[Congressional Bills 104th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. Res. 160 Introduced in Senate (IS)]
104th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. RES. 160
A resolution marking the anniversary of the anti-Greek pogrom in
Turkey, on September 6, 1955.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
August 7 (legislative day, July 10), 1995
Mr. D'Amato submitted the following resolution; which was referred to
the Committee on the Judiciary
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
A resolution marking the anniversary of the anti-Greek pogrom in
Turkey, on September 6, 1955.
Whereas, in September 1955, there existed a Greek minority population of 100,000
in Istanbul, Turkey;
Whereas, on the night of September 6-7, 1955, a pogrom against the Greek
community began in Istanbul;
Whereas anti-Greek rioters attacked, pillaged, gutted and destroyed more than
2,000 Greek homes, 4,200 Greek shops and stores, 73 Greek Orthodox
churches, 52 Greek schools, eight Greek cemeteries, all three major
Greek newspaper plants, and dozens of Greek factories, hotels,
restaurants, and warehouses in Istanbul;
Whereas 15 Greeks were killed in the pogrom or died subsequently, and 32 were
seriously injured;
Whereas as many as 200 women were raped by rioters;
Whereas the United States Consul General in Istanbul reported that police stood
idly by or cheered on the rioting mobs;
Whereas the State Department received confirmation of ``elaborate advanced
planning for widespread destruction of the property of the indigenous
Greek community,'' involving careful preparations by many individuals;
Whereas American journalist Frederick Sondern, Jr., writing at the time for
Readers Digest, described the events of that night as ``. . . one of the
wildest eruptions of mob fury and hysteria in modern times . . .'';
Whereas homes of Greek officers stationed at NATO headquarters in the Turkish
city of Izmir were also attacked and destroyed;
Whereas rioters attacked and burned down the Greek Consulate in Izmir and the
Greek Pavilion at the Izmir International festival;
Whereas Turkish authorities failed at the time to convict a single rioter, out
of thousands, for any crime committed during the pogrom;
Whereas five years later, after a military coup in Turkey, the former Prime
Minister and acting Foreign Minister at the time of the pogrom were
charged with, and convicted of, numerous criminal actions, including the
instigation of the anti-Greek riots;
Whereas the pogrom marked the beginning of the end of the Greek community's
presence in Istanbul, numbering about 2,000 in 1995; and
Whereas September 6, 1995 will mark the 40th Anniversary of the pogrom: Now,
therefore, be it
Resolved, That it is the sense of the Senate that the President
should--
(1) take all appropriate steps to observe and commemorate
the loss of life and property, and the numerous injuries and
offenses, which took place during the pogrom by proclaiming
September 6, 1995 as a day of remembrance for the victims of
these attacks; and
(2) urge all Americans to honor the victims of the pogrom
in the appropriate manner.
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