Saturday, May 16, 2026

GENOCIDE, CYPRUS, AND THE LIMITS OF GREEK RECOGNITION

 


In recent years, genocide recognition has re-entered public discourse with renewed intensity, as parliamentary resolutions, commemorative days and, in relation to genocides perpetrated during the final decades of the Ottoman Empire, official statements have multiplied, frequently framed as overdue acts of historical responsibility. Cyprus’ recognition of the Assyrian genocide in December 2025 forms part of this broader pattern, just as Armenia’s decision in 2015 to recognise the Armenian genocide alongside the genocides of the Greeks and Assyrians belongs to the same trajectory. These developments are often described as symbolic gestures, yet their effect extends well beyond symbolism, shaping how the past is narrated, determining which histories acquire institutional visibility, and establishing the boundaries within which responsibility is acknowledged.
Greece occupies a distinctive position within this evolving landscape, having recognised the Armenian genocide since 1996 while also legislating separate days of remembrance for the genocide of the Greeks of the Ottoman Empire, divided by region and historical episode. Over time, this framework has come to be treated as settled, with public discourse presenting it as comprehensive and internally sufficient. The absence of formal recognition of the Assyrian genocide rarely intrudes upon this settlement and, when it does, the matter is generally treated as peripheral, external to the core narrative of Greek remembrance. Considered alongside developments elsewhere, however, the limits of this arrangement begin to emerge with increasing clarity.
The destruction of Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians during the final decades of the Ottoman Empire and the early years of the Turkish nation-state unfolded within a shared historical horizon. Language, ecclesiastical tradition, and local history distinguished the populations targeted, yet the political logic that marked them for removal remained consistent. Deportation, massacre, starvation, forced conversion, expropriation, and cultural erasure recur across the historical record with striking regularity, demonstrating that these events did not arise as isolated eruptions of violence confined to particular regions, but formed part of a sustained effort to reorder population, territory, and sovereignty through the elimination of communities identified as incompatible with a reconfigured political order.
Continuity of this kind has long been recognised in historical and analytical accounts of the period, in which late Ottoman violence against Christian populations is increasingly understood as a connected process with multiple targets rather than as a series of parallel tragedies. Armenia’s recognition of the Greek and Assyrian genocides reflects acceptance of this reading, situating Armenian destruction within a wider field of violence rather than isolating it as a singular national event, while Cyprus’ recognition of the Assyrian genocide proceeds from a similar understanding, affirming the centrality of the Assyrian experience within the transformations of the period.
A different orientation is evident in Greece’s recognition regime. By dividing the genocide of Ottoman Greeks into regionally bounded commemorations, a logic of segmentation is introduced that sits uneasily with the historical record and, over time, produces interpretive effects that are difficult to ignore. Violence comes to appear regional rather than systemic, causation drifts toward circumstance and away from structure, and attention settles on local suffering as the machinery that produced it recedes from view.
Fragmentation of this kind is often defended as an effort to respect the particular histories of different Greek communities. Genocide, however, as a historical phenomenon, is defined by intent, coordination, and repetition, and an emphasis on division reshapes explanation accordingly, allowing coherence to give way to compartmentalisation and rendering the underlying logic of destruction increasingly difficult to apprehend.
An additional irony follows from this practice. Late Ottoman violence was administered through systems of communal classification, most notably the millet system, which rendered populations legible as discrete and governable units. These taxonomies, frequently structured along religious lines, enabled surveillance, differentiation, and ultimately destruction, while modern recognition regimes that reproduce such compartmentalisation risk extending into memory the same administrative logic that once enabled annihilation in practice, filtering the destruction of pluralism through the very categories that facilitated its undoing.
The persistence of this problem is further revealed in the reluctance to name the shared condition binding Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians during this period. Late Ottoman violence targeted Christian minorities as such, even as it differentiated between them administratively, and a preference for ethnonational framing avoids this shared designation, allowing Greek suffering to be narrated in isolation while Assyrian suffering remains external, with the classificatory mindset of empire surviving, inadvertently, within the structures of post-imperial remembrance.
The absence of formal recognition of the Assyrian genocide within the Greek framework therefore cannot be accounted for by evidentiary uncertainty and instead demands explanation at the level of structure and policy. The Assyrian experience unfolded contemporaneously with the Armenian and Greek genocides, its execution relied upon the same methods, and its justification drew upon the same ideological vocabulary, so that exclusion reflects a boundary drawn outside the historical record, revealing how recognition regimes distinguish between central and peripheral histories and how genocide becomes legible only when attached to populations capable of translating destruction into state continuity.
This pattern exposes a persistent problem identified within post-colonial and genocide scholarship alike, namely that modern recognition regimes privilege survivorship over destruction. Populations that emerge from genocide with a successor state acquire diplomatic legibility, while populations whose destruction was more thorough, or whose dispersal left no state apparatus capable of inheriting their claims, struggle to secure institutional acknowledgement, with the absence of an Assyrian state able to convert annihilation into diplomatic continuity rendering Assyrian genocide structurally vulnerable to marginalisation.
When Greece, a state that draws upon genocide recognition within its own historical narrative, declines to recognise the Assyrian experience, this structural asymmetry is reinforced. Silence acquires meaning, informal thresholds are confirmed, and a hierarchy of victimhood takes shape that sits uneasily alongside the universalist language through which genocide recognition is ordinarily justified, rendering the Assyrian genocide a test case that exposes the limits of recognition governed by national self-narration rather than historical adjudication.
These limits extend into the diasporan sphere, where Greek, Armenian, and Assyrian communities frequently pursue recognition within the same political environments, addressing the same parliaments, institutions, and publics. Unified approaches have at times strengthened these efforts by presenting late Ottoman violence as a shared historical process rather than as a set of competing claims, yet Greece’s fragmented recognition regime undermines this possibility, as separate commemorations and selective silences encourage parallel advocacy cultures that reduce the scope for coordination and weaken solidarities that might otherwise consolidate recognition.
The consequences of this fragmentation are practical and cumulative. Diasporan recognition efforts depend upon clarity, particularly when engaging audiences unfamiliar with the region’s history, and fragmented frameworks shift explanatory burdens onto communities already operating at the margins of political influence, allowing momentum to dissipate and recognition to become harder to secure even where moral and historical grounds are substantial. Delay itself acquires a structuring force, as prolonged absence from official recognition normalises erasure, embeds silence into institutional expectation, and renders any later corrective gesture increasingly provisional, defensive, and burdened by the weight of what has already been allowed to settle.
At the level of institutions, similar effects emerge. Legislators and international bodies are more likely to engage where historical frameworks appear intelligible and internally consistent, while fragmentation complicates engagement by introducing overlapping commemorations and selective omissions that invite hesitation, delay recognition, and benefit denial. A further analytical distinction clarifies the difficulty, since legal recognition requires precision, definition, and bounded categories, while historical recognition requires continuity and context, with Greece’s approach privileging juridical compartmentalisation at the expense of historical intelligibility, achieving administrative clarity at the cost of conceptual coherence.
In this sense, recognition operates not only as a juridical act but also as a pedagogical one, quietly determining which histories enter curricula, museums, public institutions, and the inherited common sense of future generations, and which are left to survive only within the fragile confines of communal memory, as state recognition continues to shape what institutions study, teach, and litigate, ensuring that silence in the present becomes marginalisation in the future.
Fragmentation also carries a reflexive cost, as a recognition regime organised through selective segmentation and administrative division begins, over time, to mirror the very logic of differentiation and isolation upon which denial has long depended, thereby weakening Greece’s own capacity to contest that logic with coherence.
Recognition is never confined to the past. It establishes the terms on which a state understands its own history and presents that understanding to others, and although Greece may not pursue genocide recognition through sustained lobbying, this does not relieve it of the obligation to maintain conceptual and moral consistency in its recognition regime. Where recognition fragments what history presents as connected, credibility erodes, and where recognition excludes a population destroyed within a shared historical process, coherence fails, since a state’s recognition policy cannot demand clarity from others while tolerating ambiguity within itself.
DEAN KALIMNIOU
kalymnios@hotmail.com
First published in NKEE on Saturday 16 May 2026

Saturday, May 09, 2026

LOST IN TRANSLITERATION: WHO GETS TO BE GREEK ON PAPER?

 



My interlocutor relates the anecdote with an ease that borders upon resignation, as though the outcome were always already inscribed within the prejudices of the system he sought to enter. A communications contract at a large corporate conglomerate, a role predicated upon nuance, articulation, and the capacity to mediate between complexity and comprehension. The application is submitted under his legal Greek name. It is declined without ceremony. The identical curriculum vitae, unaltered in substance, untouched in merit, is resubmitted under a truncated, Australianised version of his name. Within thirty minutes, the telephone stirs into life. Interest is immediate, enthusiasm unfeigned, opportunity suddenly abundant.
Such an episode might readily be subsumed within the now familiar literature on implicit bias, wherein names operate as proxies for cultural legibility, rendering the bearer either proximate to or distant from the imagined norms of the dominant order. Within this framework, the Anglicised name functions as a form of symbolic translation, smoothing the friction of difference, permitting entry into what Pierre Bourdieu would describe as the domain of legitimate language, where recognition is contingent upon conformity to established codes. The transformation not merely being phonetic is social, conferring upon its bearer a degree of symbolic capital otherwise withheld.
Yet to confine the analysis to this outward dynamic is to overlook an inobtrusive, more disquieting process unfolding within the Greek-Australian community itself. For there exists, within the pages of Greek language publications in Australia, a reverse operation of naming, whereby individuals of Greek origin, particularly those of the second and third generations, are habitually presented through their Anglicised appellations. The effect is neither incidental nor merely stylistic, constituting, rather, a subtle act of classification, one that inscribes distinctions of belonging within a linguistic space ostensibly dedicated to the preservation of Hellenic continuity.
The evidence is not difficult to locate. Steve Dimopoulos appears as Steve, (albeit also as the odd Στηβ on occasion). Nick Staikos is rendered as Nick, not Νίκος. His Honour Justice Christopher Kourakis retains his English form, rather than Χριστόφορος Κουράκης, even within a Greek textual environment that would permit, indeed invite, such a rendering. Here the argument of necessity or constraint does not apply. Instead, these renderings appear to be conscious editorial choices, repeated with sufficient consistency to suggest an underlying logic, a tacit grammar of inclusion and distance.
A parallel tendency may be observed within Greece itself, where figures of the diaspora are frequently designated by their international names, as though their distance from the national body requires a linguistic marker of differentiation. Maria Callas and Maria Menounos circulate only in English form with a persistence that exceeds mere convention, their global renown intertwined with the retention of a form that signals their emplacement within a broader, non-Greek sphere. The gesture, subtle yet insistent, participates in a form of exoticisation, a rendering of the diasporic subject as at once Greek and other, familiar yet estranged.
Within the Australian context, the implications are more layered, for the practice unfolds within a community that proclaims, with ritual regularity, its commitment to the preservation and transmission of language, culture, and identity. The rhetoric of continuity is omnipresent, articulated in speeches, commemorations, wreath laying ceremonies and institutional discourse, wherein the Greek language is elevated to the status of inheritance, obligation and fetish object. One encounters, within this discourse, an almost liturgical insistence upon the necessity of retention, the safeguarding of a cultural patrimony perceived to be under constant threat of erosion.
And yet, within the very medium through which this patrimony is articulated, a different logic asserts itself. The rendering of Greek names in English, within Greek language publications, introduces a dissonance that cannot be easily dismissed. It compels the question of how Greekness is being conceptualised, mediated, and, crucially, authorised within the diasporic field.
Here, the insights of Bourdieu acquire particular resonance. The Greek language press may be understood as a field in which symbolic capital is distributed and legitimised, wherein the authority to define the terms of Greekness is exercised through ostensibly mundane practices such as naming. To render a name in Greek is to confer a form of recognition, to inscribe the individual within the legitimate linguistic order of the community. To retain the English form, within that same space, is to position the subject at a slight remove, acknowledged yet not fully consecrated within the symbolic economy of Hellenism.
This classificatory logic is not accidental nor is it externally imposed. Drawing upon Michel Foucault’s notion of governmentality, one discerns within these practices a form of internal regulation, a mode of communal self-administration through which norms are reproduced without the need for overt coercion. The Greek-Australian community, through its own institutions, curates and disciplines its boundaries, producing a regime of truth about who is to be recognised as fully Greek, and under what conditions. The use of English names within Greek discourse thus emerges as a subtle technology of differentiation, a means by which degrees of belonging are quietly articulated.
The pattern acquires further clarity when one considers its inconsistencies. Figures who occupy prominent roles within the organised Greek-Australian community, regardless of which generation they belong to are far more likely to be designated by their Greek names. In these instances, the act of naming functions as a form of symbolic consecration, affirming their position within the institutional life of the community.
By contrast, those Greek Australians who achieve prominence within the mainstream, yet remain less embedded within communal structures, are frequently presented through their Anglicised names. The distinction, reveals an underlying taxonomy of Greekness, one that is not merely inherited but is mediated through participation, proximity, and recognition. Greekness, in this schema, rather than being a static attribute, is actualy a status conferred within a particular field of relations.
The work of Vassilacopoulos and Nicolacopoulou offers a useful extension of this analysis. If the Greek migrant in Australia is positioned within the national imaginary as a perpetual foreigner, compelled to navigate a space in which full recognition remains elusive, then within the Greek diasporic field a parallel stratification emerges. Degrees of Greekness are differentially acknowledged, authorised, and inscribed, producing a secondary hierarchy in which the criteria of belonging are determined internally, even as the community negotiates its place within the broader society. Here, the subversives are those of the latter generations who would assert their own forms of Greekness challenging the rule and role of a ruling class that has established itself through their quiescence in the dominant groups seizure of the land from its original inhabitants.
One might inquire whether such practices serve to alienate subsequent generations, reinforcing a sense of distance from a linguistic and cultural heritage already experienced as attenuated. The answer, though less dramatic than one might expect, is no less revealing. The audience most directly implicated in these representational practices often lacks the linguistic capital necessary to engage with them. Greek language publications in Australia remain largely inaccessible to those whose competence in the language is limited. The discourse, therefore, circulates within a relatively closed circuit, its classificatory effects largely unchallenged by those it implicitly positions at the margins.
This asymmetry of linguistic capital entrenches the authority of the first generation, whose fluency grants them control over the mechanisms of representation. The capacity to name, to classify, to inscribe identity within the written word, becomes a form of power, exercised with little contestation. In this sense, the practice of rendering names in English within Greek discourse is not simply a reflection of external realities, but an expression of internal hierarchies, sustained by differential access to language itself.
At the same time, the phenomenon resists reduction to a singular logic of exclusion. The persistence of English names within Greek publications may also be read through the lens of Homi Bhabha’s notion of hybridity, wherein identity is constituted within an in between space, neither wholly assimilated nor entirely preserved. The Anglicised name, retained within a Greek textual environment, signals this condition of partial translation, a form that is at once familiar and estranged, bearing the marks of both worlds without collapsing into either.
Such hybridity, far from representing a failure of continuity, reflects the lived reality of a community that has, over generations, adapted to its context, negotiating the demands of integration while sustaining elements of its cultural inheritance. The English name, in this reading, becomes less a marker of loss than a sign of transformation, an acknowledgment, however implicit, that Greekness in Australia has evolved beyond the parameters established by the first generation.
The anecdote with which this reflection commenced returns, at this juncture, with renewed significance. The substitution of a Greek name for an English one in order to secure employment speaks to the external pressures exerted upon minority identities, the necessity of translation in order to access opportunity. The retention of English names within Greek discourse, by contrast, reveals an internal accommodation, a recognition that the boundaries of identity have shifted, that the community itself participates in the reconfiguration of what it means to be Greek.
Between these movements, outward and inward, lies the space in which Greek-Australian identity continues to be fashioned. Names, in this context, are neither incidental nor merely descriptive. They are instruments through which belonging is negotiated, affirmed, and, at times, withheld. They bear witness to a community engaged in an ongoing process of self-definition, one that unfolds in the interstices between languages, generations, and competing imaginaries of what Greekness has been and what it is becoming.
The English name, printed within the columns of a Greek newspaper, stands as a quiet testament to this transformation. It signals, with a subtlety that borders upon the unconscious, the emergence of a hybrid identity that is neither fully assimilated nor entirely preserved, an identity that the community, through its everyday practices, has already begun to accept, even as it continues to speak, with undiminished fervour, of continuity and preservation.
DEAN KALIMNIOU
kalymnios@hotmail.com
First published in NKEE on Saturday, 9 May 2026

Saturday, May 02, 2026

THE BATTLE OF VEVI AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF MEMORY


 

In the early days of April 1941, as German forces advanced through the Florina valley and the narrowing corridors of northern Greece assumed a significance far exceeding their geography, Australian troops took up positions at a constricted defile near the village of Vevi, entering into an engagement that would, in the decades that followed, acquire a commemorative afterlife disproportionate to both its duration and its strategic consequence. The Battle of Vevi has come to occupy, within certain Greek communities in Australia, a symbolic place as evidence of a shared moral struggle; one in which Australians are said to have fought for the freedom of Greece, their presence transfigured into an act of solidarity grounded in principle rather than strategy.

Repeated with conviction by community organisations in commemorative observances, this claim collapses under historical scrutiny, obscuring the operational logic that produced the battle while substituting a narrative that is emotionally satisfying yet structurally incomplete.
The Australian units deployed at Vevi formed part of a composite force under British command, inserted into Greece as a consequence of strategic decisions taken within the command structures of the British Empire, where the priorities of delay, redeployment and preservation of force governed military planning across theatres, and where the Greek landscape was incorporated into a wider calculus that treated its defence as an instrument serving a broader operational objective whose articulation lay elsewhere, with strategic initiative remaining entirely external to the Greek state and operational decisions concerning defence, delay and abandonment determined within British command structures, thereby reducing Greece from a sovereign actor to a passive theatre within a wider imperial war.
Operational directives were explicit in their intent, requiring that the position be held in order to delay the German advance, to facilitate the withdrawal of Greek formations, and to enable the establishment of a secondary defensive line along the Aliakmon River, a formulation that leaves little room for retrospective moralisation, given that the terrain was to be used instrumentally, time was to be purchased at measurable cost, and the force was to be preserved for subsequent operations instead of being expended in a terminal defence of the country in which it found itself. The engagement at Vevi was therefore structured from its inception as a managed withdrawal conducted under fire, rather than as a defence intended to secure the territorial integrity of Greece.
The engagement unfolded under conditions that quickly exposed the fragility of the Allied position, as gaps opened between units, communications failed, and coordinated withdrawal became increasingly difficult to manage, with the result that elements of the Australian force were captured during retreat and equipment abandoned, outcomes that were not aberrations but the predictable consequences of a delaying action conducted within a coalition force whose cohesion had broken down under pressure.
The action at Vevi therefore achieved its intended effect in the narrowest and most technical sense, in that time was gained, withdrawal was effected, and the force was partially preserved, yet when evaluated against any claim that it constituted a defence of Greece, the conclusion that follows is structurally untenable, for the German advance proceeded, the country was occupied, and the engagement did not interrupt that trajectory, serving instead to facilitate an imperial disengagement that left the terrain, and those who inhabited it, exposed to what followed.
The persistence of an alternative narrative within Greek communities in Australia, in which Australians are remembered as having fought for Greek freedom, cannot be explained by reference to the historical event alone, but must instead be understood through an examination of the ways in which memory operates within communities and acquires authority through repetition, regulation and use.
The work of Michel Foucault provides an essential point of departure, for within his account of discourse, what can be said about the past is governed by systems of power that determine not only the content of statements but their legitimacy, and commemoration functions as a disciplinary practice that produces a regime of truth in which certain formulations are normalised and others rendered difficult to articulate, such that deviation from the authorised narrative is experienced as a breach of discursive order carrying the risk of social sanction through its perceived disloyalty to both communal memory and national belonging.
Within this regime, the assertion that Australians fought for Greece circulates with ease, finding expression in commemorative speeches, educational narratives and ritual observances. In such settings, Greek organisations frequently extend the claim further, asserting that the ANZACs fought for “democracy and freedom,” thereby reproducing a set of narrative tropes long embedded within Australian national mythology and sustained within commemorative discourse, even where those tropes no longer correspond to the historical structure of the engagement, their persistence reflecting an attachment to inherited forms of expression that promise recognition within the dominant narrative and offer, however provisionally, the prospect of acceptance. The alternative formulation, that Australian forces executed a delaying action within an imperial withdrawal strategy, despite its evidentiary basis, lacks comparable traction because it disrupts the coherence of the established narrative and therefore remains marginal within the discursive field, while also failing to sustain the ceremonial gravitas associated with engagements such as the Battle of Crete or the Battle of Kalamata.
This asymmetry is neither incidental nor merely rhetorical, for, as Pierre Bourdieu suggests, memory in this context operates as symbolic capital, enabling Greek communities in Australia to align themselves with the moral economy of the host nation by adopting and reproducing its dominant narratives of sacrifice, thereby converting historical interpretation into a resource that secures recognition, legitimacy and social standing within institutional and civic life.
The stakes of this alignment are clarified through post-colonial analysis, for Edward Said demonstrates that imperial power renders territories legible as sites of intervention within a strategic geography defined elsewhere, and Greece in 1941 was situated within precisely such a cartography, while Dipesh Chakrabarty exposes the extent to which narratives centred on allied defence obscure the subordination of local agency to imperial design, a condition that commemorative retelling masks by recasting Greece as the beneficiary of purposeful action rather than as the terrain upon which external strategies were executed.
Crucially, this narrative is not imposed upon Greek communities from the dominant class, but is actively reproduced from within, as Greek organisations themselves adopt and reiterate the dominant interpretative framework in the course of seeking recognition within it. The analysis advanced by George Vassilacopoulos and Toula Nicolacopoulou in From Foreigner to Citizen: Greek Migrants and Social Change in White Australia 1897–2000 becomes indispensable here, for their work identifies the migrant subject within Australia as one who remains structurally positioned as the perpetual foreigner and is required continuously to demonstrate alignment with the values of the dominant society in order to secure conditional acceptance, such that belonging is not achieved but performed under conditions of constraint.
Within this framework, the commemorative framing of the Battle of Vevi must be understood as a compelled act of alignment, through which Greek historical experience is recast in terms already authorised within Australian national mythology, thereby enabling entry into a narrative structure from which the migrant subject would otherwise remain excluded. The persistence of this framing does not arise from historical misapprehension but from the necessity of securing recognition within a field in which legitimacy is contingent, even as that necessity requires the suppression of the battle’s structural reality, with imperial command and the logic of withdrawal receding in favour of a representation that affirms belonging.
The narrative consolidates this alignment by legitimising Greek presence within Australia, elevating Australia within Greek historical consciousness, and obscuring the imperial command structure that determined the battle’s course, acquiring stability through its repetition in commemorative events, educational programmes and public speech, often framed within the familiar language of ANZAC remembrance, and producing thereby a narrative environment in which alternative interpretations recede from view.
This coherence is secured at the expense of historical precision, since the selective emphasis required to sustain belonging within a particular social order necessarily attenuates the structural reality of the event, a process that does not invite condemnation of those who participate in it, given that individuals act within discursive frameworks that precede them, yet nonetheless demands recognition of what is thereby lost, namely the clarity that the battle formed part of a managed imperial withdrawal.
A battle conceived and executed in order to enable retreat has thus been purposely re-constructed as a defence of freedom, and the persistence of this transformation reveals less about the engagement itself than about the conditions under which historical truth is subordinated to the imperatives of acceptance.
DEAN KALIMNIOU
kalymnios@hotmail.com
First published in NKEE on Saturday 2 May 2026.