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  • The Armenian Genocide As Jihad

    THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AS JIHAD

    January 25, 2015

    by Richard L. Rubenstein

    New English Review -

    There is a 1919 silent film about the Armenian genocide, "Ravished
    Armenia," originally produced in Hollywood using Turkish documentary
    footage. It was based on a book by a survivor, Aurora Mardiganian,
    who also starred in the production. The film originally consisted of
    nine reels, most of which have been lost. Recently, a twenty-minute
    clip was found that contains brief scenes of many of the incidents
    that took place during the genocide.1

    Although low-definition, there is one terrible scene toward the end of
    the clip that is especially difficult to watch. Seldom, if ever, have I
    viewed a film scene that matches this one in sadistic obscenity. It is
    a crucifixion scene, but unlike Christian images of Christ on the cross
    that express symbolically the triumph of eternal life over evanescent
    human pain, this film's crucifixion scene carried a very different
    symbolic meaning. There are eight crosses in a row to which are nailed
    eight naked, young Armenian women. After the film offers a panoramic
    view of all of the crosses and their victims, it focuses on a single
    sufferer. Nailed to the cross, she is helplessly alive. One could
    tell by her eyes and facial movements that her cognitive functions
    were unimpaired as she awaited the painful doom of her crucifixion.

    In this writer's opinion, that scene symbolically expressed much
    that the Turks wanted to convey about their behavior towards both the
    Armenians and their religion. In 1915, there were no pocket-sized cell
    phones with high-definition video capabilities. Motion picture cameras
    were heavy instruments and the terrible scenes of the deportations,
    confiscations, sadistic brutality, rapine, outright murder of helpless
    Armenians, and the crucifixion of the Armenian maidens could not have
    been filmed without the involvement and consent of Turkish authorities.

    The perpetrators took the most sacred symbol of Christendom and turned
    it into a blasphemous obscenity, symbolically proclaiming absolute
    Muslim dominance. Nevertheless, something else was involved: women
    are the child bearers. Their wombs carry the next generation. No words
    were necessary. The message was clear: "We express our utter contempt
    for you and your religion. We intend to destroy your future. You have
    no human rights. We can do with you what ever we wish."

    Nevertheless, shortly after the film was released, Turks apparently
    had second thoughts about what could be made available publically.

    Since then, for almost a century, Turkish governments have vehemently
    rejected the charge that Turks committed genocide against the
    Armenians. The most Turks have been willing to acknowledge is that both
    the Turks and Armenians inflicted wartime harm on each other, thereby
    arguing for moral equivalence between Turkish genocidal violence and
    rare instances of Armenian defensive action. Admitting that there
    were massacres, Turkish authorities have insisted that the number of
    Armenians killed has nevertheless been greatly exaggerated.2 Moreover,
    in spite of the publication of a host of well-documented eye-witness
    reports and testimonies, Turkish governments have used their diplomatic
    influence to prevent governments, such as the United States, the United
    Kingdom, Israel and others, from taking any action that would validate
    the Armenian claim that a nearly successful attempt to exterminate the
    Armenians of the Ottoman empire took place during the first World War.3

    Admittedly, the subject is complex, but I concur with the overwhelming
    weight of scholarly opinion that affirms that genocide did take place.

    Yet while concurring with the judgment of groups such as the
    International Association of Genocide Scholars, my interest lies
    elsewhere: In view of the fact that post-war German governments have
    acknowledged the role of National Socialist Germany in planning and
    implementing the extermination of Europe's Jews, why have successive
    Turkish governments refuse to tread a similar path with regard to
    the Armenian victims?

    Briefly stated, while steadfastly denying that genocide took place,
    Turkish governments have also implied that, no matter how terrible
    Turkish behavior may have been, no crime was committed and the actions
    taken against the Armenians were fully justified. This is not the
    view that the Turkish government has publicly expressed. Nevertheless,
    no other view appears able to explain the consistent behavior of the
    Turkish governments for almost a century.

    In order to understand why, we must turn to the realm of religion
    in addition to politics and military affairs. This suggestion is in
    accord with the first words in Vahakn N. Dadrian's magisterial study
    of the Armenian genocides. Dadrian begins: "As a first step toward a
    full analysis of the nationality conflicts [in the Ottoman Empire],
    it is necessary to examine Islam as a major determinant in the genesis
    and escalation of these conflicts."4

    As is well known, the Ottoman Empire was governed as a theocratic
    state at the apex of which stood the Sultan, both the supreme head of
    state and, for Sunni Muslims, the Caliph and, as such, the successor
    to the Prophet and supreme protector of Islam.

    Moreover, Islam was an indispensable part of Turkish personal and
    national identity, even for those members of the Turkish elite who
    were unaware of the extent to which they were influenced by their own
    religious inheritance. According to Turkish historian, Taner Akcam,
    "...the Turks, as a ruling stratum (even though they themselves
    were not conscious of their Turkishness), and under the influence of
    Islamic thought, identified themselves with Islam and felt themselves
    superior to the empire's other religious groups. The idea of the
    "ruling nation" (Millet-I Hakime) dominated the thinking of the
    Ottoman-Turkish ruling elite."5

    According to Dadrian, the Young Turks or Ittihad, the Committee of
    Union and Progress, that gained power in 1908 and consolidated that
    power in 1913, were not "followers of the tenets of Islam." Dadrian
    adds, "While the Ittihad continued to run the State largely as a
    theocracy, its leaders were personally atheists and agnostics."6

    Nevertheless, although the ruling elite had a very elevated opinion
    of themselves and their empire in comparison with neighbors whom they
    had once dominated, the actual situation of the Empire throughout
    the nineteenth century was one of decline and defeat at the hands of
    European Christian powers and their own Christian subject peoples. One
    can argue that the process of decline began with the Ottoman defeat at
    Vienna in 1683. It accelerated in the nineteenth century when Greece
    (1820), Serbia (1867), and Romania (1878) gained their independence.

    In addition, Turkey lost Libya to Italy in the Italo-Turkish War of
    1911-12 and was defeated in the Albanian Revolt of 1912. The European
    borders of the Ottoman Empire shrank and those of their formerly
    Christian subjects expanded. There was a painful dissonance between
    the Young Turk image of themselves as leaders of the "ruling nation"
    and what was happening to their nation.

    Another series of humiliations came from the Capitulations, a series
    of treaties or contracts between European powers, especially France,
    and the Ottoman Empire in which the Empire limited its jurisdiction
    over those Christian domiciled in the Empire who were the subjects
    of Christian rulers. In general, traders and later other foreigners
    were exempt from local prosecution, taxation, conscription, and the
    searching of their homes. Initially, such treaties were not seen as
    humiliations although they did constitute a limitation on Ottoman
    sovereignty but by the beginning of the twentieth century that they
    were seen as such. After Word War I, they were finally abolished.

    According to Taner Akcam, an important Turkish scholar who teaches
    at Clark University, the second half of the nineteenth century
    witnessed a new problem for the Ottoman Empire: There was a very large
    in-migration of Muslim refugees from territories recently lost by the
    Ottoman state. There were also expulsions and the Muslim immigrants
    had nowhere else to go. While the Ottoman state was shrinking, the
    number of Muslim immigrants had become a serious demographic problem.

    The problem peaked in the 1912-13 Balkan wars, not long before the
    genocide was initiated in 1915.

    Akcam adds that until then, the Ottoman government solved its
    immigration problem on an ad hoc basis, but, in keeping with the
    modernizing and rationalizing bias of the Committee of Union and
    Progress, they decided to solve the problem systematically as part of
    a plan for the "homogenization" of Anatolia.7 In effect, plans for
    homogenization meant that Christians would either be expelled in a
    population exchange program, such as took place between Turkey and
    Greece, largely after the war, or the unwanted population would be
    exterminated, as happened with the Armenians.

    Unlike most Armenian scholars, Akcam had access to Turkish archives
    and found that before World War I, the Committee of Union and Progress
    had already formulated a detailed, rational plan "to free [themselves]
    of non-Turkish elements" in the Aegean region. When the war came, they
    were fully prepared to implement their project of "ethno-religious
    homogenization" of Anatolia.

    At this point, I would suggest a word of caution. Ronald Grigor Suny
    and other scholars have argued that the predominant motive for the
    murderous homogenization project was nationalism and there is no
    doubt that radical nationalism played a part. Nevertheless, I would
    argue that the most important motivation for the monumental "ethnic
    cleansing" projects was religious and specifically a consequence of
    the unchanging nature of certain aspects of Islam.

    Although the official religion of the Ottoman Empire was Islam, over
    the centuries the empire had conquered a number of non-Muslim nations.

    This resulted in a double problem: The empire was thinly spread
    and many of the subjugated nations had skills that the conquering
    Muslims needed but did not possess. The problem was solved by a
    system of structural inequality that has persisted wherever Islam
    has been dominant.

    According to Dadrian, the fundamental common law principle governing
    the relations between Muslim and non-Muslim subjects was a quasi-legal
    contract, the Akdi Zimmet (contract with the ruling nationality), in
    which the sovereign guaranteed non-Muslim subjects the safety of "their
    persons, their civil and religious liberties, and, conditionally,
    their property in exchange for the payment of poll and land taxes,
    and acquiescence to a set of social and legal disabilities"8

    In reality, the Akdi Zimmet was in spirit and substance the dhimma,
    the Muslim pact of submission that terminated the state of war with
    Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians and stipulated the conditions
    under which the subjugated "peoples of the book" were permitted
    domicile in Islamic lands.9 Strictly speaking, Islamic tradition
    envisages no such thing as enduring peace between faithful Muslims
    and infidels. There can be a truce when combat appears unlikely to
    succeed or when it serves Muslim convenience. There could also be
    conditional toleration in a multi-national, multi-religious empire
    based on an hierarchical gradation of status, such as the Ottoman in
    which the distinctions of rulers and ruled, Muslims and non-Muslim,
    were strictly maintained.10 This arrangement worked well until the
    nineteenth century when intervention by European powers, England,
    France, and Russia, that had provided a system of extraterritorial
    rights for their citizens living and trading in the Ottoman Empire,
    became a source of Turkish resentment.

    There had also been an hierarchical gradation of status in Christian
    Europe, but under the influence of the Enlightenment and the French
    Revolution, there was a definite move toward equality of legal, if
    not social, status in the countries of western Europe and the United
    State in which law was not thought of as unchanging in character
    or divine in origin. This does not mean that there were no forces
    for change in Islamic law. There were, but the agency of change was
    interpretation by recognized scholarly authorities who maintained
    the fiction of an unchanging law while change was effected through
    casuistry and interpretation. There was, incidentally, a comparable
    phenomenon in traditional rabbinic law.

    There was, however, one area in which interpretation could change
    nothing, the legally enforced social, religious, and political
    inferiority of non-Muslims to Muslims. Nor did this change when
    the modernizing Young Turks, the Committee of Union and Progress,
    took power in 1908. Although some Christians were under the mistaken
    impression that the Young Turks favored an Ottoman polity based upon
    equality of status, they were quickly disabused of the notion. The
    Young Turks were as committed, as were their predecessors, to the
    idea of Muslims as the ruling nation and non-Muslim as, at best,
    tolerated infidels. In reality, the defeats suffered by the Ottoman
    Empire made them, if anything, more committed to the idea, so much
    so that they were willing to commit mass murder for it.

    The idea of Muslims as the ruling nation is best understood by two
    related concepts, dhimmitude and dhimmi. According to Bat Ye'or,
    who has done much to acquaint western readers with the terms:

    Dhimmitude designates the civilizations of peoples conquered by jihad
    over the past thirteen centuries and subjected to shari'a law. A
    "dhimmi" is a non-Muslim belonging to the civilization of dhimmitude.

    Having surrendered to the armies of jihad, the dhimmi loses
    his territorial rights and his sovereignty, but in exchange he is
    protected by a contract (dhimma) against jihad--the obligatory and
    irrevocable war against the infidels. This protection provides some
    relative security, conditioned upon a series of demeaning restrictions
    and discrimination.11

    The Christians of the Ottoman Empire were all descendants of conquered
    peoples and were, as such, dhimmis. It made no difference that, in
    many cases, their ancestors had settled the land long before Muslim
    conquest. The Muslims were the conquerors and the Christians were
    the conquered peoples and were treated as such.

    There was only one way a conquered person or community could achieve,
    at least theoretically, full equality with his or her overlords,
    conversion to Islam which made a person a member of the Muslim umma
    or nation. Not only did equal status depend on religion, so too did
    subordinate status. Put differently, personal and political status
    were religiously legitimated.

    As Peter Balakian and other scholars have shown, the Christian
    population of the Ottoman Empire was both wealthier and better educated
    than the Muslim population. This is not an uncommon phenomenon where
    there is a system of structured inequality. Apart from land-owning
    and control of the peasantry, the personal characteristics valued
    by a dominant group are those that facilitate dominance, such as
    bureaucratic skills and military leadership. Money making skills that
    require advanced schooling, such as large-scale trading, finance,
    and commerce are looked down upon.

    In the Ottoman Empire, Christians took advantage of the schools and
    colleges, largely established by American Protestant missionaries,
    or they sought training at European universities. As a result, they
    acquired the skills necessary for wealth, but they also became the
    objects of envy, resentment, and hostility.

    During the nineteenth-century, Armenians tended to rise above the Turks
    economically. The more affluent sent their sons abroad to receive
    their education in a rapidly modernizing Europe. As Christians,
    they had links to Europe that were not available to the Muslim
    majority. Diaspora Armenians sent home remittances and brought back
    to their families in the empire new machines and technology. When the
    sale of Muslim lands to non-Muslims became permitted by the reforms
    of 1856, Armenians had the resources to buy up large landholdings,
    especially after 1870.12 This resulted in a reversal of status in a
    world newly oriented toward industry and commerce.

    Resentment was bitter and fed upon itself, so that Sultan Abdul Hamid
    II's efforts to undo the emancipatory reforms received widespread
    Muslim support.

    A related source of Turkish resentment stemmed from the fact that
    the Armenians were a "market dominant minority."13 As noted above,
    discriminated minorities, barred from service in the military or
    the state bureaucracy and subject to other forms of social and
    vocational discrimination, tend to rely on education and training
    for their economic survival and well-being to a much greater extent
    than do indigenous majorities. Such minorities are also likely to
    be concentrated in urban centers and to specialize in urban trades
    and crafts, finance, and the professions. Their capital consists in
    what is in their heads and is easily transportable. Often subject
    to expulsion, they formed diaspora networks that were intrinsically
    advantageous in both finance and commerce. This had been the case with
    the European Jews before World War II, the Chinese in Southeast Asia,
    the Lebanese in West Africa, and the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.

    During the first half of the nineteenth century, reformist sultans,
    such as Mahmud II (1789-1839) and Abdulmecid (1823-1861), as well
    as prominent European-educated Turkish bureaucrats, recognized that
    traditional religious and military institutions could no longer meet
    the needs of the modern empire. Among the changes introduced were
    universal conscription, and educational and institutional reforms. The
    measures were known as the Tanzimat reforms the objective of which
    was the creation of a common Ottoman identity in the empire for
    Muslims and non-Muslims alike. The policy was initiated with the
    Imperial Rescript of the Rose Chamber of 1839 that stipulated that
    the different peoples within the empire were declared equal before
    the law. The reforms guaranteed the life, honor, and property of all
    Ottoman subjects, regardless of race or religion. In 1856, a second,
    expanded edict of reform asserted the equality of all Ottoman subjects,
    Muslim and non-Muslim.14

    The era of reform came to an end shortly after the accession of
    Sultan Abdul Hamid II (1842-1918). The response, especially from the
    Armenians, was not long in coming. In the 1880s, Armenian exiles in
    Europe, influenced by western ideas about national self-determination
    and the "people" as the source of political legitimacy, began to
    campaign for national autonomy. The Armenians did not initially seek
    full political independence, but nationalism provided a powerful
    legitimation for separation from the multinational Ottoman Empire. As
    such, it was profoundly subversive of the imperial order. Armenian
    rebels in the Caucasus organized raids into Ottoman territory. While
    the vast majority of Armenians sought amelioration of their situation
    within the empire, by 1890, an Armenian Revolutionary Federation was
    established in Tiflis (Tbilisi, the capital of Georgia) that demanded
    Armenian freedom "with gun in hand."15 In 1891, the Sultan responded
    by raising a force of Kurdish Muslim irregulars and sanctioning
    their predatory attacks on Armenians.16 Within a year, the Kurds had
    formed cavalry units totaling 15,000 men. Assured of legal immunity,
    the Kurds attacked and spread terror among Armenians in the capital
    and the hinterland. In 1893 Armenian revolutionaries posted placards
    in many towns and cities calling on Muslims to rise up against the
    Sultan's oppression. Since, as noted, the Sultan was also the Caliph,
    combining the traditional functions of political and religious
    leadership, the Armenian challenge was seen by traditionalists as a
    radical breach of thedhimma.

    Actual massacres first broke out in the summer of 1894 in Sasun in
    southern Armenia. Turkish authorities used Armenian resistance to a
    system of double taxation and officially sanctioned Kurdish violence
    and sexual abuse of Armenian women as a pretext for indiscriminate
    rape and slaughter.17 News of the outrages quickly spread to Europe
    and Britain, France and Russia demanded a commission of inquiry. These
    same powers also sought to persuade the Ottoman government to adopt
    reforms in those provinces where most of the Armenians were domiciled.

    The Sultan made an empty show of accepting some reforms, although he
    had no intention of implementing them. In September, 1895, Armenians
    demonstrated in Constantinople in order to pressure the Sultan and
    the European powers to implement the reforms. The police and radical
    Muslim elements in the capital city responded with ten days of massacre
    and terror. About the same time, an unprovoked, premeditated massacre
    began in the city of Trebizond on the Black Sea (Adalian).

    The massacres then spread through almost every town with a significant
    number of Armenian inhabitants. There was nothing spontaneous about
    the massacres. They were in fact military operations that began and
    ended daily with the call of a bugle.18

    The worst massacre occurred in the city of Urfa, known to the ancient
    world as Edessa, where Armenians constituted about a third of the
    population. In December 1895, after a two-month siege of the Armenian
    quarter, Armenian leaders gathered in their cathedral and requested
    official Turkish protection. The Turkish commander agreed but then
    surrounded the Cathedral of Urfa, after which Turkish troops and
    the mob rampaged through the Armenian quarter burning, looting,
    and killing all adult males. 2,500 Armenians were burned alive in
    the cathedral. Dadrian comments that wherever possible the killing
    was done in such a way as to emphasize the religious nature of the
    deed.19 Lord Kinross describes the manner in which the slaughter was
    assimilated to a sacrificial ritual: "When a large group of young
    Armenians were brought before a sheikh, he had them thrown down on
    their backs and held by their hands and feet. Then, in the words of
    an observer, he recited verses of the Koran and "cut their throats
    after the Mecca rite of sacrificing sheep"

    The mosques were places of incitement; the Christian churches served
    as slaughterhouses. Murderous mobs were urged on by their imams. The
    worst butchery often followed Friday services. Dadrian also comments
    on the importance of local religious authorities in the implementation
    of the massacres. The sultan in distant Constantinople could issue
    orders for the massacres, often framed in covert language, but the
    interpretation, planning, and implementation of such orders required
    the leadership of local authority figures. Because of the empire's
    theocratic nature, local religious leaders used their authority to
    assure the mob that the massacres were in accordance with the Seriat
    (shari'a).20 With very few exceptions, the muftis [jurisconsults who
    dispensed formal legal opinions], kadis [magistrates and guardians
    of law and order], ulemas [Muslim theologians] and mullahs played a
    crucial role in conferring religious legitimacy.

    The reactions of both the Muslim and non-Muslim populations were
    recorded by Cevet Paþa, an astute observer and a high Ottoman
    official:

    In accordance with this ferman [edict] Muslim and non-Muslim subjects
    were to be made equal in all rights. This had a very adverse effect
    on the Muslims. Previously, one of the four points adopted as the
    basis for peace agreements had been that certain privileges were
    accorded to Christians on condition that these did not infringe on the
    sovereign authority of the government. Now the question of (specific)
    privileges lost its significance; in the whole range of government,
    the non-Muslims were forthwith to be deemed the equals of the Muslims.

    Many Muslims began to grumble: 'Today we have lost our sacred national
    rights, won by the blood of our fathers and forefathers. At a time
    when the Islamic millet was the ruling millet, it was deprived of
    this sacred right. This is a day of weeping and mourning for the
    people of Islam.'

    As for the non-Muslims, this day, when they left the status of
    raya [dhimmi] and gained equality with the ruling millet, was a
    day of rejoicing. But the patriarchs and other spiritual chiefs
    were displeased, because their appointments were incorporated in
    the ferman. Another point was that whereas in former times, in the
    Ottoman state, the communities were ranked, with the Muslims first,
    then the Greeks, then the Armenians, then the Jews, now all of them
    were put on the same level. Some Greeks objected to this, saying:
    'The government has put us together with the Jews. We were content
    with the supremacy of Islam.'

    As a result of all this, just as the weather was overcast when the
    ferman was read in the audience chamber, so the faces of most of
    those present were grim. Only on the faces of a few of our Frenchified
    gentry dressed in the garb of Islam could expressions of joy be seen.

    Some notorious characters of this type were seen and heard to say:
    'If the non-Muslims are spread among the Muslims, neighborhoods will
    become mixed, the price of our properties will rise, and civilized
    amenities will expand.' On this account they expressed satisfaction.21

    Even before Abdul Hamid II abolished the reforms, their likely
    negative consequences of were already understood in 1856 by Grand
    Vizier, Mustafa ReÅ~_id Pasha (1800-1858), a brilliant diplomat. In
    a memorandum addressed to the sultan in the wake of the reforms of
    that year, ReÅ~_id foresaw the possibility of a "great slaughter"
    as a result of the efforts to establish the civic equality of all
    Ottoman subjects through legal enactment.22

    ReÅ~_id's views were prescient. Muslim traditionalists regarded the
    emancipation of Jews and Christians as profoundly offensive. Before
    emancipation, payment of the jizya, the poll tax imposed upon all
    male dhimmis, symbolized their subjection, inferior status, and
    suspension of jihad. By voiding dhimmi disabilities, traditionalists
    believed the dhimma had been rendered null and void. In their eyes,
    dhimmi emancipation did not mean an end to civic disabilities but
    the restoration of the state of war against the dhimmis. Under the
    circumstances, the traditionalists believed that, at least in theory,
    the umma, the Muslim community, could commit any outrage against
    them.23Moreover, these actions were regarded "not only as justified
    but also as mandatory and even as praiseworthy"24

    Peter Balakian has described one of the most agonizing disabilities
    imposed upon the Armenians because of their dhimmi status:

    Another burden solely for the Armenians was the kishlak, or
    winter-quartering obligation, which enabled Kurds and Turks to quarter
    themselves, their families, and their cattle in Armenian homes during
    the long winter months. The fact that the Kurdish way of life was
    nomadic and rough and the Armenian dwellings did not allow for much
    privacy made the intrusion unbearable, and knowing that the unarmed
    Armenians had neither physical nor legal recourse, a well-armed Kurd
    or Turk could not only steal his host's possessions but could rape
    or kidnap the women and girls of the household with impunity."25

    The massacres of 1894-1896 constituted an unprecedented level of
    violence on the part of the Ottoman Empire against one of its subject
    peoples. In spite of pressure from the Great Powers, Abdul Hamid II
    was clearly determined to frustrate Armenian hopes of reform. He also
    sought to crush any Armenian attempt to organize politically.

    Estimates of the number of dead range from 100,000 to 300,000. Tens
    of thousands emigrated; thousands were forcibly converted to Islam.

    Moreover, the Sultan understood that he could deal with his subjects
    with utter impunity because the Great Powers were more interested
    in good relations with his empire than the fate of a minority
    subject-people. From the sultan's point of view, the Armenians got
    what they deserved. By seeking to overcome their religiously-defined
    subordinate status and seeking the help of foreign rulers, they had
    broken their contract of submission and had placed themselves in
    a state of war with his realm in which no violence, expropriation,
    or indignity was out of bounds as we see in the crucifixion of the
    eight Armenian maidens.

    Abdul Hamid's massacres can be characterized as pre-genocidal. The
    slaughter had irretrievably marginalized and dehumanized the
    Armenians. The massacres thus prepared the way for the full-scale
    genocide and ethnic homogenization perpetrated by the modernizing
    twentieth-century regime of the Committee of Union and Progress,
    the Young Turks.

    Nevertheless, the political agenda of the Young Turks was different
    from the sultan's. They were a Turkish reform party that responded to
    the weakness of the Ottoman Empire as manifested in Austria-Hungary's
    annexation of Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1908, Italy's seizure of Libya
    and the island of Rhodes in 1912, the independence of Albania in 1912,
    and the Ottoman defeat in the First Balkan War of 1912-1913 that led
    to the loss of much of the Ottoman territory in Europe. Moreover, as
    noted, in the empire itself, Muslims had been losing ground to dhimmi
    minorities, the Greeks, Jews, and Armenians, who dominated the world
    of commerce and the professions. The Young Turks were modernizing,
    rationalizing "progressives" who understood, as did the Japanese
    elites at the time of the Meiji Reformation of 1866-1869, that,
    absent modernization, the independence and territorial integrity of
    their respective empires would be at risk.

    In 1908, the Young Turks effectively overthrew Abdul Hamid II's
    traditionalist regime. In their initial enthusiasm, many Armenians
    made an understandable but deadly miscalculation. They assumed that
    the overthrow of an inefficient and corrupt traditional regime by
    one that was less corrupt and more rational augured well for their
    own community. The Young Turks had given public assurances of equal
    treatment of the empire's non-Muslim minorities, but the logic of
    their modernizing revolution made ethnic homogenization rather than
    diversity the almost inevitable political outcome.

    The first generation of Turkish revolutionaries were divided on the
    issue of working with the Armenians, as was evident at the First
    Congress of the Ottoman Opposition that met in Paris in February,
    1902. Some of the more liberal Young Turks thought that an alliance
    with the Armenians would get a favorable response from the Europeans.

    Armenian activists declared that cooperation with the Turkish
    revolutionaries was conditional on the implementation of reforms
    in the six Anatolian vilayets (provinces) with significant Armenian
    populations to be guaranteed by the European powers. The conditions
    were acceptable to the majority attending the Congress but were
    vehemently rejected by the nationalist minority. The latter regarded
    European support as wholly at odds with their fundamental objective,
    the creation of a strong, independent Ottoman realm in which the
    traditional status hierarchy would remain more or less intact. The
    views of the minority ultimately carried greater weight as they
    represented the dominant tendency among most Young Turk organizations
    and newspapers.26

    According to Ronald Grigor Suny and other scholars, in the first decade
    of the twentieth century there was a shift by the Young Turks from
    what he characterizes as an "Ottomanist orientation" that emphasized
    the equality of themillets in a multinational society to a more
    Turkish nationalist position that stressed the predominance of the
    ethnic Turks over the subordinate communities that were regarded as
    "the protected flock of the Sultan," Armenian, Catholic, Jewish,
    and Orthodox.27 Until World War I, loyalty to the empire remained
    part of Young Turk rhetoric, but it was increasingly supplanted by
    nationalist ideology. The shift placed the Armenian political leaders
    in a difficult position. Their community was to be found on both sides
    of the Ottoman-Russian border. In addition, the Armenians were split
    into two factions, largely along socioeconomic lines. The Dashnak,
    members of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Hai Heghapokhakan
    Dashnaksutiun), represented the Armenian petty bourgeoisie of Anatolia;
    the patriarchate represented the wealthy commercial class of the
    capital and other larger cities.28 The Dashnak ultimately sought
    autonomy if not complete Armenian independence. The patriarchate and
    its allies sought a restoration of their traditional privileges as
    dhimmis in the millet system that was threatened by the centralizing
    tendencies of government.

    When the war began, the Dashnak urged Armenians to volunteer in the
    Ottoman army. In Tsarist Russia, the Dashnak urged Armenians to enlist
    in the Tsarist army. As a result, both the Tsarist and the Ottoman
    governments suspected the Armenians of disloyalty. The situation was
    aggravated by the dangers confronting the Ottoman Empire in 1914 and
    1915. In November, 1914, over the objections of field commanders,
    Turkish forces led by Enver Pasha, Minister of War and one of the
    ruling Young Turk triumvirate, attempted to regain land in the Caucasus
    lost to the Russians in 1878. Enver's effort ended catastrophically
    at Sarikamis, a Turkish town in the Caucasus. In the west, Djemal
    Pasha led an attack in February 1915 on the Suez Canal that also ended
    in defeat. In March 1915, in response to a Russian request for aid,
    Allied naval forces under Admiral Sir John de Robeck, Commander of
    the Aegean Squadron, made preparations to force a passage through
    the Dardanelles Strait. The evacuation of Constantinople began and
    the state archives and the empire's gold reserves were sent away.

    Most observers anticipated the empire's collapse. However, on March 18,
    1915, as a result of an unsuspected Turkish minefield in the Strait,
    five Allied warships were destroyed. The Allied attempt to force the
    Strait ended in disaster.29

    When the Young Turks contemplated evacuating from Constantinople to
    the Anatolian heartland, they could not ignore the issue of security.

    Anatolia's population was mixed. In addition to Turks, it was inhabited
    by Greeks, Armenians and Kurds whose loyalty was suspect in Turkish
    eyes. Some Greek civilians were deported from the coastal areas,
    but those deportations were not genocidal in intent. In the first
    months of 1915, the Young Turks responded to the defeat at Sarikamis
    by blaming the Armenians whom they accused of sympathizing with the
    Russians.30 The Ottoman authorities disarmed and demobilized Armenian
    soldiers who were then forced into labor brigades and compelled to
    dig their own graves before being shot.31

    Rumors of the slaughter spread in the Armenian villages.32 On April
    20, 1915, the Armenians of Van rose up in self-defense when Djevdet
    Bey, the recently appointed governor of Van and Enver Pasha's
    brother-in-law, demanded that the Armenian leadership hand over
    four thousand men for the Ottoman army's labor battalions. With
    no illusions concerning the fate of the men if they complied,
    the leadership refused, an action depicted by the Turks as a
    revolutionary uprising.33 The Armenians held out in Van until May
    14, 1915, when the city was captured by the Russians with the aid
    of some Armenian guerrillas who proclaimed Van the capital of an
    independent Armenian republic. When the Turks recaptured the city in
    July, they were infuriated by what they regarded as Armenian treason
    and launched a massacre, butchering the men, and robbing, raping and
    leaving the women to die. Dr. Clarence B. Ussher, an American medical
    missionary in Van, reported that 55,000 Armenians were killed there
    in May.34 On April 24, 1915 the Ministry of the Interior ordered
    the arrest of Armenian parliamentary deputies, former ministers,
    and some intellectuals. Thousands were arrested, including 2,345 in
    the capital, most of whom were subsequently executed.35

    On May 27, 1915, a new emergency law was promulgated, the Temporary
    Law of Deportation. The law authorized military leaders to order the
    deportation of population groups on suspicion of espionage, treason,
    and military necessity. With this sweeping authorization and without
    explicitly naming the Armenians, the Turkish government arrogated to
    itself the genocidal deportation of its Armenian population. Shortly
    thereafter, Djevdet Bey, Van's governor, gave an order to "exterminate
    all Armenian males of 12 years and older" in that border region.36
    Actual genocide had begun in April, 1915, with the rounding up and
    deportation of Armenian men in one population center after another.

    The men were usually imprisoned for several days, after which they
    were marched out of town and massacred. Later women, children and
    older men were also deported. The women were often raped and mutilated
    before being killed. Thousands of the female deportees were given
    the choice of conversion to Islam or death. Having lost their men
    and completely at the mercy of hostile Turks and Kurds, many of the
    women converted. We return to that subject below.

    In June, 1915, the government began to use the railroads to expedite
    deportation and extermination. Freight cars were employed to transport
    thousands to remote areas where they were left to starve to death
    while being assaulted by the ravages of nature and human malice. Many
    were murdered outright. The Armenian deportees were among the first
    men and women in the twentieth century to learn that human rights
    are inseparable from political status. Having been deprived by the
    Ottoman government of all political status, save that of outlaw,
    there was no abuse that could not with impunity be inflicted upon them.

    The extermination project was thoroughly modern in spirit and
    implementation from its initial planning stages to its execution.37
    Mass extermination was advocated in the planning sessions as the
    appropriate "scientific" response to the universal struggle of the
    races for survival.38 Like other modernizing elites of the period,
    the largely European-trained Young Turks interpreted the relations
    between races and nations in Social Darwinist terms. Above all, the
    Young Turks had a reliable, centralized bureaucratic network. Taalat
    Bey, one of the ruling triumvirs and Minister of the Interior, did not
    entrust the assignment to old-fashioned provincial bureaucrats but
    sent Young Turk bureaucrats to act as his personal representatives
    and, when necessary, to punish governors and local governors who,
    out of compassion or greed, failed to carry out orders. There was a
    special organization with responsibility for organizing the massacres.

    At the local level, much of the actual killing was carried out by
    death squads who were given the name of "Butcher Battalions."39

    Taalat Bey spelled out the objectives of his government in a telegram
    to the Police Office in Aleppo, Syria, dated September 15, 1915:

    It has been reported that by order of the Committee [of Union and
    Progress] the Government has determined completely to exterminate
    the Armenians living in Turkey. Those who refuse to obey this order
    cannot be regarded as friends of the Government. Regardless of the
    women, children or invalids, and however deplorable the methods of
    destruction may seem, an end is to be put to their existence [i.e.,
    the Armenians] without paying any heed to feeling or conscience."

    (emphasis added).

    Taalat,

    Minister of the Interior40

    The Young Turks characterized their aggression as "deportations," and
    insisted that they were acting in the interests of national security.

    However, it was quickly apparent that the number of victims far
    exceeded the nineteenth-century massacres. In 1915 deportation had
    acquired a new and sinister meaning. It had become an instrument of
    extermination in which no fewer than one million Armenians perished.41

    Many volumes have been written about the Armenian genocide. One
    of the earliest was also one of the most comprehensive, the report
    assembled by Viscount James Bryce in 1916 in partnership with Historian
    Arnold Toynbee and presented to Sir Edward Grey, the British Foreign
    Secretary. The authors concluded their report with an observation
    concerning the slaughter: "It was a deliberate, systematic attempt
    to eradicate the Armenian population throughout the Ottoman Empire
    and it has certainly met with a very large measure of success."42

    To this day, Turkish authorities have denied that genocide ever took
    place, and insist that their actions were necessary defensive measures
    against a disloyal and rebellious minority.43 That claim has been
    refuted by the vast majority of responsible scholars. Nevertheless,
    the Turkish government has used every threat in its diplomatic arsenal
    to prevent friendly governments from officially taking issue with
    its denial of genocide.

    As noted above, there is little reason to doubt that Abdul
    Hamid's massacres were in large measure religiously motivated. The
    sultan-caliph was responsible for mass murder on an unprecedented
    scale but extermination of the entire community was beyond his
    capacities. Not so, the Young Turks. Within months after Turkey's
    entrance into the Great War, the decision to exterminate the Armenians
    had been taken. When the deed was done, the justifications the Young
    Turks offered were largely political and economic.

    When I first wrote about the Armenian genocide of 1915, I stressed the
    modernity of the enterprise and its economic, political and military
    motives.44 I did not consider the possibility that the perpetrators'
    motives might have included a very important religious component.

    Today, I would argue that religion was an indispensable component in
    the motivation for genocide. It was certainly an indispensable element
    in defining the otherness of non-Muslims in the Ottoman Empire. I would
    further argue that the crimes perpetrated against the Armenians were
    regarded by the Turks as legitimate defensive methods of dealing with
    dhimmis who had violated the conditions of the dhimma, and, hence,
    were outlaws for whom everything, including life, property, freedom,
    and family, was forfeit. I would also argue that the persistent Turkish
    genocide denial - so different from the German way of dealing with
    their genocide - has been due, at least in part, to the Turkish belief
    that they did no wrong in exterminating the Armenians, a belief that
    rests ultimately on the traditions of jihad and the dhimma.

    In the massacres of 1894-1896, Turkish authorities were quite open
    about religious legitimations. In 1914, religion was once again
    an important component in the conduct of Turkish authorities, this
    time in the way the war was initiated and its purposes defined. On
    November 2, 1914, the Ottoman Empire declared war on the Entente
    powers, Britain, France, Russia, and their allies. On November 13,
    the Ottoman Sultan, in his capacity, as Caliph, issued an appeal
    for jihad. The next day Mustafa Hayri Bey, the Sheikh-ul-Islam, and
    as such the chief Sunni religious authority in the Ottoman world,
    issued a formal (and inflammatory) declaration of jihad "against
    infidels and enemies of Islam." Jihad pamphlets in Arabic were also
    distributed in mosques throughout the Muslim world that offered a
    detailed plan of operations for the assassination and extermination
    of all "unbelievers" except those of German nationality, the empire's
    wartime ally.45 Killing squads and their leaders were "motivated by
    both the ideology of jihad and pan-Turkism influenced by European
    nationalism."46 While the practical influence of the jihad on the
    masses was limited, "it later facilitated the government's program
    of genocide against the Armenians."47 It is also worth noting that
    although the Sheikh-ul-Islam was customarily appointed by the Sultan,
    Hayri Bey was appointed by the Committee of Union and Progress,
    the Young Turks who were to instigate the genocide.

    According to historian Ara Sarafian, in addition to the killings and
    general massacres, a large number of Armenians were "'abducted,'
    'carried off,' or 'converted to Islam'"48 Sarafian argues that
    "the fate of this latter class of Armenians was part of the same
    genocidal calculus as those who were murdered." It is estimated that
    in 1915-1916 between 100,000 and 200,000 Armenians, most of whom
    were women and children, escaped death by converting to Islam. The
    absorption of these converts into the Muslim community had the same
    objective as outright genocide, the elimination of the Christian
    Armenian community as a demographic presence in the Ottoman Empire. In
    addition to killing a very large number of Armenians through forced
    marches and starvation, the deportations served to weaken and terrify
    women and children who had lost their male protectors before or during
    the deportations. According to Sarafian, "...young women and children
    were rendered prime candidates for absorption into Muslim households
    after they were isolated from their families and terrorized during
    the forced marches and execution of their elders"49

    Sarafian contends, with considerable justice, that the authorities were
    implementing a "single policy of destruction" in both the outright
    murder of adult males and in the absorption of Armenian women and
    children into the Muslim community. The same Ottoman bureaucrats who
    controlled the deportations were also in charge of the conversion
    program. In the initial stages of the assault on the Armenians,
    there were "voluntary" conversions. Some individuals were selected by
    individual Muslims for absorption into their households. In addition,
    government agencies distributed Armenians to Muslim families. Children
    in government-sponsored orphanages were converted and directly absorbed
    into the Muslim community.

    Events in Trebizond are illustrative of how the program functioned.

    Between July 1 and July 18, 1915, five deportation convoys left
    Trebizond. Oscar Heizer, the American Consul, reported that most of
    the deportees were killed by their guards shortly after leaving.50
    Approximately 3,000 children, girls up to 15 years old and boys
    no older than ten, were placed in a number of houses designated by
    the Turks as "orphanages." Another 300 were housed in the American
    missionary school which was turned into an orphanage. Both orphanages
    were subsequently closed down by an official sent from Constantinople
    to supervise the extermination of the Armenians. Some children were
    drowned by the Turks; others were distributed to Muslim households
    where, according to Heizer, they were assimilated as Muslims within
    weeks.51 Elsewhere, U.S. Consul Leslie Davis reported on the passage
    of thousands of deportees through Harpoot which was situated on a
    principal route to the deserts of Syria. Davis wrote that hardly any
    men had survived among the deportees. Subject to constant beatings,
    with little or no food or water, the victims were rapidly dying. The
    gendarmes guarding the Armenians refused to permit them to leave
    the convoy or to receive aid from American missionaries. They did,
    however, permit Turks to visit the convoys with doctors to select
    "the prettiest girls" for their own purposes. Davis further reported
    that the Turks were not only seeking to exterminate the Armenians;
    they were also seeking to absorb a large number as Muslims. Sarafian
    concludes that there was a mass transfer of Armenians into Muslim
    households in 1915. By destroying the Armenian social structure in the
    early stages of the genocide through the murder of young men, heads
    of families, and community leaders, the Turks were able to garner
    "the ideal candidates for absorption" into Muslim households and the
    general Muslim population.52

    As cruel as this program was, it was fundamentally different
    from the Nazi Final Solution. Suny has observed that "To a
    considerable degree, religious differences were transmuted by both
    the Armenians and the Turks into racial and national differences,
    far more indelible and immutable than religion"53 Nevertheless,
    Suny's qualifier, "To a considerable degree" is important. For the
    Nazis, the racial divide between the so-called Aryans and Non-Aryans
    was absolute and unbridgeable. In the National Socialist universe,
    there was no room for an absorption program for Non-Aryans, save for
    a miniscule number of "Honorary Aryans." Some Poles and others with
    the appropriate physical characteristics could be absorbed, but not
    the Jews. By contrast, even in genocide, religion made a difference
    in the Ottoman Empire. Conversion could and did save some Armenians
    even as it destroyed their community. Moreover, as noted, both the
    extermination and the conversion process were fully consistent with
    Islamic tradition in the eyes of the Turks.

    Nor were the Armenians the only Christian minority eliminated by
    the Turks, albeit by somewhat gentler means. In January, 1923, after
    Greece's failed invasion of Turkey's Anatolian mainland and Turkey's
    repudiation of the 1920 Treaty of Sèvres, at Turkey's insistence both
    countries agreed to an "exchange" of populations. Between 1923 and
    1930, 1.25 million "Greeks" were "repatriated" from Turkey to Greece;
    a smaller number of "Turks" departed from Greece to Turkey. However,
    as Bernard Lewis points out, the exchanges did not imply acceptance
    of the European principle of nationality in which Greeks and Turks,
    "unwilling or unable to live as national minorities among aliens,"
    elected to return to their homeland and live among their own people.

    In reality, the great majority of Anatolia's "Greeks" spoke little
    or no Greek. They spoke Turkish among themselves although they wrote
    in the Greek script. Similarly, many of the "Turks" in Greece and
    Crete spoke Greek among themselves and knew little or no Turkish. The
    expulsions were actually based on religion. Turkish-speaking Christians
    faithful to the Greek Orthodox Church were expelled to Greece, a
    "homeland" they had never known, while Greek-speaking Muslims were
    expelled to Turkey.54 The Armenian genocide, the absorption-conversion
    program, and what was, in effect, the expulsion of Turkey's "Greeks"
    all shared a common objective, the elimination of a significant
    Christian demographic presence from Turkey. The methods varied,
    but all three can be seen as religiously-motivated state-sponsored
    programs of population elimination.

    Finally, I take note of an authoritative report based entirely on Arab
    sources entitled "Contemporary Islamist Ideology Authorizing Genocidal
    Murder" by Yigal Carmon in which he demonstrates that today's radical
    Islamists regard genocide as a legitimate weapon against those whom
    they regard as enemies of Islam.55 Holding that Islam is now under
    attack, they see unremitting jihad as both defensive in character and
    the single most important Muslim religious obligation. It is obligatory
    for Muslims without restriction or limitation. No weapons or types
    of warfare are to be excluded. Without exception, all infidels are
    to be fought and, barring conversion, are to be exterminated. I must,
    however, stress that these are the views of the most radical elements
    within contemporary Islam. We do not know the extent to which the
    extremists can persuade or compel the Islamic mainstream to share
    their views.

    _________________ ________________________________

    [1]
    http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/A_Letter_from_The_International_Association_of_Gen ocide_Scholars
    .

    [2] See, "Inflated Figures of Armenian Genocide & Credibility,"

    [3] See the text of an 'open letter from the members of the
    International Association of Genocide Scholars to Prime Minister Tayyip
    Erdogan of Turkey, dated June 7, 2005, calling on him " to acknowledge
    the responsibility of a previous [Turkish] government for the
    genocide of the Armenian people, as the German government and people
    have done in the case of the Holocaust." The text is available at:
    http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/A_Letter_from_The_International_Association_of_Gen ocide_Scholars

    [4] Vahakn N. Dadrian, The History of the Armenian Genocide: Ethnic
    Conflict from the Balkans to Anatolia to the Caucasus (Providence:
    Berghahn Books, 1995), p. 3.

    [5] Taner Akcam, The Genocide of the Arrmenians and the Silence of
    the Turks, p. 49.

    http://www.wbarrow.co.uk/rememberarmenia/pdfs_in_chapters/04_armenia2_turk_affirms.pdf
    .

    [6] Dadrian, The History of the Armenian Genocide, 5.

    [7] Akcam, op. cit., Kindle location 1239.

    [8] Dadrian, The History of the Armenian Genocide, 4.

    [9] Bat Ye'or, Islam and Dhimmitude: Where Civilizations Collide
    (Madison, NJ, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2002) 37-38.

    [10] Suny, "Religion, Ethnicity," 30-31.

    [11] Bat Ye'or, Europe, Globalization, and the Coming of the Universal
    Caliphate (Rowman & Littlefield, Kindle Edition), p.1.

    [12] Suny, "Religion, Ethnicity," 39.

    [13] For an exploration of the phenomenon of market-dominant
    minorities, see Amy Chua, World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market
    Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability. (New York,
    NY: Doubleday, 2003)

    [14] On the Tanzimat Reforms, see Dadrian, The History of the Armenian
    Genocide, 25-27, 32-33.

    [15] Lord Kinross (John Balfour, 3rd Baron Kinross), The Ottoman
    Centuries: The Rise and Fall of the Turkish Empire. (New York, NY:
    William Morrow, 1977), 556-557.

    [16] Dadrian, The History of the Armenian Genocide, 45-47.

    [17] On the origins of the Sasun massacres, see Balakian, The Burning
    Tigris, 54- 56 and Dadrian, The History of the Armenian Genocide,
    114-116.

    [18] Kinross, The Ottoman Centuries, 559.

    [19] Dadrian, The History of the Armenian Genocide, 147.

    [20] Dadrian, The History of the Armenian Genocide, 149.

    [21] Benjamin Braude and Bernard Lewis, Christians and Jews in the
    Ottoman Empire: The Functioning of a Plural Society (New York: Holmes
    and Meier Publishers, 1982), 30.

    [22] J. C. Hurewitz, Diplomacy in the Near and Middle East, A
    Documentary Record: 1535-1914 (Princeton: Princeton University Press,
    1956), Vol. 1, 154;

    [23] See "Infidel Status in the Ottoman Empire" in Balakian, The
    Burning Tigris, 40-43.

    [24] Bat Ye'or, The Dhimmi: Jews and Christians under Islam
    (Rutherford, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1985), 101.

    [25] Balakian, The Burning Tigris, 41-42.

    [26] Suny, "Religion, Ethnicity," 46-47.

    [27] Suny, "Religion, Ethnicity," 47.

    [28] Braude and Lewis, Christians and Jews, 418.

    [29] David Fromkin, A Peace to End All Peace: The Fall of the Ottoman
    Empire and the Creation of the Modern Middle East (New York: Henry
    Holt, 1989), 152-153.

    [30] Balakian, The Burning Tigris, 178.

    [31] Balakian, The Burning Tigris, 178.

    [32] Suny, "Religion, Ethnicity," 52.

    [33] Balakian, The Burning Tigris, 179.

    [34] Henry Morgenthau,

    http://www.horizonweekly.ca/news/details/60337

    http://www.newenglishreview.org/Richard_L._Rubenstein/The_Armenian_Genocide_as_Jihad/

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