Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Hakob Kyuntsler - The Swiss Father Of Armenians

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

  • Hakob Kyuntsler - The Swiss Father Of Armenians

    HAKOB KYUNTSLER - THE SWISS FATHER OF ARMENIANS

    AZG Armenian Daily
    26/04/2007

    Armenian Genocide's Witness

    "The nation in slaughterhouse" - it's the title of Ralf Hug's article
    published in Swiss "Tagblatt" that is about the witness of the
    Armenian Genocide, Swiss Hakob Kyuntsler (1871-1949), who was born
    in Apentsel, Switzerland. He is a witness of slaughters committed
    in South Anatolia. He raised his voice about this in Switzerland,
    but there was no response.

    In 1914 Kyuntsler was in Baghdad when he heard the speech of the leader
    Nefis Bey. 'We, Turkish people, must either annihilate or make to
    emigrate the Armenians without exception. It's inadmissible to live
    in the same country together with them". It became true in summer
    and autumn of 1915, when thousands of Armenians, women, children,
    old people, were killed in the deserts of Syria. 'According to the
    historians the number of victims is over one million and it's the
    first genocide of 20th century', the article says. At that time,
    Hakob Kyuntsler worked as a doctor in the hospital of Urfa. Urfa
    was a town, where different nations lived: Turkish, Armenian, Greek,
    Syrian, Kurdish. In 1895 two thousand Armenians were fired with petrol.

    In 1915 he wrote in his notes: 'Turkish people of the town threatened
    Armenians every day. What is the reason? They suspect that Armenians
    cooperate with Russians. On May, 1915 the first Armenian families were
    sent to prison, tortured, fired. Hakob Kyuntsler raised the alarm to
    the international diplomats, but the world was busy with the World
    War I.

    Genocide was committed under the shadow of World War I. The way of
    expelled Armenians crossed Urfa, and Kyuntsler could see the lines
    of hundred thousands of Armenians, sometimes even stark naked, who
    were driven away to the deserts and killed. It was a 'concentration
    camp of emigrants'.

    Kyuntsler was sure that the whole nation was slaughtered according
    to a plan.

    His notes were first published in 1921, titled 'In the country of blood
    and tear'. The book ('In the country of blood and tear. Experiences
    of World War I in Mesopotamia) was republished in 1999 as a tool
    against the denial of the Armenian Genocide.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X