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Massacre Of Adana Armenians In 1909 Is A Classic Example Of Genocide

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  • Massacre Of Adana Armenians In 1909 Is A Classic Example Of Genocide

    MASSACRE OF ADANA ARMENIANS IN 1909 IS A CLASSIC EXAMPLE OF GENOCIDE PRELUDE

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    01.04.2009 20:27 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Massacre of Adana Armenians in 1909 is a classic
    example of Genocide prelude (similar example, Kristallnacht in
    Holocaust chronicles), orientalist and historian Suren Manukyan told
    a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter.

    Adana population was heartened with promises of "Liberty, Equality
    and Fraternity" proclaimed by the new authorities of Ottoman Empire
    a year before tragic events. Armenians demanded appointments to
    governmental offices. An atmosphere of amicability was established
    between Armenians and Turks of Adana region, the more unexpected was
    the blow to Adana Armenians. People of Adana and adjusting villages
    were subjected to all the tortures employed during the Genocide of
    1915-23: hatred fomentation with religious mottos of "fighting the
    unfaithful" and violence towards Christians. The Ottoman government
    sent in the Army of Young Turks to keep peace, but instead they
    tolerated the violence or participated in it.

    In the aftermath of Adana massacres, the government of Turkey, as
    well as some Turkish writers and nationalists, tried to deny the
    pogroms. Young Turks tried to shift the responsibility for massacres
    upon their political rival Abdul Hamid and even out the number of
    those killed in the massacre, both massacre victims and perpetrators
    (362 people were arrested: 149 Muslims and 213 Christians). Thus,
    the impunity was the major total of Adana massacre. 9 Muslims and
    6 Armenians were beheaded on May 28. Beheaded Muslims were common
    people, none of the notables, yet true perpetrators of disturbances
    were not made accountable. And the only fault of beheaded Armenians
    was trying to protect themselves.

    "Impunity of perpetrators and inconsistence of the Great Powers
    created a firm perception of unpunishability of killing an Armenian,"
    Suren Manukyan emphasized.

    The tension erupted into riots on April 1, 1909, which soon escalated
    into organized violence against the Armenian population of Adana and
    in several surrounding cities. Reports estimated that the massacres
    in Adana Province resulted in 30,000 deaths.

    Turkish and Armenian revolutionary groups had worked together to
    secure the restoration of constitutional rule, in 1908. On 31 March
    (or 13 April, by the Western calendar) a military revolt directed
    against the Committee of Union and Progress seized Istanbul. While the
    revolt lasted only ten days, it precipitated a massacre of Armenians
    in the province of Adana that lasted over a month.

    The awakening of Turkish nationalism, and the perception of the
    Armenians as a separatist, European-controlled entity, also contributed
    to the violence.
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