×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Sunday
25
Jan 2026
weather symbol
Athens 16°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> Politics

Mert Kaya: “Greeks must know someone is working for Islamized Greeks in Turkey”

His dissertation was published in Greek with the title “The Islamization of the Greeks of Asia Minor in the period 1919-1925. A study of memory”

Newsroom April 7 11:32

The young Turkey born researcher Mert Kaya searched for his roots and discovered that he is the great-grandson of a Pontian Greek who was left behind in the population exchange in 1923-24 and was Islamised.

His intensive study has just been published in Greek and he states that “Memory is a place for battles”.

Kaya was born and raised in Smyrna (Σμύρνα, Turkish: İzmir).

He studied Sociology at the Middle East University of Technology with a postgraduate degree in Cultural Studies and Media from Hacettepe University. His dissertation was a memorial research on the Islamisation of the Greeks of the East in 1919-1925.

The interest did not arise by chance; one day, when he was 10 years old, one of his aunts had returned from her first trip abroad, to Greece, and she was telling her brothers about her experience. When the conversation got “heavy,” the adults took the children out of the room and watched a video showing an elderly man greeting them, saying “I miss you so much.”

Over the years, and by persistently asking, Mert learned a different truth about the origins of his mother’s family: their roots were not in the Bitlis, a city in eastern Turkey inhabited mainly by Kurds, but rather from in Amasya (Ἀμάσεια) in Pontus, today’s Turkey’s southeastern Black Sea coast. They were Pontian Greeks, most of whom escaped to Greece, except for Mert Kaya’s great-grandfather Ishak, who was left behind, adopted by a Kurdish family and gradually converted to Islam and moved with them to Bitlis.

Looking for the traces of his ancestors in Greece and Turkey, Mert Kaya unraveled the thread of people who stayed behind and embraced Islam to survive. The children and grandchildren of those who experienced its events narrated the experiences of migration, residence, Islamisation, assimilation and cultural integration as they experienced them before, during and after the “population exchange”.

The oral stories that he collected became his dissertation that was published in 2019 and a few days ago was published in Greek with the title “The Islamization of the Greeks of Asia Minor in the period 1919-1925. A study of memory” by Kyriakidis publications.

He is currently a PhD candidate in the Department of Communication Sciences at Hacettepe University and works as a sociologist at the UNESCO branch in Smyrna. This is his story.

See Also:

Why Athens is becoming a magnet for young expats

What is your family history? What did you know about it until you did your research?

– My parents were born in Bitlis, a city in eastern Turkey, and moved to  Smyrna in the late 1970s. I grew up with Turkish and Kurdish culture. I had no idea about my Greek origin. I was educated in classical Turkish history and under pressure of ethnocentric ideology.

>Related articles

Mitsotakis: Europe must remain united and maintain channels of cooperation with the US, even in times of tension – We seek an active role in Gaza

Week of pay rises for about 1 million private-sector employees due to changes in direct taxation – See examples

A university in Texas banned a professor from teaching Plato

If you live and grow up in Smyrna, your enemy is the Greeks. They taught us that the Greeks invaded our lands and we had a war with them.

There was basically no family history. No one mentioned the past – only some happy stories from childhood and difficult living conditions, especially during winters. When I compared my mother and father’s families, I found my father more conservative. On my mother’s side, they are more open-minded and not conservative. I always feel more intimate with my mother’s side; I share and communicate more with them. Although I knew nothing about family history, I already felt closer to my mother because of their views.

Continue here: Greek City Times

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#Christian Orthodox#Christians#culture#diplomacy#dissertation#greece#Greeks#history#islam#islamization#Mert Kaya#muslims#Ottoman Empire#politics#research#Smyrna#turkey#world
> More Politics

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

Smiling climber Alex Honnold waves to onlookers watching him from inside the skyscraper in Taiwan – watch the video

January 25, 2026

New “ecological crime” with a five-star hotel in Mytakas, Milos, next to Sarakiniko – watch the video

January 25, 2026

Mitsotakis: Europe must remain united and maintain channels of cooperation with the US, even in times of tension – We seek an active role in Gaza

January 25, 2026

Week of pay rises for about 1 million private-sector employees due to changes in direct taxation – See examples

January 25, 2026

A university in Texas banned a professor from teaching Plato

January 25, 2026

Dead man found in the trunk of a car in Glyfada – His son arrested, had also killed his mother in 2014

January 25, 2026

Greek antiquities held by the company of Robin Symes are being repatriated

January 25, 2026

The planet is entering an era of “global water bankruptcy,” according to the UN

January 25, 2026
All News

> World

Smiling climber Alex Honnold waves to onlookers watching him from inside the skyscraper in Taiwan – watch the video

Using mainly his legs, Alex Honnold reached the top of the world’s 11th-tallest building – He described the fee he received as “awkwardly large” – The climb had originally been scheduled for Friday but was postponed due to weather conditions

January 25, 2026

A university in Texas banned a professor from teaching Plato

January 25, 2026

ICE agents shot and killed a protester in Minneapolis (videos)

January 24, 2026

“The Discombobulator”: Trump’s revelation about the secret weapon the U.S. used during the capture of Maduro in Venezuela

January 24, 2026

War in Ukraine: Diplomacy in Abu Dhabi, Bombardments in Kyiv and Kharkiv

January 24, 2026
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2026 Πρώτο Θέμα