Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian genocide: Millions killed and forgotten

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian genocide: Millions killed and forgotten

    The Express Tribune, Pakistan
    Jan 1 2011


    Armenian genocide: Millions killed and forgotten

    by Ahmed Aziz


    Turkey has always denied the death of 1.5 million Armenian Christians
    as genocide, blaming it on civil war at the time.
    On December 24, 2010, the United States once again avoided diplomatic
    difficulties with a Nato ally, Turkey. The House of Representatives
    ended its term by not putting forward a resolution recognising the
    genocide of the Armenians by the Ottoman Empire during World War I.
    This resolution is unlikely to be passed by the Congress in the next
    term because the next house speaker, John Boehner, does not support
    it.

    According to the Independent, supporters of the resolution had high
    hopes for it to be passed before the term ended because the outgoing
    speaker, Nancy Pelosi, had previously supported the resolution.

    Turkey is an important ally of the US in the Middle East playing a
    supporting role in the Iraq War and has helped the US in the past on
    other war fronts. Turkish governments have always denied the death of
    1.5 million Armenian Christians as genocide, blaming it on general
    anarchy and civil was at that time. However, historians term it as the
    first holocaust of the 20th century, of which documentary and
    photographic proof also exists.

    Genocide roots in the Ottoman Empire

    Within the Ottoman Empire, the Armenians were generally concentrated
    in the eastern provinces. According to the Dhimmi system in the
    Ottoman Empire the non-Muslims were subjected to over-taxation and
    limited legal freedoms. Generally referred to as infidels or
    unbelievers, they were not considered equal to Muslims. Testimony of a
    non-Muslim against a Muslim was not admissible in court and their
    houses could not be higher than their Muslim neighbor's.

    Initial massacres took place under the rule of Sultan Abdul Hamid II
    in the late 19th century. These were called the Hamidiyan massacres in
    which, according to different historians, 80,000 to 300,000 Armenians
    were killed.

    In 1908, the monarchy had collapsed after the Young Turk Revolution
    and by 1913 the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP), Ittihad ve
    Terakki Jemiyeti, emerged at the head of the government in a coup. The
    CUP had an extreme Turkish nationalistic ideology and was mainly
    controlled by Enver Pasha, Minister of War, Talat Pasha, Minister of
    the Interior and Grand Vizier in 1917, and Jemal Pasha, Minister of
    the Marine.

    The resettlement program

    I will not go deep into political background of the genocide which
    occurred during World War I but one of the basic reasons behind it was
    Ottoman insecurity that the Armenian Christian subjects will support
    the Russians pushing on in the eastern front of the war. Some
    historians also credit it to the policies of the government to create
    a unified and pure `Turkish state.'

    In the spring and summer of 1915 Armenians all around the empire were
    ordered to deport under a fictitious `resettlement program.' Convoys
    consisting of hundreds of thousands of Armenians from different parts
    of the empire started towards the Syrian Desert. These convoys were
    basically death marches because most of the people were subjected to
    torture, rape and slaughter during their painful journey towards the
    desert. The government did not make any plans for the provision of
    food and water and thousands died of starvation and disease. Some
    evidence of a primitive form of gas chambers also exists, where women
    and children were put into a cave and the entrance of the cave was set
    on fire, suffocating the people inside the cave.

    The forgotten holocaust

    A new `Special Organisation' called the Teshkilti Mahsusa, was formed
    as a tool for extermination. Approximated two million Armenians lived
    in the Ottoman lands in 1915 but by 1918 an estimated 1 million had
    perished and by 1923 a negligible number of Armenians were left in
    main Anatolian Turkey.

    Photographic and documentary evidence exist of the extermination of
    the Armenian race from the Ottoman lands.

    This Genocide the forgotten holocaust because it was over-shadowed by
    the killing of the six million Jews during the World War II by Nazi
    Germany and generally people really don't know about it. It is ironic
    because while persuading his associates that a Jewish holocaust would
    be tolerated by the west, Adolf Hitler said the following and he was
    right:

    `Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?

    'Events of such magnitude cannot be explained in one article so for
    readers who are further interested in knowing about what took place in
    the Ottoman Empire during that time, should have a look at the
    following:

    1.Great War for Civilization: The conquest of the Middle East - By
    Robert Fisk (Chapter 10)
    2.Subjects of the Sultan: Culture and Daily Life in the Ottoman Empire
    - by Suraiya Faroqhi
    3.The Knock at the Door: A Journey through the Darkness of the
    Armenian Genocide - by Margaret Ajemian Ahnert
    4.A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish
    Responsibility - by Taner Akçam
    5.Survivors: An Oral History Of The Armenian Genocide - by Donald E.
    Miller and Lorna Touryan Miller
    .
    http://blogs.tribune.com.pk/story/3713/armenian-genocide-millions-killed-and-forgotten-done/




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X