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Armenian Genocide |
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Armenian Genocide Quotes
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The Armenian Genocide, the first genocide of the 20th Century,
occurred when two million Armenians living in Turkey were
eliminated from their historic homeland through forced
deportations and massacres between 1915-1918.
The Ancient Armenians
For three thousand years, a
thriving Armenian community had existed inside the vast region
of the Middle East bordered by the Black, Mediterranean and
Caspian Seas. The area, known today as Anatolia, stands at the
crossroads of three continents; Europe, Asia and Africa. Great
powers rose and fell over the many centuries and the Armenian
homeland, when not independent, was at various times ruled by
Persians, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, Arabs and Mongols.
Despite the repeated invasions
and occupations, Armenian pride and cultural identity never
wavered. The snow-capped peak of Mount Ararat became the focal
point of this proud people and by 600 BC Armenia as a kingdom
sprang into being.
The First Christian
Nation
Following the advent of
Christianity, Armenia became the very first nation to accept it
as the state religion. A golden era of peace and prosperity
followed which saw the invention of a distinct alphabet, the
flourishing of literature, art, commerce, and a unique style of
architecture. By the 10th century, Armenians had established a
new capital at Ani, affectionately called the ‘city of a
thousand and one churches.’
Under Muslim Rule
In the eleventh century, the
first Turkish invasion of the Armenian homeland occurred. Thus
began several hundred years of rule by Muslim Turks. By the
sixteenth century, Armenia had been absorbed into the vast and
mighty Ottoman Empire. At its peak, this Turkish empire included
much of Southeast Europe, North Africa, and almost all of the
Middle East.
But by the 1800s the once
powerful Ottoman Empire was in serious decline. For centuries,
it had spurned technological and economic progress, while the
nations of Europe had embraced innovation and became industrial
giants. Turkish armies had once been virtually invincible. Now,
they lost battle after battle to modern European armies.
As the empire gradually
disintegrated, formerly subject peoples including the Greeks,
Serbs and Romanians achieved their long-awaited independence.
Only the Armenians and the Arabs of the Middle East remained
stuck in the backward and nearly bankrupt empire, now under the
autocratic rule of Sultan Abdul Hamid.
An Ottoman Civil Rights Movement
By the 1890s, young Armenians,
educated in the universities of Europe began to press for
political reforms in the Ottoman Empire, calling for a
constitutional government, the right to vote and an end to
discriminatory practices such as special taxes levied solely
against them because they were Christians. The despotic Turkish
Sultan responded to their pleas with brutal persecutions and
massacres. Between 1894 and 1896 over 100,000 inhabitants of
Armenian villages were slaughtered during widespread pogroms
conducted by the Sultan’s special regiments.
But the Sultan’s days were
numbered. In July 1908, reform-minded Turkish nationalists known
as “Young Turks” forced the Sultan to allow a constitutional
government and guarantee basic rights. The Young Turks were
ambitious junior officers in the Turkish Army who hoped to halt
their country’s steady decline.
Armenians in Turkey were
delighted with this sudden turn of events and its prospects for
a brighter future. Both Turks and Armenians held jubilant public
rallies attended with banners held high calling for freedom,
equality and justice.
The Rise of Turkish
Nationalism
However, their hopes were dashed
when three of the Young Turks seized full control of the
government via a coup in 1913. This triumvirate of Young Turks,
consisting of Mehmed Talaat, Ismail Enver and Ahmed Djemal, came
to wield dictatorial powers and concocted their own ambitious
plans for the future of Turkey. They wanted to unite all of the
Turkic peoples in the entire region while expanding the borders
of Turkey eastward across the Caucasus all the way into Central
Asia. This would create a new Turkish empire, a “great and
eternal land” called Turan with one language and one religion.
But this new empire would have to
come at the expense of the Armenian people, whose traditional
historic homeland lay right in the path of the Young Turks’
plans to expand eastward. And on that land was a large
population of Christian Armenians totaling some two million
persons, making up about 10 percent of the Empire’s overall
population.
Along with the Young Turk’s
newfound “Turanism” there was a dramatic rise in Islamic
fundamentalist agitation throughout Turkey. Christian Armenians
were once again branded as infidels (non-believers in Islam).
Young Islamic extremists, sometimes leading to violence, staged
anti-Armenian demonstrations. During one such outbreak in 1909,
two hundred villages were plundered and over 30,000 persons
massacred in the Cilicia district on the Mediterranean coast.
Throughout Turkey, sporadic local attacks against Armenians
continued unchecked over the next several years.
Fueling hatred toward Armenians
within the Empire were the significant cultural differences
between Armenians and Turks. Though a majority of the Armenian
population in Turkey lived in poverty and despair, a small
minority had excelled as best they could within their second
class status, with many serving as professionals, businessmen,
lawyers, doctors, artists, architects and skilled craftsmen.
Armenians had also, by and large,
been well educated compared to their Turkish counterparts, who
were largely illiterate peasant farmers and small shopkeepers.
The leaders of the Ottoman Empire had traditionally placed
little value on education and not a single institute of higher
learning could be found within their old empire. The various
autocratic and despotic rulers throughout the empire’s history
had valued loyalty and blind obedience above all.
The Young Turks decided to
glorify the virtues of simple Turkish peasantry at the expense
of the Armenians in order to capture peasant loyalty. They
exploited the religious, cultural, economic and political
differences between Turks and Armenians so that the average Turk
came to regard Armenians as strangers among them.
The Outbreak of War
When World War I broke out in
1914, leaders of the Young Turk regime sided with the Central
Powers (Germany and Austria-Hungary). The outbreak of war would
provide the perfect opportunity to solve the “Armenian question”
once and for all for the Young Turks. The world’s attention
became fixed upon the battlegrounds of France and Belgium where
the young men of Europe were soon falling dead by the hundreds
of thousands. The Eastern Front eventually included the border
between Turkey and Russia. With war at hand, unusual measures
involving the civilian population would not seem too out of the
ordinary.
As a prelude to the coming
action, Turks disarmed the entire Armenian population under the
pretext that the people were naturally sympathetic toward
Christian Russia. Every last rifle and pistol was forcibly
seized, with severe penalties for anyone who failed to turn in a
weapon. Quite a few Armenian men actually purchased a weapon
from local Turks or Kurds (nomadic Muslim tribesmen) at very
high prices so they would have something to turn in.
The Genocide Begins
At this time, about forty
thousand Armenian men were serving in the Turkish Army. In the
fall and winter of 1914, all of their weapons were confiscated
and they were put into slave labor battalions building roads or
were used as human pack animals. Under the brutal work
conditions they suffered a very high death rate. Those who
survived would soon be shot outright. For the time had come to
move against the Armenians.
The decision to annihilate the
entire population came directly from the ruling triumvirate of
ultra-nationalist Young Turks. The actual extermination orders
were transmitted in coded telegrams to all provincial governors
throughout Turkey. Armed roundups began on the evening of April
24, 1915, as 300 Armenian political leaders, educators, writers,
clergy and dignitaries in Constantinople (present day Istanbul)
were taken from their homes, briefly jailed and tortured, then
hanged or shot.
Next, there were mass arrests of
Armenian men throughout the country by Turkish soldiers, police
agents and bands of Turkish volunteers. The men were tied
together with ropes in small groups then taken to the outskirts
of their town and shot dead or bayoneted by death squads. Local
Turks and Kurds armed with knives and sticks often joined in on
the killing.
Then it was the turn of Armenian
women, children, and the elderly. On very short notice, they
were ordered to pack a few belongings and be ready to leave
home, under the pretext that they were being relocated to a
non-military zone for their own safety. They were actually being
taken on death marches heading south toward the Syrian Desert.
Muslim Turks who assumed instant
ownership of everything quickly occupied most of the homes and
villages left behind by the rousted Armenians. In many cases,
local Turks who took them from their families spared young
Armenian children from deportation. The children were coerced
into denouncing Christianity and becoming Muslims, and were then
given new Turkish names. For Armenian boys the forced conversion
meant they each had to endure painful circumcision as required
by Islamic custom.
Turkish gendarmes escorted
individual caravans consisting of thousands of deported
Armenians. These guards allowed roving government units of
hardened criminals known as the “Special Organization” to attack
the defenseless people, killing anyone they pleased. They also
encouraged Kurdish bandits to raid the caravans and steal
anything they wanted. In addition, an extraordinary amount of
sexual abuse and rape of girls and young women occurred at the
hands of the Special Organization and Kurdish bandits. Most of
the attractive young females were kidnapped for a life of
involuntary servitude.
The death marches during the
Armenian Genocide, involving over a million Armenians, covered
hundreds of miles and lasted months. Indirect routes through
mountains and wilderness areas were deliberately chosen in order
to prolong the ordeal and to keep the caravans away from Turkish
villages.
Food supplies being carried by
the people quickly ran out and they were usually denied further
food or water. Anyone stopping to rest or lagging behind the
caravan was mercilessly beaten until they rejoined the march. If
they couldn’t continue they were shot. A common practice was to
force all of the people in the caravan to remove every stitch of
clothing and have them resume the march in the nude under the
scorching sun until they dropped dead by the roadside from
exhaustion and dehydration.
An estimated 75 percent of the
Armenians on these marches perished, especially children and the
elderly. Those who survived the ordeal were herded into the
desert without a drop of water. Being thrown off cliffs, burned
alive, or drowned in rivers.
During the Armenian Genocide, the
Turkish countryside became littered with decomposing corpses. At
one point, Mehmed Talaat responded to the problem by sending a
coded message to all provincial leaders: “I have been advised
that in certain areas unburied corpses are still to be seen. I
ask you to issue the strictest instructions so that the corpses
and their debris in your vilayet are buried.”
But his instructions were
generally ignored. Those involved in the mass murder showed
little interest in stopping to dig graves. The roadside corpses
and emaciated deportees were a shocking sight to foreigners
working in Turkey. Eyewitnesses included German government
liaisons, American missionaries, and U.S. diplomats stationed in
the country.
Western Response
During the Armenian Genocide, the
Christian missionaries serving in the Empire were often
threatened with death and were unable to help the people.
Diplomats from the still neutral United States communicated
their blunt assessments of the ongoing government actions. U.S.
ambassador to Turkey, Henry Morgenthau, reported to Washington:
“When the Turkish authorities gave the orders for these
deportations, they were merely giving the death warrant to a
whole race…”
The Allied Powers (Great Britain,
France, Russia) responded to news of the massacres by issuing a
warning to Turkey: “…the Allied governments announce
publicly…that they will hold all the members of the Ottoman
Government, as well as such of their agents as are implicated,
personally responsible for such matters.”
The warning had no effect.
Newspapers in the West including the New York Times published
reports of the continuing deportations with the headlines:
Armenians Are Sent to Perish in the Desert – Turks Accused of
Plan to Exterminate Whole Population (August 18, 1915) – Million
Armenians Killed or in Exile – American Committee on Relief Says
Victims of Turks Are Steadily Increasing – Policy of
Extermination (December 15, 1915).
Armenian
Self-Defense
Temporary relief for some
Armenians came as Russian troops attacked along the Eastern
Front and made their way into central Turkey. But the troops
withdrew in 1917 upon the Russian Revolution. Armenian survivors
withdrew along with them and settled in among fellow Armenians
already living in provinces of the former Russian Empire. There
were in total about 500,000 Armenians gathered in this region.
In May 1918, Turkish armies
attacked the area to achieve the goal of expanding Turkey
eastward into the Caucasus and also to resume the annihilation
of the Armenians. As many as 100,000 Armenians may have fallen
victim to the advancing Turkish troops.
However, the Armenians managed to
acquire weapons and they fought back, finally repelling the
Turkish invasion at the battle of Sardarabad, thus saving the
remaining population from total extermination with no help from
the outside world. Following that victory, Armenian leaders
declared the establishment of the independent Republic of
Armenia in a small portion of their historic homeland in the
Caucasus.
War Trials
World War I ended in November
1918 with a defeat for Germany and the Central Powers including
Turkey. Shortly before the war had ended, the Young Turk
triumvirate; Talaat, Enver and Djemal, abruptly resigned their
government posts and fled to Germany where they had been offered
asylum.
In the months that followed,
repeated requests by Turkey’s new moderate government and the
Allies were made asking Germany to send the Young Turks back
home to stand trial. However all such requests were turned down.
As a result, Armenian activists took matters into their own
hands, located the Young Turks and assassinated them along with
two other instigators of the mass murder.
Meanwhile, representatives from
the fledgling Republic of Armenia attended the Paris Peace
Conference in the hope that the victorious Allies would give
them back their historic lands seized by Turkey. The European
Allies responded to their request by asked the United States to
assume guardianship of the new Republic. However, President
Woodrow Wilson’s attempt to make Armenia an official U.S.
protectorate was rejected by the U.S. Congress in May 1920.
But Wilson did not give up on
Armenia. As a result of his efforts, the Treaty of Sevres was
signed on August 10, 1920 by the Allied Powers, the Republic of
Armenia, and the new moderate leaders of Turkey. The treaty
recognized an independent Armenian state in an area comprising
much of the former historic homeland.
Justice Denied
However, Turkish nationalism once
again reared its head. The moderate Turkish leaders who signed
the treaty were ousted in favor of a new nationalist leader,
Mustafa Kemal, who simply refused to accept the treaty and even
re-occupied the very lands in question then expelled any
surviving Armenians, including thousands of orphans.
No Allied power came to the aid
of the Armenian Republic and it collapsed. Only a tiny portion
of the easternmost area of historic Armenia survived by being
becoming part of the Soviet Union.
After the successful obliteration
of the people of historic Armenia during the Armenian Genocide,
the Turks demolished any remnants of Armenian cultural heritage
including priceless masterpieces of ancient architecture, old
libraries and archives. The Turks even leveled entire cities
such as the once thriving Kharpert, Van and the ancient capital
at Ani, to remove all traces of the three thousand year old
civilization.
Referring to the Armenian
Genocide, the young German politician Adolf Hitler duly noted
the half-hearted reaction of the world’s great powers to the
plight of the Armenians. After achieving total power in Germany,
Hitler decided to conquer Poland in 1939 and told his generals:
“Thus for the time being I have sent to the East only my
‘Death’s Head Units’ with the orders to kill without pity or
mercy all men, women, and children of Polish race or language.
Only in such a way will we win the vital space that we need. Who
still talks nowadays about the Armenians?”
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