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Kaban ng Hiyas
Congressional Library

ARK Logo

Kaban ng Hiyas
Congressional Library

Book Details

Book cover
Biography & Autobiography

Farewell to Salonica

Author

Leon Sciaky

Call Number

PL 632769 L56F 5467 2003

Accession Number

93598pl

PUBLICATION YEAR

2005

Keywords

Salonica, Sephardic Judaism, Ottoman Empire, cultural diversity, Balkan history

Book Summary

At the crossroads of the Eastern and Western worlds, Salonica -- now Greece's third largest city Thessaloniki -- was an oasis in a desert of conflicting powers and interests. A Turkish territory until 1912, the city was an economic centre of the Ottoman empire and a cultural centre of Sephardic Judaism. In this memoir, Leon Sciaky, the son of a Sephardic merchant family who immigrated to Turkey during the Spanish Inquisition, tells of growing up in the vibrant community that flourished in Salonica at the turn of the century. He introduces the Turkish sheiks and dervishes, Sephardic rabbis, Hungarian revolutionaries, Bulgarian farmers, Greek priests, Kurdish grocers, Albanian woodcutters, and French headmasters who populated this little Balkan world. Although his early years were idyllic, Sciaky's well-respected merchant family could not escape the violence of Salonica's constant lesions and struggles. Situated amidst peoples of different languages, religions, cultures, and national allegiances, Salonica was like a vividly set stage in a drama where these very diverse peoples lived, in peace and strife, vying for power and prosperity.

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