
6 commenti
I always see comments here about how TCs will be allowed to fly the Turkish flag (like what GCs do with the Greek flag) and have portraits/statues of Ataturk up in the event of a reunification.
And my question is, will that actually be the case? Will there not be a subset of people who are adamant that we not do that?
Will this also not give fuel to the Mainland Turks who like to parrot the ‘GCs don’t care about TCs’ narrative?
Καλά έγινε, ο πατέρας του έθνους τους, ο σφαγέας του έθνους μας. (μαζί με τους αρμένιδες τζαι ασσύριους)
> Distaste at Mustafa Kemal Ataturk among Pontic Greeks is sourced from the Greco-Turkish war, during which both sides committed sundry atrocities against one another, including massacres, torturing and the burning of towns and villages.
> Amid those atrocities, Nikos Kapetanidis, a journalist from the Black Sea city of Rize who published a newspaper in Trabzon, was convicted and sentenced to death during the Amasya trials, which were carried out by the Turkish national movement, which at a national level was led by Kemal, in 1921 in the eponymous Black Sea town.
> Kapetanidis was one of hundreds to be sentenced to death in Amasya, convicted of agitating for a Greek-led breakaway of the Black Sea region.
Interesting.
Nice
It should be renamed if it upsets the residents of the area who are refugees.