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Speaker describes children's fate during the Armenian genocide
October 12, 2004 15:12:52
Speaker describes children's fate during the Armenian genocide By Patrick Gordon, Daily Editorial Board
The Tufts Daily, MA Oct 12 2004
Glendale - Dr. Hilmar Kaiser explored a new facet of the disputed Armenian genocide in a lecture last Thursday that discussed how young Armenian children were able to escape death, though usually at the expense of parting with their parents.
"Armenian children had a strong chance of survival" during the period of the starvation, abuse and loss of more than a million Armenians that took place in the early 20th century, said Kaiser, a German scholar of the genocide.
Kaiser described the genocide's devastating nature on Turkey's wider Armenian population using authentic and often graphic photos of the genocide.
Armenian girls and boys younger than age 13 were often spared, however, because the Turkish government felt it was "possible for Armenian children to be assimilated into Turkish culture," Kaiser said.
Marriage into a Turkish family would save girls, especially younger girls, from a more disastrous fate in the genocide's death marches across the Anatolia region.
"A saving grace for Armenian girls is the Turkish social structure," Kaiser said. "An Armenian woman who married a Turkish man automatically became Turkish by association."
The Turkish government also provided funds specifically to "feed the Armenian children," because they were also useful laborers, Kaiser said.
For this reason, there also "was a clear pattern for survival of boys" because they were needed to "work as shepherds, camel herders and farmhands," Kaiser said.
Armenian children were spared because of their importance in Turkey's textile industry as well. Their small hands could reach into the spokes of the spinning machines to retrieve bits of unprocessed cotton, making them "essential to the industry. Without them, the textile industry surely would have collapsed," Kaiser said.
But hundreds of thousands of older Armenians were removed from their villages and provinces within Turkish territories, supposedly to be "relocated" to distant and isolated pockets of the empire such as Azur.
Instead, the Armenians were subject to a "systematic exposure to starvation, dehydration and contagious diseases," Kaiser said.
The Turkish government still denies to this day that there was a genocide, claiming that Armenian populations were simply removed from a "war zones."
But some Armenian children, though they were able to avoid the death marches and forced relocations, were exposed to another extreme hardship: prostitution.
Kaiser said that "there was rampant child prostitution and rape along Turkey's railroads during this period. Children eight years old and even younger were prostituted in these regions."
The origins of the genocide lie partly in the surging fear within Ottoman Turkey that its Armenian population had sided with the Russian forces during World War I.
The immediate genocidal period lasted from about April 1915 until Sept. 1916, according to Kaiser. It began with the executions of hundreds of Armenian leaders who had been fooled into gathering in Istanbul.
Although Kaiser said that conflicting data and statistics make it difficult to determine precisely how many Armenians were murdered during the genocide, "the Armenian population could have suffered about 1.5 million losses."
Kaiser defined a "loss" not simply as a death, but rather as a functioning member of the Armenian community who, for whatever reason, could no longer rejoin it after the genocide.
"How many people were ravaged by disease and made infertile? How many were reduced to insanity by the death marches? How many Armenian women were married into Turkish families?" Kaiser said.
And though Kaiser stressed that the genocide was rapidly planned and carried out by the Turkish government, he said that "there was no long-term conspiracy to kill Armenians."
Rather, "it occurred when the Turks had every reason to believe that their last hour had come [as a result of World War I]."
"[It was more] the Turks saying 'we'll take care of the Armenians before we go down ourselves,'" Kaiser said.
Kaiser was invited to speak by the Tufts Armenian Club. About 30 people attended the discussion, which took place Thursday night in Eaton Hall.
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submitted by Emil Lazarian
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