Background
He was born in Triglia (today Zeytinbağı), Turkey in 1867, and was killed by a lynch mob after the sacking of Smyrna by Turkish troops at the end of the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–1922.
He was born in Triglia (today Zeytinbağı), Turkey in 1867, and was killed by a lynch mob after the sacking of Smyrna by Turkish troops at the end of the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–1922.
Kalafatis studied at the historical Theological School of Halki from the age of 17.
He became the Metropolitan of Drama in 1902 and the Metropolitan of Smyrna in 1910. He had not been in good terms with the Ottoman/Turkish authorities and he was displaced. When the Greek army occupied Smyrna in 1919, at the beginning of the Greco-Turkish war, Kalafatis was reinstated to his office as bishop.
On 10 September (Julian style – 27 August) 1922, soon after the Turkish army had moved into Smyrna, a Turkish officer and two soldiers took Chrysostomos from the office of the cathedral and delivered him to the Turkish commander-in-chief, Nureddin Pasha.
The general decided to hand him over to a Turkish mob who murdered him. According to French soldiers who witnessed the lynching but were under strict orders from their commanding officer not to intervene:
"The mob took possession of Metropolitan Chrysostom and carried him away.. a little further on, in front of an Italian hairdresser named Ismail.. they stopped and the Metropolitan was slipped into a white hairdresser"s overall.
They began to beat him with their fists and sticks and to spit on his face. They riddled him with stabs.
They tore his beard off, they gouged his eyes out, they cut off his nose and ears."
Bishop Chrysostomos was then dragged (according to some sources, he was dragged around the city by a car or truck) into a backstreet of the Iki Cheshmeli district where he died soon after.