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Farewell to Salonica: City of the Crossroads

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Edition Armchair Traveller (an imprint of Haus Publishing Ltd.), 2016. ISBN:978-1-909961-23-4. PAPERBACK. 282 pages, size: 12.5 x 19.8 x 2.5 cm. Just light tan to paper edges. Other than that, the book remains in excellent condition throughout: Soft cover intact; text all clean, neat and tight. Prompt dispatch from UK.

300 pages, Paperback

First published May 1, 2003

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About the author

Leon Sciaky

1 book5 followers
Leon Sciaky was born in 1894, when the Turkish flag still waved over Salonica. His family left their beloved but turbulent homeland in 1915, settling in New York City. Sciaky lived in America--mainly upstate New York--with his wife, Frances, and son until his death in 1958. He taught at a number of progressive schools and camps and, in his last years, owned and operated a school and camp with Frances

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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Geoffrey Rose.
111 reviews8 followers
July 23, 2011
A touching, beautifully written memoir of a Sephardic childhood in Ottoman Salonica. The multicultural, Balkan world Sciaky describes hasn't existed for a century but it comes alive in his beautiful text (written in the 1940s).
Profile Image for Don.
152 reviews14 followers
May 3, 2020
(FROM MY BLOG)
The Frenks are clever, but their hearts are hard as the stones in Mehmed's mill," commented a peasant in breeches, stroking his long black beard.
Four years ago, I wrote an essay discussing André Aciman's memoir, Out of Egypt. Aciman grew up in a large, extended Jewish family in Alexandria in the late 1950s and early 60s. Alexandria was then a highly cosmopolitan city, with a population from a multitude of ethnic roots. His family was forced to leave in 1964, when Egypt expelled nearly all non-Arabs, citizen and non-citizen alike. Aciman was 14 years old when they left. Out of Egypt is a haunting memoir of growing up in a happy but lost world. I notice that I've referred to it frequently in subsequent posts.

Salonica -- now bearing the Greek name, Thessaloniki -- was another cosmopolitan city at the beginning of the twentieth century. A coastal city in the Ottoman province of Macedonia, it had a population of Turks, Greeks, Jews, Arabs, Bulgarians, French, and Spanish. The Jewish population was especially large, their ancestors having moved to Salonica after 1492, when Spain and Portugal expelled their Jewish residents. The Jewish immigrants were ambitious and highly educated, and were welcomed to the Ottoman Empire by the Sultan, who mused: "They say that Ferdinand [Spain's king] is a wise monarch. How could he be one, he who impoverishes his country to enrich mine?"

Leon Sciaky was born in Salonica in 1892. His memoir, Farewell to Salonica (1946), begins with his early recollections of growing up in a large house with a large garden. His father was a successful, well respected, and well liked businessman. Leon appears to have been an introspective but not shy young boy, highly affected by the beauties and curiosities of his house and garden, and highly imaginative in the solitary games he played. Once he began school, he made friends with children from all ethnic groups, and became fluent in French in addition to the family's Ladino (a Jewish dialect derived from ancient Castilian Spanish); he also spoke enough of Salonica's other languages to get around, as did many of the city's residents.

From the early chapters of the memoir, it's clear that Leon lived in an intensely close, extended family, as did Aciman in Alexandria. He was loved, and lived a secure and enviable childhood.
I had grown much like the weeds around the odd corners of the garden of the big house, drawing upon its cloister-like serenity the stuff that went to make my dreams and fantasies. Mine had been a world so filled with wonder and exciting fancies that I had not missed the companionship of other children.
He found his grammar school boring and stifling, but when he began high school, he attended Le Petit Lycée Français -- a highly innovative school for its time (or for any time, I'd say). The instructors were approachable and friendly, and enjoyed answering questions. Students in the multi-ethnic student body were taught to study as a group, rather than being pitted against each other competitively. Virtually all of the students were bright and curious and Leon found them enjoyable to work with.

And it was at the Petit Lycée Français that Leon began satisfying his intense curiosity about the outside world, the world that was beginning to amaze even Salonicans with its railroads and electricity and steamships. The world beyond the safe, comfortable, non-challenging world of Salonica in which he had grown up. The world of the "Frenks," as the Ottomans called all Westerners, not just the French.

Leon's closest friend at the Lycée was a Turkish boy named Shukri, a boy as quiet, as intelligent, and as thoughtful as Leon himself. They spoke often together about the books they read, mainly French classics, and about their school classes. Only once does Leon recall Shukri having spoken about the Ottoman Empire's place in the world. Everyone in the West is upset about the plight of the Christians in Macedonia, Shukri noted. "But the shame we feel, who shares it with us? We see our country on the brink of ruin, reviled, and spat upon. Enemies surround us and are in our midst. Who shares with us our humiliation?" He hoped for an awakening by the common man in Turkey.

By the time Leon was sixteen, the centuries-old Ottoman world was breaking up, as Shukri foresaw, with the revolt of the "Young Turks." Five years later, in 1913, the Great Powers decreed the partition of Macedonia, with the southern part, including Salonica, awarded to Greece. In 1915, Leon and his family left Salonica, never to return, and settled in New York.

America was exciting, Leon found, but disconcerting.
Reared in the atmosphere of courtesy and hospitality of the East, I found both teachers and pupils shockingly intolerant of anything that deviated ever so slightly from what they had been accustomed to. Their readiness to ridicule foreigners -- their names, their accents, and their civility -- struck me as singularly coarse.
He later decided that this was the cost of democracy -- he noted how young people from every social and economic class played together as equals. He regretted the cost, but approved of the result.

Salonica became, as it is now, a Greek city. Other ethnic groups were forced to assimilate or leave. The dwindling Jewish community was finished off during World War II, when the Germans sent virtually all the Jews north to extermination camps.

Leon and his wife spent most of their adult lives in upstate New York, where he taught in progressive schools and ran summer camps. He died in 1958. Three years after his death, I passed through Thessaloniki by train on my way to Athens. I rejoiced that I had finally arrived in Greece. I had no idea of the tragedies that the city outside the railway station had endured.

Rebecca West and Robert Kaplan, in the two books I've read and discussed over the past couple of weeks, emphasized the cruelty, harshness, and stupidity of Ottoman rule. They accurately described the effects of that rule on the Slavic minorities -- and for Kaplan, also the Greeks -- who suffered under that rule. And Leon does not minimize the hardships suffered by the peasants, both Bulgarian and Turkish, in the rural areas of Macedonia surrounding Salonica, peasants whose grain his father purchased each year for shipping. Many of these hardships resulted from the greed and corruption of the local Turkish "beys," or landowners, whose soil the peasants worked -- the exorbitant taxes and fees the beys imposed.

But for Leon's family, and the rest of the very large Jewish community in Salonica, Turkish rule was, in some ways, more a blessing than a curse. For all its arbitrary cruelty and corruption, the Ottomans had never been a nationalistic Turkish empire. It was an empire that embraced a large number of different ethnic groups. Jews, among others, were allowed considerable autonomy and self-rule. While resistance to Ottoman rule was already developing outside the city, within Salonica itself Leon recalls almost complete peace among all the groups.

Leon recalls especially the quiet warmth and peacefulness of Turkish households, the rituals of hospitality that were more than rituals, that truly expressed welcome to Leon and his family. The flip side to this devotion to traditional values was the stagnation that Leon fought against, the resistance to new ideas, to change in general. Leon's every instinct from childhood was to burst out of this cocoon, this lack of interest in new ideas and new inventions. He found a congenial home in America.

But even in America today, young people who leave behind the close ties of their home towns for the excitement and progressiveness of the large city often look back with nostalgia to the unquestioned values and friendly rituals of their youth. So it's been with André Aciman. So it was with Leon Sciaky, as he looked back and said "farewell" to Salonica.
Profile Image for Greg Barnes.
79 reviews
June 14, 2021
The edition I read was Farewell to Salonica: Portrait of an Era, published in 1946. The author provided a colorful description of the Macedonian world. The story was cumbersome and difficult to follow as it shifted between the story of a family and the political history of the area. I did, however, find the author’s position on interfaith relationships refreshing and timely.
11 reviews1 follower
April 7, 2013
Vivid depiction of multinational salonica of late nineteenth / early twentieth century. knife cutting remarks and paradise lost narrative. concluding paragraph fantastic. Wonderful read!
Profile Image for Ghaida Setiana.
100 reviews6 followers
November 16, 2025
“It was an age-old struggle, this. For Macedonia knew the word ‘freedom’ before the people of the West had learned to lisp it.”

Picked up this book randomly at Daunt Books, and the narration starts with the adhan and I was like, “hmm interesting??” I didn’t expect a story set in early 1900s Salonica to feel this alive and personal. I really love historical books like this; not in a heavy, textbook way, but in a way that mixes real events with the author’s own childhood memories. It doesn’t try to “educate” you directly, but I still ended up questioning so many things about the history of this city and learning a lot.

What struck me the most is how ironic this whole history feels. Salonica used to be one of the most multicultural cities in the world; Muslims, Jews, and Christians living side by side for centuries. And yet the city was later ruined by the same people who wanted to claim it as theirs. When nationalism came, everyone suddenly wanted Salonica for their own group. It’s sad to see how a place built on coexistence can fall apart because of identity and borders.

I’m also deeply moved by the storyline, because Leon describes his childhood with such warmth, almost like he was telling us about the highest happiness he ever experienced.

“In the quiet of this room an overwhelming sense of happiness came over me, a happiness so great that it brought a lump to my throat. For the first time I became conscious of being happy.”

His memories of his multicultural neighborhood, family routines, and the peaceful mix of religions felt so full of life. And then the book ends with him and his family living in the US, longing for a place to call “home,” while the Salonica he remembers only exists in ruins. That contrast broke my heart. It’s so painful to imagine someone carrying a memory of a city that no longer exists. It stayed with me long after I closed the book.
Profile Image for clara.
72 reviews
October 30, 2025
leon sciaky décrit dans ses mémoires une salonique cosmopolite, où les habitants vivent ensemble paisiblement depuis des générations. l’homme, juif espagnol, y raconte une enfance confortable et agréable, et une éducation multiculturelle. du moins, jusqu’à ce qu’un certain nombre d’événements extérieurs ne le permettent plus. des aspirations régionalistes macédoniennes aux mouvements nationalistes turcs, grecs, bulgares, albanais et serbes, salonique se retrouve au cœur des tourmentes de l’aube du xx ème siècle, et leon sciaky émigre aux états-unis.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Barry.
13 reviews
September 17, 2022
Poetic and evocative of the Balkans and the end of an era.
Profile Image for Mustafa.
5 reviews
August 27, 2023
A bunch of biased, unfair and ungrateful observations by a Sephardic Jew as the empire burns.
You should verify what you read here from more serious sources.
30 reviews
Currently reading
September 15, 2007
Currently reading this book, a memoir of a boy in the days when Salonica was still a part of the Ottomon Empire but on the verge of changing identity. It's a fascinating place where many peoples from all religions lived at the time-- including my ancestors! More to come when I finish...
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