‘It’s not possible for a Muslim to commit genocide.’
- Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashi
I wonder how
many schoolchildren are taught about Sudan’s genocide or what Atatürk did to
millions of Armenians. The answer to the former isn't clear - at least as it
pertains to the roots and partisans, but the answer to the latter is
apparently, 'No!' As an example of Armenian Genocide Denial (AGC), Kjetil
Elsebutangen, the formerly of the Norwegian Foreign Ministry: 'There is
no legal evidence that the 1915 events in the Ottoman Empire were ‘genocide.'
In fact, the
very word ‘genocide’ was not coined to describe what Hitler did to Jews, Poles,
and Gypsies, etc., in World War II. It was coined by Raphael Lemkin, a
Polish-Jewish legal scholar, in 1943 to describe what the Ottoman Turks and,
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk's forces in particular, perpetrated against the Armenian
people during World War I, now called the Armenian Genocide. As Lemkin
made clear in a 1949 interview with Quincy Howe, which was broadcast on CBS: 'I became
interested in Genocide because it happened so many times. It happened to the
Armenians, then after the Armenians, Hitler took action.'
Yet, the
Muslims in Turkey, who were ‘incapable of committing genocide,’ didn’t just
kill millions of Armenians either. They killed Greeks (500,000) and Assyrians
(750,000), too. Then, there were the forced deportations involving death
marches, starvation in labour camps, concentration camps, etc. - were referred
to as ‘white massacres’ - which caused untold number of indirect deaths. Most
people have heard about the Kraków Ghetto and Amon Göth's cleansing of the ghetto
on 13 March 1943 as the Jews were herded off to the Płaszów concentration camp,
but many have never heard of the Great Fire of Smyrna. Hundreds of thousands of
Greeks, Armenians, and Assyrians had been herded into ‘Infidel Smyrna’ (Gavur
Izmir). By September 1922, however, Kemal's forces occupied the town. They
sealed off the Armenian quarter and began systematically butchering the 25,000
inhabitants. They set fire to it to incinerate any survivors, according to
Niall Ferguson and other historians with some putting the death toll from
Smyrna alone at over 100,000.
Renowned
Turkish journalist and author, Falih Rifki Atay, was quoted at the time as
lamenting that the Turkish army had burnt Smyrna to the ground.
He said:
‘As why were we burning down Izmir? Were we afraid that if waterfront konaks, hotels and taverns stayed in place, we would never be able to get rid of the minorities? When the Armenians were being deported in the First World War, we had burned down all the habitable districts and neighbourhoods in Anatolian towns and cities with this very same fear. This does not solely derive from an urge for destruction. There is also some feeling of inferiority in it. It was as if anywhere that resembled Europe was destined to remain Christian and foreign and to be denied to us.
If there were another war and we were defeated, would it be sufficient guarantee of preserving the Turkishness of the city if we had left Izmir as a devastated expanse of vacant lots? Were it not for Nureddin Pasha, whom I know to be a dyed-in-the-wool fanatic and rabble-rouser, I do not think this tragedy would have gone to the bitter end.’
So, not only
are Muslims capable of ‘genocide,’ the very word was coined to describe the
ethnic cleansing carried out by and genocidal actions of Muslims.
‘The real
purpose of the deportation was robbery and destruction;
it really represented a new method of massacre. When the Turkish authorities
gave the orders for these deportations, they were merely giving the death
warrant to a whole race; they understood this well, and, in their conversations
with me, they made no particular attempt to conceal the fact....I am confident
that the whole history of the human race contains no such horrible episode as
this. The great massacres and persecutions of the past seem almost
insignificant when compared to the sufferings of the Armenian race in 1915...They
have drawn from the fields the male population and thereby destroyed their
agricultural communities. They have annihilated or displaced at least two
thirds of the Armenian population and thereby deprived themselves of a very
intelligent and useful race....Deportation of and excesses against peaceful
Armenians is increasing and from harrowing reports of eyewitnesses it appears
that a campaign of race extermination is in progress under a pretext of
reprisal against rebellion.’
- Henry
Morgenthau, Sr, United States Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, 1913–1916
‘It may
look amazing, but the reality that what happened in 1915 was a mass murder was
accepted by everybody having lived in that period, and was never the object of
an argument.’
- Taner
Akcam
‘As to their
preparations, the flags, bombs and the like, even assuming there to be some
truth in the statement, it does not justify the annihilation of the whole
people, men and women, old men and children, in a way which revolts all
humanity and more especially Islam and the whole body of Moslems, as those
unacquainted with the true facts might impute these deeds to Mohammedan fanaticism.....Annihilation seemed to be
the sole means of deliverance; they found their opportunity in a
time of war, and they proceeded to this atrocious deed, which they
carried out with every circumstance of brutality — a deed which is contrary to
the law of Islam.’
- Faiz El-Ghusein, Sheikh and member of
Ottoman parliament
‘During my
few days of service in this government I've learned of a few secrets and have
come across something interesting. The deportation order was issued through
official channels by the minister of the interior and sent to the provinces.
Following this order the [CUP] Central Committee circulated its own ominous
order to all parties to allow the gangs to carry out their wretched task. Thus
the gangs were in the field, ready for their atrocious slaughter...The 'mission' in the circular was: to attack the
convoys and massacre the population ... I am ashamed as a Muslim, I am ashamed
as an Ottoman statesman. What a stain on the reputation of the Ottoman Empire,
these criminal people ...’
- Reşid Akif Paşa, Vali of Sivas,
Council of State, and cabinet minister in the Ottoman government
'It is unlawful to designate the Armenian assets as
‘abandoned goods’ for the Armenians, the proprietors, did not abandon their
properties voluntarily. They were forcibly, compulsorily removed from their
domiciles and exiled. Now, the government through its efforts is selling their
goods ... Nobody can sell my property if I am unwilling to sell it. Article 21
of the Constitution forbids it. If we are a constitutional
regime functioning in accordance with constitutional law we can't do this. This
is atrocious. Grab my arm, eject me from my village, then sell my goods and
properties, such a thing can never be permissible. Neither the conscience of
the Ottomans nor the law can allow it. Let's face it, we Turks savagely killed
off the Armenians. In a statement in the Ottoman Parliament, Rize referred to
the Special Organization as ’murderers and criminals’.
- Ahmet Reza, Young Turk politician and President
of the first Ottoman parliament
'During World War I Gorrini openly denounced the
Armenian Genocide through press articles and interviews and didn't hesitate to
describe the policies of massacre perpetrated against the Armenians. He said if
everyone had seen what he had, the condemnation of those acts would have been
universal especially on the side of the Christian powers. He was in touch with American
Ambassador Morgenthau and the Apostolic delegate to Constantinople Angelo
Dolci, and this way he managed to save 50,000 Armenians from deportation and
mass murder.
In
1911–1915, he served as Italian Consul in Trabzon and was an eyewitness to the
massacres in and around the area. In August 1915, with Italy's participation in
the war effort and their subsequent declaration of war against the Ottoman
Empire, Gorrini was forced to leave his office. ‘The local authorities, and
indeed the Moslem population in general, tried to resist, to mitigate it, to
make omissions, to hush it up. But the orders of the Central Government were
categorically confirmed, and all were compelled to resign themselves and obey. It was a real extermination and
slaughter of the innocents, an unheard-of thing, a black page stained with the
flagrant violation of the most sacred rights of humanity ... There were about 14,000
Armenians at Trebizond — Gregorians, Catholics, and Protestants. They had never
caused disorders or given occasion for collective measures of police.
When I left Trebizond, not a hundred of them remained.'
‘As for the
Armenians, they were treated differently in the different vilayets. They were
suspect and spied upon everywhere, but they suffered a real extermination,
worse than massacre, in the so-called 'Armenian Vilayets.' from the 24th June
onwards, the Armenians were all ‘interned’ — that is, ejected by force from
their various residences and dispatched under the guard of the gendarmerie to
distant, unknown destinations, which for a few will mean the interior of
Mesopotamia, but for four-fifths of them has meant already a death accompanied
by unheard-of cruelties.’
- Giacomo Gorrini, Italian Italian Consul of Trabzon,
1911–1915
American
businessman Walter Mackintosh Geddes provided a detailed account of the
situation of the Armenian deportees in the Syrian Desert. While in Aleppo, he
witnessed thousands die of exposure and starvation. Upon returning from Aleppo
back to Smyrna, Geddes remarked ‘the sights that I saw on my return
trip were worse than those on my trip going’. Greatly saddened and affected by
the scenes he witnessed, he ultimately committed suicide on 7 November 1915.
‘Several Turks[,] whom I interviewed, told me that the
motive of this exile was to exterminate the race. The destination of all these
Armenians is Aleppo. Here they are kept crowded in all available vacant houses,
khans, Armenian churches, courtyards and open lots. Their condition in Aleppo
is beyond description. I personally visited several of the places where they
were kept and found them starving and dying by the hundreds every day.'
- Walter M. Geddes, American Businessman
Unlike most
of his companions in the German consulate, Metternich openly condemned the
Turkish and German governments for collaborating and conspiring against the
Armenians. He was particularly bothered by the German media which he accused of
encouraging the ongoing measures against Armenians. He was quoted as saying,
‘Their successes are due to our work, to our officers, to our cannons and to
our money. Without our help, the inflated frog is bound to collapse’. Metternich was among the few German diplomats in the
Ottoman Empire who openly
held Talat Pasha responsible for the massacres, accusing him of being ‘the soul of
the Armenian persecutions.’
‘In its attempt to carry out its purpose the delegate
of the Pope, nor by the threats of the Allied Powers, nor in deference to the
public opinion of the West representing one-half of the world....In the
implementation of its scheme to settle the Armenian Question through
annihilation of the Armenian raceto resolve the Armenian
question by the destruction of the Armenian race, the Turkish government has
refused to be deterred neither by our representations, nor by those of the
American Embassy, nor by, the Turkish government did not
allow itself to be distracted...Nobody has any more the power to restrain the
multi-headed hydra of the [CUP] Committee, and the attendant chauvinism and
fanaticism. The committee demands the extirpation of the last remnants of the
Armenians, and the government must yield. The authority of the committee is not
limited to the Ottoman capital where Ittihad is organized and functions as a
party in power. The authority of the committee reaches into all the provinces.
A committee representative is assigned to each of the provincial
administrators, from vali down to kaymakam, for purposes of
assistance and supervision...Turkification means license to expel, to kill or
destroy everything that it not Turkish, and to violently take possession of the
goods of others.’'
- Paul Wolff-Metternich, German Ambassador to the
Ottoman Empire, 1915–1916
George
Horton is particularly remembered for his book The Blight of Asia, which
describes the systematic ethnic cleansing of the Christian population up until
the Great Fire of Smyrna Becoming American Consul of Izmir once again during
the time of the Great Fire of Smyrna, Horton became an eyewitness to the destruction of the
city and notes that the goal of the Ottoman government was to get rid of all
Christian peoples in the Empire. Horton believed that Mustafa Kemal
Atatürk continued the policies of the Young Turks.
'The Turks
were now making a thorough and systematic job of killing Armenian men. The
squads of soldiers were chiefly engaged in hunting down and killing Armenians.
I have also other statements from eyewitnesses, not natives of this country, of
the highest standing in the religious and educational world, which leads me to
believe that what is now taking place in Armenian Turkey, surpasses in
deliberate and long protracted horror and in extent anything that has hitherto
happened in the history of the world. From what all these people worthy of the
highest credence tell me, from 800,000 to 1,000,000 human beings are now going
through this process of slow and hideous torture, and the movement instead of
waning is increasing in ferocity, so that before it is finally over, in the
neighborhood of 2,000,000 people will be affected, a very large percentage of
whom will certainly perish as they are driven along for weeks and months
without food or shelter and without the means of procuring these. The murder of the Armenian race had been practically
consummated during the years 1915–1916, and the prosperous and populous Greek
colonies, with the exception of Smyrna itself, had been ferociously destroyed.’
- George Horton, American Consul of Izmir,
1911–1917
Rafeal de
Nogales Méndez was hired by the Ottoman army as a mercenary while serving for
the German army. During his service in the Ottoman army during World War I,
Nogales Méndez witnessed the massacres of Christians in and around the eastern
provinces of the Ottoman Empire and described them to be ‘unjustified massacres
of the Christians. He believed that the massacres were committed by Khalil bey,
the Commander and Chief of the Expeditionary Army he volunteered to serve.[
Nogales Méndez reported that the civil authorities found it preferable to
murder at night with the help of local Kurds. When visiting Aghtamar, an island
in Lake Van where the Armenian Cathedral of the Holy Cross is located, he notes
that he uncovered the corpses of many priests. Nogales Méndez visited Diyarbakir in 26 June 1915 and
spoke with the governor Mehmet Reşid, who was to be later known as the ‘butcher
of Diyarbakir’. Nogales Méndez recounts in his
memoirs that Reşid mentioned to him that he received a telegram directly from
Talat Pasha ordering him to ‘Burn-Destroy-Kill’.
‘At dawn I
was awakened by the noise of shots and volleys. The Armenians had attacked the
town. Immediately I mounted my horse and, followed by some armed men, went to
see what was happening. Judge of my amazement to discover that the
aggressors had not been the Armenians, after all, but the civil authorities
themselves! Supported by the Kurds and the rabble of the
vicinity, they were attacking and sacking the Armenian quarter, I succeeded at
last, without serious accident, in approaching the Beledie reis of the town,
who was directing the orgy; whereupon I ordered him to stop the massacre. He astounded me by
replying that he was doing nothing more than carry out an unequivocal order
emanating from the Governor-General of the province to exterminate all Armenian males of twelve years of age
and over.’
’The civil authorities of the
Sultan kill noiselessly and preferably by night, like vampires. Generally they
choose as their victim's sepulcher deep lakes in which there are no
indiscreet currents to bear the corpse to shore, or lonely mountain caves
where dogs and jackals aid in erasing all traces of their crime. Among them I
noticed some Kurds belonging to a group of several hundred which, on the
following morning, was to help in killing off all the Armenians still in
possession of some few positions and edifices around the town. Seeing that the
enemy's fire was dwindling down, and unable to endure any longer the odor of
scorched flesh from the Armenian corpses scattered among the smoking ruins of
the church.’
- Rafael de Nogales Méndez, Venezuelan officer in the
Ottoman army
Abdülmecid
II was the last Caliph of Islam from the Ottoman Dynasty and Heir-Apparent to
the Ottoman Throne. He is often noted for his intervention and confrontation
with Enver Pasha before the latter's support of initiating the deportations and
subsequent massacres. In an interview with an Istanbul Special Correspondent of
a newspaper based in London, Abdülmecid II describes the encounter.
‘I refer to those awful massacres. They are the
greatest stain that has ever disgraced our nation and race. They were entirely
the work of Talat and Enver. I heard some days before they began that they were
intended. I went to Istanbul and insisted on seeing Enver. I asked him if it
was true that they intended to recommence the massacres which had been our
shame and disgrace under Abdul Hamid. The only reply I could get from him was:
'It is decided. It is the program.'
- Caliph Abdulmecid II, last Turkish Caliph of Islam
of the Ottoman Dynasty, 1922–1924
Jakob Künzler was known as the ‘Father of Armenian
Orphans.’ With an invitation from
Protestant missionary Johannes Lepsius, he visited Urfa and was his assistant.
With the start of World War I, Künzler was heavily preoccupied by providing
medical assistance to the needy. During his time in the Ottoman Empire, Künzler
with his wife Elisabeth helped the destitute and wounded Armenian orphans in the
Syrian Desert. He was especially involved with the Near East Foundation and is
known to have saved thousands of Armenian lives. In his memoirs, In the Land of
Blood and Tears, Künzler recounts the massacres he had witnessed in Ottoman
Turkey and especially in Urfa.
‘... two Turkish officials who appeared in Urfa. The rumor
was that they hurried out in order to drive forward the extermination of the
Armenian people with all their might, and they had the sanction of the highest
state authority for doing so. They ordered on this basis, scarcely the moment
they arrived in Urfa, the killing of all gathered prisoners. '
Why should we
feed them any longer?' they said.’
‘I resolved to serve that people as
a true brother. Ever since, I have come to deeply believe that all
barbaric schemes to destroy the Armenian people will always be destined to
fail.’
‘After what I experienced, I
had felt that I had been summoned from the Heavens, the Lord had shown me the
path [and] led me
to a people, who, despite all adversities and miseries, had resolved to remain
faithful to their God and the Lord
... Isn't this the same people who just a couple of
years ago [1894–1896] had been subjected to horrible massacres? Their villages
razed, plundered, and tens of thousands massacred? And yet, this very people,
with resolute faith in God, continue to remain hopeful that better days are yet
to come and that they will be more felicitous. God dispatched me to such a
people so that I can attend to their wounds as their true brother.’
- Jacob Künzler, Swiss Surgeon and Orientalist
Friedrich
Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein, was a German General and the head of Ottoman
army operations in the Caucasus during World War I. Additionally, he was, as
well as the chief of staff in Syria and Palestine.
It was during his time in the region that he reported
that the policy implemented towards the Armenians by the Turkish government as
a ‘military necessity’ was in actuality a policy to ‘justify the murder of
hundreds and thousands of human beings.’ Kressenstein was also known in his
reports for scorning the misinformation by Turkish authorities in regards to
the situation of the Armenians. He also noted that the refusal of providing aid
to the Armenian refugees was ‘proof’ in itself that the Turkish authorities had
the ‘resolve to destroy the Armenians. The Turkish policy of causing starvation
is an all too obvious proof for the Turkish resolve to destroy the Armenians.
The Turkish policy vis a vis the Armenians is clearly outlined [zeichnet sich
klar ab].
The Turks have by no means relinquished their intention to
exterminate the Armenians [ihre Absicht . . . auszurotten]. They merely changed
their tactic. Wherever possible, the Armenians are being aroused, provoked in
the hope of thereby securing a pretext for new assaults on them.’
- Friedrich Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein, German
General and head of Ottoman army operations in the Caucasus, as well as the
chief of staff in Syria and Palestine during World War I.
Abdülmecid II was the last Caliph of Islam from
the Ottoman Dynasty and Heir-Apparent to the Ottoman Throne. He is often noted
for his intervention and confrontation with Enver Pasha before the latter's
support of initiating the deportations and subsequent massacres. In an
interview with an Istanbul Special Correspondent of a newspaper based in
London, Abdülmecid II describes the encounter.
‘I refer to those awful massacres. They are the
greatest stain that has ever disgraced our nation and race. They were entirely
the work of Talat and Enver. I heard some days before they began that they were
intended. I went to Istanbul and insisted on seeing Enver. I asked him if it
was true that they intended to recommence the massacres which had been our
shame and disgrace under Abdul Hamid. The only reply I could get from him was:
'It is decided. It is the program.'
- Caliph Abdulmecid II, last Turkist Caliph of Islam
of the Ottoman Dynasty, 1922–1924
Jakob Künzler was known as the ‘Father of Armenian
Orphans.’ With an
invitation from Protestant missionary Johannes Lepsius, he visited Urfa and was
his assistant. With the start of World War I, Künzler was heavily preoccupied
by providing medical assistance to the needy. During his time in the Ottoman
Empire, Künzler with his wife Elisabeth helped the destitute and wounded
Armenian orphans in the Syrian Desert. He was especially involved with the Near
East Foundation and is known to have saved thousands of Armenian lives. In his
memoirs, In the Land of Blood and Tears, Künzler recounts the massacres he had
witnessed in Ottoman Turkey and especially in Urfa.
‘... two Turkish officials who appeared in Urfa. The
rumor was that they hurried out in order to drive forward the extermination of
the Armenian people with all their might, and they had the sanction of the
highest state authority for doing so. They ordered on this basis, scarcely the
moment they arrived in Urfa, the killing of all gathered prisoners. 'Why should
we feed them any longer?' they said.’
‘I resolved to serve that people as a true brother. Ever since, I have come to deeply believe that all
barbaric schemes to destroy the Armenian people will always be destined to
fail.’
‘After what
I experienced, I had felt that I had been summoned from the Heavens, the Lord
had shown me the path [and] led me to a people, who, despite all adversities and
miseries, had resolved to remain faithful to their God and the Lord ... Isn't this the same people who just a couple of
years ago [1894–1896] had been subjected to horrible massacres? Their villages
razed, plundered, and tens of thousands massacred? And yet, this very people,
with resolute faith in God, continue to remain hopeful that better days are yet
to come and that they will be more felicitous. God dispatched me to such a
people so that I can attend to their wounds as their true brother.’
- Jacob Künzler, Swiss Surgeon and Orientalist
Friedrich Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein, was a
German General and the head of Ottoman army operations in the Caucasus during
World War I. Additionally, he was, as well as the chief of staff in Syria and
Palestine. It was during his time in the region that he reported
that the policy implemented towards the Armenians by the Turkish government as
a ‘military necessity’ was in actuality a policy to ‘justify the murder of
hundreds and thousands of human beings.’ Kressenstein was also known in his
reports for scorning the misinformation by Turkish authorities in regards to
the situation of the Armenians. He also noted that the refusal of providing aid
to the Armenian refugees was ‘proof’ in itself that the Turkish authorities had
the ‘resolve to destroy the Armenians. The Turkish policy of causing starvation
is an all too obvious proof for the Turkish resolve to destroy the Armenians. The
Turkish policy vis a vis the Armenians is clearly outlined [zeichnet sich klar
ab]. The Turks have by no means relinquished their intention to exterminate the
Armenians [ihre Absicht . . . auszurotten]. They merely changed their tactic.
Wherever possible, the Armenians are being aroused, provoked in the hope of
thereby securing a pretext for new assaults on them.’
- Friedrich Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein, German
General and head of Ottoman army operations in the Caucasus, as well as the
chief of staff in Syria and Palestine during World War I.
James Harbord was sent to the Caucasus to lead
an American Military Mission to Armenia in order to provide detailed
information about the country to the United States. Upon returning to the
United States, Harbord wrote Conditions in the Near East: Report of the
American Military Mission to Armenia, which was a summary of the expedition
that provided various details of the mission. The report includes maps,
statistics, and historical analyses of the country and its population. In
addition to such details, Harbord collected evidence and information regarding
the massacres of Armenians and was an eyewitness to them.
‘The dead, from this wholesale attempt on the race,
are variously estimated at from five hundred thousand to a million, the usual
figure being about eight hundred thousand. Driven on foot under a hot sun,
robbed of their clothing and such petty articles as they carried, prodded by
bayonets if they lagged, starvation, typhus, and dysentery left thousands dead
by the trail side.’
‘Massacres
and deportations were organized in the spring of 1915 under definite system,
the soldiers going from town to town. The official reports of the Turkish
Government show 1,100,000 as having been deported. Young men were first
summoned to the government building in each village and then marched out and
killed. The women,
the old men, and children were, after a few days, deported to what Talat Pasha
called ‘agricultural colonies,’ from the high, cool, breeze-swept plateau of
Armenia to the malarial flats of the Euphrates and the burning sands of Syria
and Arabia ... Mutilation, violation, torture, and death have left
their haunting memories in a hundred beautiful Armenian valleys, and the
traveler in that region is seldom free from the evidence of this most colossal
crime of all ages.’
-James Harbord, American Lieutenant General in the
United States Army
Martin Niepage, a German schoolteacher in Aleppo
Martin. Niepage was a teacher of the German Realschule in Aleppo from 1913 to
1916. Niepage had tried to stop the massacres from happening
by appealing to the local German authorities in order ‘to put a stop to the
brutality with which the wives and children of slaughtered Armenians are being
treated here’. He also indicated that the
campaign of forceful starvation was just one of the methods employed to
annihilate the Armenian nation altogether. Martin Niepage wrote an account of
his experiences in Aleppo entitled The
Horrors of Aleppo. Niepage was later sentenced to death in absentia by
the Turkish government for publishing the account.
‘A newspaper
reporter was told by one of these gentlemen ‘Certainly we are now punishing
many innocent people as well. But we have to guard ourselves even against those
who may one day become guilty.’
On such grounds Turkish statesmen justify the
wholesale slaughter of defenceless women and children. A German Catholic ecclesiastic reported that
Enver Pasha declared, in the presence of Monsignore Dolci, the Papal Envoy at
Constantinople that he would not rest so long as a single Armenian remained
alive.
The object of the deportations is the extermination of the whole
Armenian nation.’
‘I was told, to cover
the extermination of the Armenian nation with a political cloak, military
reasons were being put forward
... After I had informed myself about the facts and
had made enquiries on all sides, I came to the conclusion that all these
accusations against the Armenians were, in fact, based on trifling
provocations, which were taken as an excuse for slaughtering 10,000 innocents
for one guilty person, for the most savage outrages against women and children,
and for a campaign of starvation against the exiles which was intended to
exterminate the whole nation.’
‘The German Consul from Mosul related, in my presence, at the German club at Aleppo that, in many places on the road from Mosul to Aleppo, he had seen children’s hands lying hacked off in such numbers that one could have paved the road with them.’
‘The German Consul from Mosul related, in my presence, at the German club at Aleppo that, in many places on the road from Mosul to Aleppo, he had seen children’s hands lying hacked off in such numbers that one could have paved the road with them.’
‘When I
returned to Aleppo in September, 1915, from a three months' holiday at Beirut,
I heard
with horror that a new phase of Armenian massacres had begun which were far
more terrible than the earlier massacres under Abdul-Hamid, and which aimed at
exterminating, root and branch, the intelligent, industrious, and progressive
Armenian nation, and at transferring its property to Turkish hands.’
- Martin Niepage, German schoolteacher in Aleppo, who
tried
to stop the massacres
Mehmed Celal Bey, Turkish Governor of Aleppo and
Konya Celal Bey was known for saving thousands of lives during the Armenian
Genocide and is often called Turkish Oscar Schindler. During his time as
governor of Aleppo, Mehmet Celal Bey did not believe that the deportations were
meant to ‘annihilate’ the Armenians:
‘I admit, I did not believe that these orders, these
actions revolved around the annihilation of the Armenians. I never imagined
that any government could take upon itself to annihilate its own citizens in
this manner, in effect destroying its human capital, which must be seen as the
country's greatest treasure. I presumed that the actions being carried out were
measures deriving from a desire to temporarily remove the Armenians from the
theater of war and taken as the result of wartime exigencies.’
Celal Bey had later admitted that he was
mistaken and that the goal was ‘to attempt to annihilate’ the Armenians. When defying
the orders of deportation, Celal Bey was removed from his post as governor of Aleppo and transferred to
Konya. As deportations continued, he
repeatedly demanded from the central authorities that shelter be provided for
the deportees. In
addition to these demands, Celal Bey sent many telegraphs and letters of
protest to the Sublime Porte stating that the ‘measures taken against the
Armenians were, from every point of view, contrary to the higher interests of
the fatherland.’
His demands, however, were ignored. Mehmet Celal Bey compared himself to ‘a person sitting
by the side of a river, with absolute no means of saving anyone. Blood was
flowing in the river and thousands of innocent children, irreproachable old
people, helpless women, strong young men, were streaming down this river
towards oblivion. Anyone I could save with my bare hands I saved, and the
others, I think they streamed down the river never to return.’
‘Yes, let us say that the Armenians assisted the
enemy. And that some Armenian parliamentary deputies preferred to join the
ranks of the rebels and decided to murder. The government did not take up the
responsibility to arrest the perpetrators of these crimes, but instead, decided
to resettle the entire Armenian population, whether they were friendly or not.
A rebel is capable of anything since he is a rebel. The government is supposed
to track them down. However, just like the governors of back then, having never
forgotten their rebellious spirit, have conducted the deportation in the most
audacious manner that even the guerrillas couldn't possibly have imitated.
Instead of attacking the Russians at the Sakarya valley and utilizing the
Armenians for assistance, the government at that time decided, as a precaution,
to relocate them all throughout Ankara, Konya and Eskişehir. At the time, the
Russians had fully supplied themselves with dreadnoughts while the Yavuz and
Midilli dominated the Black Sea whereas, it was impossible for the Russian
troops to send troops to the Sakarya basin. Okay, let us accept this as a
possibility ... but why were the Armenians of Bursa, Edirne, and Tekirdag
removed? Was this part of the Sakarya basin as well? Why were they sent to
Aleppo, a place whose population was only one-twentieth Armenian? Right or wrong,
for the sake of the fatherland the Armenians were removed from their lands, how
is this a practical policy? Has the government even thought about the
implications of deporting these helpless Armenians without food or shelter to
Der Zor where Arab nomadic tribes solely reside? If so I ask: how much food was
provided and how many shelters were built for these deportees? What is the
purpose of deporting the Armenians, who have lived for centuries on these
lands, to the deserts of Der Zor without water and lumber to construct their
new settlements? Unfortunately, it is impossible to deny and distort the facts.
The purpose was to annihilate [imhaydı] and they were annihilated [imha
edildiler]. It is impossible to hide and conceal this policy conducted by the
İttihat and Terakki which was drafted by its leaders and was ultimately
accepted by the general public.’
- Mehmed Celal Bey, Turkish Governor of Aleppo and
Konya Celal Bey
Maria
Jacobsen wrote the Diaries of a Danish
Missionary: Harpoot, 1907–1919, which according to Armenian Genocide
scholar, Ara Sarafian, is a ‘documentation of the utmost significance’ for
research of the Armenian Genocide. Jacobsen will later be known for having
saved thousands of Armenians during the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide
through various relief efforts
‘It is quite obvious that the purpose of their
departure is the extermination of the Armenian people.’ ‘Conditions now are completely different from
what they were during the massacres of 20 years ago. What could be done then is
impossible now. The Turks know very well about the war raging in
Europe, and that the Christian nations are too busy to take care of Armenians,
so they take advantage of the times to destroy their ‘enemies’.
- Maria Jacobsen, Danish Christian missionary
Oscar S. Heizer
worked at the American Consul in Trabzon. While serving in his diplomatic post
in Trabzon, Heizer
witnessed the Armenian Genocide and often risked his own life to save the lives
of Armenians. Being one of the first to report massacres, Heizer's initial
reporting to the American consulate in Constantinople said that
it was permissible ‘whenever the parents so desire’ to leave children – girls
up to the age of 15 and boys up to the age of ten – in the ‘orphanages by the
Turks.’ Heizer also describes how some
children were assimilated into Muslim Turks in a matter of weeks. Often writing about the systematic drowning of
Armenians in the Black Sea, Heizer exposed the direct link and collaboration
between the central Ottoman government and local members of the Committee of
Union and Progress.
‘This plan
did not suit Nail Bey ... Many of the children were loaded into boats and taken
out to sea and thrown overboard. I myself saw where 16 bodies were washed
ashore and buried by a Greek woman near the Italian monastery.’
‘It is impossible to convey an idea of the
consternation and despair the publication of this proclamation has produced
upon the people. I have seen strong, proud, wealthy men weep like children
while they told me that they had given their boys and girls to Persian and Turkish
neighbors. Even a strong man, without the necessary outfit and food would
likely to perish on such a trip ... The People are helpless but are making
preparations to start on the perilous journey.’
- Oscar S. Heizer, American American Consul in Trabzon
Hans
Freiherr von Wangenheim served as the German Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire,
1912–1915. During the deportations and as World War I was going on, all of the
diplomats representing Allied powers were expelled from the country. Due to the
German-Turkish alliance, Germans along with Austrians remained. While major
newspapers were talking about the massacres, Wangenheim was at first reluctant to talk about the
massacres, but he eventually conceded by saying that there ‘no longer was doubt
that the Porte was trying to exterminate the Armenian race in the Turkish
Empire.’ While Wangenheim did not go further in his formal testimony against
the massacres, his successors and others in the German diplomatic staff reacted
more strongly.
‘On the other hand, the German Government cannot disguise
the dangers created by these rigorous measures and notably by the mass
expatriations which include the guilty and the innocent indiscriminately,
especially when these measures are accompanied by acts of violence, such as
massacre and pillage.’ ‘The manner in which the matter of relocation is being
handled demonstrates that the government is in fact pursuing the goal of
annihilating the Armenian race in Turkey.’
- Hans Freiherr von Wangenheim served as the German
Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, 1912–1915
Mustafa Arif
(since Surname Law Mustafa Arif Deymer) served as Interior Minister succeeding
Talat Pasha after the latter had stepped down from office,
In regards to the massacres, Arif was especially known
for establishing a governmental commission that examined the events. On March
18, 1919, the commission concluded that 800,000 Armenians died during World War
I. The figure became reputable after other Turkish historians such as Yusuf
Hikmet Bayur used the figure in their research and writing.[36] ‘Surely a few
Armenians aided and abetted our enemy, and a few Armenian Deputies committed
crimes against the Turkish nation ... it is incumbent upon a government to
pursue the guilty ones. Unfortunately, our wartime leaders, imbued with a spirit
of brigandage, carried out the law of deportation in a manner that could
surpass the proclivities of the most bloodthirsty bandits. They decided to
exterminate the Armenians, and they did exterminate them.
‘The atrocities committed against the Armenians
reduced our country to a gigantic slaughterhouse.’
- Mustafa Arif Deymer, served as Turkish Interior Minister
Einar af
Wirsén, the Swedish Military Attaché, wrote much about the Armenian Genocide in
his memoirs Minnen från fred och krig
(‘Memories from Peace and War’). In
his memoirs, Wirsén dedicated a chapter to the massacres entitled Mordet på en nation (‘The Murder of a Nation’). He believed that the deportations were a way of
concealing the massacres. The memoirs provide an important
analysis of the deportations and massacres from a country who was not involved
in World War I.
‘Officially, these had the goal to move the entire
Armenian population to the steppe regions of Northern Mesopotamia and Syria,
but in reality they aimed to exterminate [utrota] the Armenians, whereby the
pure Turkish element in Asia Minor would achieve a dominating position’. ‘The
annihilation of the Armenian nation in Asia Minor must revolt all human
feelings ... The way the Armenian problem was solved was hair-raising. I can
still see in front of me Talaat's cynical expression, when he emphasized that
the Armenian question was solved’.
- Carl Einar Ture af Wirsén, Swedish Military Attaché
Henry H. Riggs,
an American Christian missionary and president of Euphrates College, was
stationed in Kharpert during the Armenian Genocide. His book Days of Tragedy in Armenia: Personal
Experiences in Harpoot, 1915–1917, is considered to be one of the most
detail accounts of the Armenian Genocide in the English language, provides an
important eyewitness account of the events. Riggs concluded that the
deportation of Armenians was part of an extermination program organized by the
Ottoman government.
‘The attack on the Armenian people, which soon developed
into a systematic attempt to exterminate the race, was a cold-blooded,
unprovoked, deliberate act, planned and carried out without popular approval,
by the military masters of Turkey.’
‘Very good evidence exists for the belief that
both there and Ras-ul-Ain, also in the same desert, the people were massacred
wholesale as soon as they left the villages where they had been quartered. At
the beginning of the period under discussion, that is, at the beginning of
1916, there were in exile in that district something like 485,000 Armenians.
Fifteen months later, after the last deportation had been completed, not more
than 113,000 out of that throng could be located. Out of the 372,000 who had
perished most had died from starvation and disease, but many thousands were
also massacred at the last moment, when apparently the Turkish government had
tired of the pretense of carrying out the theory of deportation.’
- Henry H. Riggs, American Christian missionary and
president of Euphrates College
president of Euphrates College
Mustafa
Yamulki, Turkish Ottoman military officer and head judge of the Turkish
Courts-Martial of 1919–1920 Also known as ‘Nemrud’ Mustafa Pasha, Yamulki was
the head judge of the Turkish Courts-Martial of 1919–1920 since the day of its
creation on February 1919.[91] The Courts-Martial's was later known for
condemning Talat, Enver, Cemal, and others to death for their role in the
massacres against Armenians. ‘Nemrud’ Mustafa Pasha had a reputation for being
honest and was instrumental in exposing the crimes and corruption scandals of
the Ottoman Empire during World War I. Due to his open accusations against the
massacres, ‘Nemrud’ Mustafa Pasha was sentenced to three months imprisonment.
The sentences he gave condemning various Turkish officials for conducting
massacre were overturned.
‘Our fellow countrymen committed unheard of crimes,
resorted to all conceivable methods of despotism, organised deportations and
massacres, poured gas over babies and burned them, raped women and girls in
front of their parents who were bound hand and foot, took girls in front of
their parents and fathers, appropriated personal property and real estate,
drove people to Mesopotamia and treated them inhumanly on the way ... they put
thousands of innocent people into boats that were sunk at sea ... they put
Armenians in the most unbearable conditions any other nation had ever known in
its history.’
- Mustafa Yamulki, Turkish Ottoman military officer
and head judge of the Turkish Courts-Martial of 1919–1920
Like his
predecessor Hans Freiherr von Wangenheim, Kühlmann was initially reluctant to
expose the massacres against the Armenian population. Kühlmann, who held
sympathetic beliefs toward Turkish nationalism, repeatedly used the term ‘alleged’
and excused the Turkish government for the massacres. Kühlmann, in defense of
the Turkish government and the German-Turkish World War alliance, stated that
the policies against the Armenians was a matter of ‘internal politics’,]
However, Kühlmann eventually conceded in calling the massacres ‘a large scale
destruction of Armenians.’
‘The destruction of the Armenians was undertaken on a
massive scale. This policy of extermination will for a long time stain the name
of Turkey.’
- Richard von Kühlmann, German Ambassador to the
Ottoman Empire, 1916–1917
Bodil Katharine
Biørn was a Christian missionary stationed in Mush when the Armenian Genocide
started. She was instrumental in saving thousands of Armenian lives Biørn wrote
much of what she witnessed in her personal diary. She is also noted for taking
hundreds of photographs of the situation providing details of the events in the
back of each photograph. Bodil eventually took care of Armenian orphans in
Syria, Lebanon and Constantinople. In 1922 she founded an orphanage named ‘Lusaghbyur’
in Alexandropol, Soviet Armenia. Then she continued her work by aiding the
Armenian refugees in Syria and Lebanon. By the initiative of the Armenian
community of Aleppo, the Norwegian city of Kragero has erected a statue
honoring Bodil Biorn.
‘Of the Armenian part of Mush, where 10,000 people
lived, only ruins were left. It happened during the warmest time of the year,
the heat and the smell from the burning houses and all the people who were
burnt to death and all the killed, was almost impossible to bear. It was an
awful time. Almost the whole Christian population was murdered, often in a
gruesome manner. 40 ox wagons with women and children were burned in this
manner. 11 canons were put on the heights above the city and fired at the
Armenian quarters. Some managed to flee to the mountains, some fled through
Persia to the Armenian republic, some were deported, but the majority was
killed. The Armenian part of the city and all Armenian villages were in ruins.’
- Bodil Katharine Biørn, Norwegian Christian
missionary
Vehip Pasha
assumed the commandment of the Third Army in February 1916 from Mahmud Kâmil
Pasha, after much of the deportations concluded. During his post, Vehip Pasha
received an order to send 2,000 Armenians as labor battalions for the
construction of the Baghdad-Berlin Railway. However, Vehip Pasha was ‘outraged’
after receiving word that the Armenians he had sent were massacred. Vehip Pasha
set up a court-martial for the man in charge of the transfer and massacre, Nuri
Efendi. During the court-martial, Nuri Efendi blamed the governor of Sivas,
Ahmet Muammer, for the massacres. Ahmet Muammer was eventually relieved by
Talat Pasha who subsequently positioned him outside of Vehip Pasha's
supervision. Though Vehip Pasha is largely known for his commandment during the
Caucasus Campaign in 1918, he also condemned the massacres against Armenians
that happened prior to his appointment as commander of the Third Army in 1916.
‘The massacre and destruction of the Armenians and the
plunder and pillage of their goods were the results of decision reached by
Ittihad's [the Young Turks] Central Committee ... The atrocities were carried
out under a program that was determined upon and involved a definite case of
premeditation. It was [also] ascertained that these atrocities and crimes were
encouraged by the district attorneys whose dereliction of judicial duties in
face of their occurrence and especially their remaining indifferent renders
them accessories to these crimes.’
‘In summary, here are my convictions. The Armenian
deportations were carried out in a manner entirely unbecoming to humanity,
civilization, and government. The massacre and annihilation of the Armenians,
and the looting and plunder of their properties were the result of the decision
of the Central Committee of Ittihad and Terakki. The butchers of human beings,
who operated in the command zone of the Third Army, were procured and engaged
by Dr. Bahattin Şakir. The high ranking governmental officials did submit to
his directives and order ... He stopped by at all major centers where he orally
transmitted his instructions to the party's local bodies and to the
governmental authorities.’
- Vehip Pasha, Turkish General in the Ottoman Army and
commander of the Ottoman Third Army during the Caucasus Campaign
After World
War I, Ahmet Refik wrote Two committees two massacres (İki Komite iki Kitâl),
an account of the massacres during the War. Though Refik writes about massacres
conducted on both sides, he concludes that the massacres against the Armenians
was an attempt by the Turkish government to ‘destroy the Armenians’.
‘The criminal gangs who were released from the
prisons, after a week's training at the War Ministry's training grounds, were sent
off to the Caucasian front as the brigands of the Special Organization,
perpetrating the worst crimes against the Armenians.’
‘In a situation such as this, a just government which
is confident of its force would have punished those who rebelled against the
government. But the Ittihadists, wanted to annihilate the Armenians and in
this manner eliminate the Eastern Question.’
‘It was said that the most distressing tragedies
occurred in Bursa and Ankara; houses were ransacked, hundreds of Armenian
families were put into cars and hurled into streams. Many women went insane in
the face of such awful murders. Houses of wealthy Armenians were bought, but
the payments were recovered by fiat upon transfer of title. This conduct was a
murder against humanity. No government, in any age, had brought about a murder
this cruel.’
- Ahmet Refik, Turkish historian, poet, and writer
BE SURE TO READ: The Forgotten Genocide: Why It Matters Today
* It's Sunday and I sprained or tore some ligaments in my foot/ankle. So, you'll have to tolerate heavy usage of wikipedia and my own photographic styling!
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