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Special book release for U.K Holocaust Memorial Day 2009

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  • Special book release for U.K Holocaust Memorial Day 2009

    AZG Armenian Daily #015, 31/01/2009

    Press Release

    SPECIAL BOOK RELEASE FOR U.K. HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL DAY 2009

    New Book Offers Critical New Insights into Germany and the Armenian
    Genocide

    Paul Leverkuehn, A German Officer during the Armenian Genocide: A
    Biography of Max von Scheubner-Richter, translated by Alasdair Lean
    with a preface by Jorge Vartparonian and a historical introduction by
    Hilmar Kaiser, London: Gomidas Institute, 2009, cxxx + 153 pages, map,
    photos, index, ISBN 978-1-903656-81-5, UK£17.00. Available from
    [email protected]

    One of the tangible links between the Armenian Genocide and the
    Holocaust is in the person of Max Von Scheubner-Richther, the German
    Consul in Erzurum in 1915 who later became a co-founder of the
    National Socialist (Nazi) Party in Germany, only our years later. This
    personal link to Adolph Hitler has led to much speculation about
    Hitler's intimate knowledge of the Armenian Genocide, and how such
    knowledge might have influenced the organisation of the Final Solution
    in Europe.

    Scheubner-Richter was one of Hitler's most trusted and revered
    colleagues, one deemed irreplaceable by the leader following his death
    in the Munich Putsch of 1923. Given their close relationship it is
    unthinkable that the mass murder of an ethnic group that
    Scheubner-Richter witnessed was never discussed with Hitler who had a
    similar plan in mind for Jews. In "A German Officer During The
    Armenian Genocide", it is impossible to ignore the observations that
    Scheubner Richter makes about the Armenian Genocide, both verbally and
    in written correspondence, that were later to become features of the
    Holocaust.

    A German Officer during the Armenian Genocide is a new English
    language biography of Scheubner-Richter, translated from the German
    original, and gives us unique insights into one of the most
    tantalising links between the Armenian Genocide and the
    Holocaust. This translation also includes a seminal introduction by
    the German historian, Hilmar Kaiser, who discusses Scheubner-Richter's
    involvement in the genocide of Armenians in 1915. Kaiser's
    introduction draws on German foreign office documents and other
    archival materials including Armenian testimonies, to bring fresh
    light to otherwise speculative and sometimes sensationalised
    discussions about Germany's involvement in the Armenian Genocide.

    According to both the original German biography, which was written by
    a colleague of Scheubner-Richter in the Ottoman Empire, and Kaiser's
    introduction, Scheubner-Richter took a commendable position in trying
    to avert the destruction of Armenians. His contacts varied from direct
    relations with the Armenian prelate of Erzurum (Smpad Saadetian), and
    the provincial governor (Tahsin Bey), to various intermediaries and
    Armenian deportees. Scheubner-Richter also communicated his concerns
    to the German ambassador Hans Von Wangenheim in Constantinople, and
    thus created an archival record of what he observed around him. He was
    not the only German consul in the Ottoman Empire who acted to save
    Armenians, yet as in other cases, the German foreign office was
    confronted with the hard reality that the fate of Ottoman Armenian was
    an internal Ottoman matter, while the German priority had to be the
    maintenance of the Turko-German alliance and winning the war.

    Consequently, German intercession on behalf of Armenians was limited,
    and this limitation allowed the Allied powers and some later
    commentators to allege German complicity in the destruction of Ottoman
    Armenians in 1915. A German Officer during the Armenian Genocide
    brings important new research into light for a more informed
    discussion and substantive analysis of the subject matter.

    According to Ara Sarafian, the publication of A German Officer during
    the Armenian Genocide is part of the Gomidas Institute's ongoing
    commitment to engage the Armenian Genocide issue in a critical
    manner. This publication is the Gomidas Institute's second publication
    addressing German involvement in the Armenian Genocide.

    For more information, contact Gomidas Institute, 42 Blythe Rd., London
    W14 0HA, England, Tel: (020) 7603 7242, Email: [email protected]
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