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ELEUTHERIOS VENIZELOS

1864

THE BALKAN BEAR GARDEN

ELEUTHERIOS VENIZELOS

THE BALKAN BEAR GARDEN

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By RICHARD BOARDMAN

The isles of Greece, the isles of Greece!
Where burning Sappho loved and sung,
Where grew the arts of war and peace,-
Where Delos rose, and Phoebus sprung!
Eternal summer gilds them yet,

But all, except their sun, is set."

"Earth! render back from out thy breast
A remnant of our Spartan dead."'

N THE island of Crete, in the year 1864, Dame Destiny gave birth to a man child who, after redeeming three million Greeks from Turkish oppression, one day was to sit as the most distinguished member in the first council of the League of Nations. Upon his infant shoulders was placed the burdensome name of Eleutherios K. Venizelos.

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I have before me two accounts of his birth. Neither states the precise day of its occurrence. This is due, no doubt, to two facts. The Greeks pay little or no

attention to birthdays, celebrating instead the day of one's patron saint; and, as they still use the old style in reckoning time, a Greek writer might hesitate to give a date which must from the nature of things be untrue, either from his own or from his reader's point of view, and at the same time might consider the matter of too little consequence to warrant a full explanation.

His father was a rich merchant. His mother, like the mothers of so many other great men, was a woman of profound religious nature. Already three children had been born to this couple, all of whom had died in infancy. His mother resolved that if prayer could save this child, he should be saved. The story is told that in the house, for two days and two nights before the birth of Venizelos, two Mohammedan hodjas and two Greek priests prayed ceaselessly that the child about to be born might have a long life. They prayed in four different tongues. Whatever one may think of the prayers of these professionals, few will doubt the efficacy of the spirit of the mother who not only called in these men, known far and wide for their spiritual power, but added to their prayers in divers languages, her own prayer uttered in the great universal language of a woman's love for her child. In those days-nay, weeks and months of yearning, of determination and of prayer, she impressed upon

the face of the child a beauty of expression that years of struggle have not been able to deface or mar.

Venizelos was educated at the University of Athens. He became a lawyer and returned to Crete in 1886. He is said to have acquired a considerable law practice. But in 1887 he was in politics as the leader of the Liberal party elected to power that year. Crete, at the time, was a wellnigh autonomous dependency of Turkey. But the bitterness of the party quarrel in 1887 led to the intervention of the Turk with an army of 40,000 men. The story of the years that followed is the story of one armed conflict after another. In the Rebellion of 1895 the Concert of Powers of Europe took part and sided with the Turk. Venizelos led the forlorn hope of the Cretan patriots who stood for union of Crete with Greece. The fighting continued off and on till 1897. Then the Turks, because of their own bad conduct toward the British, were forced by the Great Powers to withdraw, and Prince George, a son of the King of Greece, was appointed High Commissioner.

The contest now became one between the Cretans, who wanted immediate union with Greece, and the Grecian Prince, who wanted to hold his berth under the suzerainty of Turkey. In March, 1905, a Revolutionary Convention proclaimed the "political union of Crete with the Greek kingdom." The

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