🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷Kappadokya🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷 Orthodox GREEKS Songs from the Greeks of Καισάρεια/Kayseri They sing the Farasopoulos sisters: Ekaterini Farasopoulou Evsevia Farasopoulou Marika Misailidou
They spoke Karamanlid and they were Turks; not Greeks. That's why we've rejected population exchange for many years, until the time when we succumbed to the British. Stop copy-pasting the same propaganda under every single Karamanlid video. FYI, I'm partly Karamanlid.
@@ozpiroglu if you are part-Karamanli, you have Hellenic roots! People in Kappadokia were and are Hellenes. They were never turks. They forced to speak turkic. They came to Hellas with the Exchange because they were Hellenes, if they were turks they would have stayed there… Logic 🧠 Study History, educate yourself. Don’t believe the turkic propaganda!
Ενα τεστ DNA ισως τους κανει να καταλαβουν οτι ειναι Ελληνες !!!! Γιαυτο και σφαγιασθησαν και εκδιωχθηκαν απο τους τουρκους!! Δεν ηρθαν εκδρομη στην Ελλαδα κυνηγημενοι ηρθαν.
@@Kolious_Thrace native Anatolians became Hellenised during the Byzantine rule, during which they adopted Orthodox Christianity and Greek language. My Karamanlid grandmother's village is literally called "Fraktın" (Phrygian), they're native Anatolians. After the Seljuqi conquests they became Turkicized and Seljuqid Turks gave them two options, one being that they convert to Islam and keep their language and other is that they adopt Turkish (Chagatai, old Turkish etc.) and keep on with their religion. They accepted to proceed with the latter, which is to adopt Turkish while still using the Greek alphabet, creating the Karamanlid language. They are called Karamanlid for the area in which their populations density was high was called Karaman, named after the Turkic Karamanlı Beylik (feudal state). Karamanlids are native Anatolians who first became Greek, then Turkish. If the main criteria here is their genetics, they're neither Hellenic nor Turkish (though, they've mixed with both, mostly with Turks); if it's all about ethnicity, they're Turkish, not Greek. I don't have Hellenic genes and I'm in no way connected to Greece besides the fact that I have some distant relatives who went to Ellada during the exile. What defines nationality is the sense of belongingness, and I don't belong to Greece. I'm also partly Chechen and I feel the same way about Chechnya, my belongingness is very much insignificant, hence, it wouldn't be plausible for me to claim any bond to that culture. You shouldn't oppress people into choosing a nationality they belong to; everyone in their right mind already knows which culture they belong to. Go out and do something more productive komşu.
Kayseriden selamlar
Karamanlı Türkleri en az Batı Trakya Türkleri kadar bizim için önemlidir ve hepsine sahip çıkmalıyız
yakup bey teşekür ederim cok az bildiğim olayı sizin sayenizde kavradım
false
İşte bu din diye ayırdıkları kandaşlarımız aynı dili konuşan komşularımız
Bende karaman gocmeniyim Amasya Ka gurubu
😢😢😢😢 vah Kayserim vaahhh...
🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷Kappadokya🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷
Orthodox GREEKS
Songs from the Greeks of Καισάρεια/Kayseri
They sing the Farasopoulos sisters:
Ekaterini Farasopoulou
Evsevia Farasopoulou
Marika Misailidou
They spoke Karamanlid and they were Turks; not Greeks. That's why we've rejected population exchange for many years, until the time when we succumbed to the British.
Stop copy-pasting the same propaganda under every single Karamanlid video.
FYI, I'm partly Karamanlid.
@@ozpiroglu if you are part-Karamanli, you have Hellenic roots!
People in Kappadokia were and are Hellenes.
They were never turks.
They forced to speak turkic.
They came to Hellas with the Exchange because they were Hellenes, if they were turks they would have stayed there…
Logic 🧠
Study History, educate yourself.
Don’t believe the turkic propaganda!
Ενα τεστ DNA ισως τους κανει να καταλαβουν οτι ειναι Ελληνες !!!! Γιαυτο και σφαγιασθησαν και εκδιωχθηκαν απο τους τουρκους!! Δεν ηρθαν εκδρομη στην Ελλαδα κυνηγημενοι ηρθαν.
@@ΚατερίναΘωμαΐδου-υ9π βγάζεις άκρη με τουρκο; Όχι
Με φανατικό τουρκο (που σίγουρα έχει Ελληνικές ρίζες) ακόμα χειρότερα…
@@Kolious_Thrace native Anatolians became Hellenised during the Byzantine rule, during which they adopted Orthodox Christianity and Greek language. My Karamanlid grandmother's village is literally called "Fraktın" (Phrygian), they're native Anatolians.
After the Seljuqi conquests they became Turkicized and Seljuqid Turks gave them two options, one being that they convert to Islam and keep their language and other is that they adopt Turkish (Chagatai, old Turkish etc.) and keep on with their religion. They accepted to proceed with the latter, which is to adopt Turkish while still using the Greek alphabet, creating the Karamanlid language. They are called Karamanlid for the area in which their populations density was high was called Karaman, named after the Turkic Karamanlı Beylik (feudal state).
Karamanlids are native Anatolians who first became Greek, then Turkish. If the main criteria here is their genetics, they're neither Hellenic nor Turkish (though, they've mixed with both, mostly with Turks); if it's all about ethnicity, they're Turkish, not Greek.
I don't have Hellenic genes and I'm in no way connected to Greece besides the fact that I have some distant relatives who went to Ellada during the exile. What defines nationality is the sense of belongingness, and I don't belong to Greece. I'm also partly Chechen and I feel the same way about Chechnya, my belongingness is very much insignificant, hence, it wouldn't be plausible for me to claim any bond to that culture.
You shouldn't oppress people into choosing a nationality they belong to; everyone in their right mind already knows which culture they belong to.
Go out and do something more productive komşu.
Süreç çok güçlü..akıllı insan gittikçe hayvanlaşırken , alılsız hayvanlar ise insanlaşmakta. ??!! 😓😓
Eski Kayseri
Όμορφο
Sakıp Sabancı müzesi
Çok şahane çalıp söylüyorlar.Sizleri bizden ayıranlara diyeceğimde Llyod George,Lord Curzon, Venizalos göçüp gittiler.
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