Alexander
Billinis: «I am particularly pleased as an American and a
Greek to highlight the brilliant efforts of Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe, who deserves
the moniker "Patriot of Two Nations." Fought for Greece's freedom,
was an active abolitionist in the US, and sought to empower the downtrodden
everywhere he went».
Revolutions
are often exported. There is no question that the effects of the American
Revolution spread far beyond our shores. France followed suit, and several
years later, Greeks rose in revolt against a four-hundred-year-old Ottoman
regime that oppressed them. Americans were energized by this thirst for human
freedom and agency, inspired in part by America’s fight for freedom, and many
Americans went to fight for Greece.
In
the coming year, as we prepare for Greece’s Bicentennial, it is only just that
we as Greek Americans honor our fellow Americans who volunteered to fight and
to advocate for Greece, and I seek to start talking about this substantial hall
of heroes with a particular standout, Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe.
Samuel Gridley Howe, from Perkins Institute
Dr.
Howe was a native of Massachusetts, a graduate of Harvard University who
trained as a surgeon. This very technocratic, almost human resources-like
description belies the complicated mystery of the man. A “Harvard Man” of the
times was a man versed in the Classics, in Ancient Greek and Latin. Often
enough, in a time when duels were still fought, such an individual would be a
close combat expert, which Howe was. This skill set—linguistic, cultural, and
martial—afforded Howe the ability to be immediately and asymmetrically
effective when he arrived in Revolutionary Greece.
On
the ground in Greece, Howe used these skills in battle with the Turks, tending
the wounded, and liaising with key Greek leaders and American and European
philhellenes. He chronicled these events in his inimitable Historical Sketch of
the Greek Revolution, an absolute must-read for its granular analysis of the
revolt and its key figures. While risking his life for the Greek cause, love
for Greece did not make him blind; bad or duplicitous behavior from Greek
revolutionaries, including by luminaries such as Kolokotronis and Bouboulina,
gets called out.
Howe’s
service in Greece covered wide geographies, and his narrative reflects a deep
sense of history and understanding of the Greeks’ cultural and institutional
struggles. While he had the love of the Classical heritage typical of an
educated American of his generation, he also understood the Greeks’ Byzantine
heritage (which he viewed, correctly, as part of the continuity of culture from
Ancient Greece) and the impact that four centuries of Turkish rule had on the
state that was trying to be born.
Howe’s
activism, both for Greece and for his native country, the United States, did
not stop once the guns were silenced with Greek Independence. Like other
Philhellenic Americans, he worked to assist Greek war orphans, arranging for
many to be adopted and to come to the US. Some returned after adulthood, others
remained in the US and often as not, they were great assets to their societies.
Howe’s
thirst for liberating the enslaved extended to his fellow countrymen in the
United States, the African American slaves. Howe was an outspoken and very
active abolitionist, and in many cases he was prepared to confront violent
anti-abolitionists with force. His reputation as a combat arts specialist was
well known and often defused fights before they began.
Howe
remained devoted to Greece, and he returned in 1867 in order to help the young
state expand her territory. Crete had just risen in one of this heroic island’s
many revolts against the Turks to unite with Greece. Howe came with his
daughter, herself a fluent Greek speaker, and even though he was a wanted man
by the Turks he went into “unredeemed” parts of Greece still part of the
Ottoman Empire, reporting back to fellow Americans about the condition of
Greeks still struggling to unite with the fledgling Greek Kingdom.
Howe
commissioned an intelligent and resourceful young journalist to be his guide at
the time. When the Howes returned to the US, this bright young man, Michael
Anagnos, from the Epirote region of Papingo came with them, and eventually
married Howe’s daughter.
Michael
Anagnos is a name that should be at least vaguely familiar to most Americans.
Along with Annie Sullivan, he was Helen Keller’s teacher. Like his father in
law, and, in the tradition of Greek villagers at the time, and particularly in
the fastness of the fiercely independent Epriote mountains, Anagnos was well
drilled in the combat arts which today we call Pammachon. Further, there is
evidence to suggest that neural exercises in Pammachon contributed to Anagnos’
successful teaching of Helen Keller. Among her many accomplishments, Helen
Keller also knew Greek.
Howe
in Foustanella, painted by son in law John Eliott
Dr.
Howe lacks the celebrity quality of Lord Byron, who is the go-to Philhellene
for most people, and while the latter’s “star power” certainly gained sympathy
for the Greek cause, the former’s Yankee know-how and technocracy ended up
being more effective both on the field and in gathering support for the Greek
cause over decades and generations.
In
Howe we have a warrior for justice and liberty for two nations, and a historian
who probably best (and most transparently) chronicles the peaks and valleys of
an epic struggle. Howe’s practice was to empower others, particularly those
less fortunate and in bondage, to seek their own agency. This praxis, combined
with a keen intellect, sense of history, and martial ethos, allowed Howe to be
an asymmetric force for good, and his son in law Michael Anagnos certainly
carried the baton.
It
is time we take up the baton, for both countries, in both countries. Howe
provides the inspiration and the road map.
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