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Kaligian Analyzes ARF And Ottoman Relations At NAASR

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  • Kaligian Analyzes ARF And Ottoman Relations At NAASR

    KALIGIAN ANALYZES ARF AND OTTOMAN RELATIONS AT NAASR

    Armenian Weekly
    February 1, 2010

    Dr. Dikran Kaligian presented a lecture entitled "The Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation Under Ottoman Rule, 1908-14," on Thursday,
    January 21, at the National Association for Armenian Studies and
    Research (NAASR) Center. The lecture was the first of the year
    for NAASR.

    Kaligian is a historian who has taught at Clark University, Regis
    College, and other institutions, as well as the managing editor of
    the Armenian Review and a former chairman of the Armenian National
    Committee of America, Eastern U.S. He is the author of Armenian
    Organization and Ideology Under Ottoman Rule, 1908-1914 (Transaction,
    2009), which provides a comprehensive picture of relations between
    the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) and the Committee of
    Union and Progress (CUP) both before and after the CUP reached power
    in the constitutional revolution of 1908.

    Kaligian explained that his reason for undertaking this particular
    research was that there is a lot of research that has been done on the
    Armenian Genocide "but the years immediately before are critical...The
    party that will end up implementing the Armenian Genocide is the CUP,"
    and yet the CUP had been allied with the Armenians and in particular
    the ARF. "How do you go from two parties, both revolutionary parties,
    both working to overthrow Sultan Abdul Hamid, to just a few years
    later one committing genocide against the people of the other,"
    Kaligian asked. "That's the question I wanted to look at."

    An "Armenian Uprising"?

    He briefly described the Turkish state-aligned historiography,
    which generally describes "how there was no genocide and why it was
    justified," and places blame for violence against the Armenians,
    including the 1909 Adana Massacres and the Armenian Genocide, as a
    natural response to an Armenian uprising. The ARF is often portrayed
    as leading this uprising and its long-term alliance with the CUP is
    seen as entirely insincere.

    In his book, Kaligian "traces ARF policies and initiatives to answer
    the important question of whether or not the party and the Armenian
    community in general largely remained loyal to the constitutional
    regime and only resumed their appeals to Europe after the government's
    repeated failures to implement promised reforms." Making extensive
    use of the ARF archives in Watertown, Kaligian was able to give a
    detailed picture of the inner workings of the party and its internal
    debates and discussions.

    Backtracking to the turn of the 20th century, Kaligian explained,
    the ARF and Verakazmial Hnchakian Party entered into a dialogue with
    Turkish opposition groups and both parties took part in the First
    Congress of Ottoman Opposition Forces in 1902 along with Turkish, Arab,
    Greek, Kurdish, Albanian, Circassian, and Jewish representatives. At
    the end of 1907, the Second Congress of Ottoman Opposition Forces
    met in Paris. This congress resolved to overthrow the Sultan and
    to restore the Ottoman constitution using radical means, including
    refusal to pay taxes, propaganda, and armed resistance, if necessary.

    When the Sultan was indeed overthrown in 1908 and the Ottoman
    constitution reim-plemented, there was jubilation among all of the
    opposition parties, including the ARF. The ARF published a program
    which recognized the territorial integrity of the Ottoman Empire
    and called for a federal, decentralized government that would allow
    a high degree of local autonomy. Parliamentary elections held late
    in the year brought a multi-ethnic governing body which included 11
    Armenians into existence.

    Adana Crisis

    However, in the spring of 1909 a counterrevolution temporarily drove
    the CUP from power and in April 1909 the Adana massacres took place,
    claiming upwards of 20,000 Arme-nian lives in and near Adana.

    Kaligian stated that this "created the first major test for ARF-CUP
    relations," and the ARF was faced with a decision: to continue or to
    break off their cooperation with the CUP.

    The party, Kaligian explained, had to weigh the degree of CUP
    culpability in the massacres against the benefits of continuing to
    work with the CUP toward a true constitutional regime. The party was
    "torn between solidarity with the progressive elements within the
    CUP and their revulsion at the murderous acts of its chauvinistic
    elements." While the ARF clearly wanted to assist the progressive
    elements within the CUP, they were forced to gamble on whether Adana
    was an aberration or a sign of things to come. This, Kaligian said,
    with their credibility at stake, was "a serious political gamble by
    the ARF." The decision made-to continue cooperation under certain
    conditions-may have been determined partly by self-interest, insofar
    as the ARF "may not have wanted to admit their policy of cooperation
    was a failure."

    Although there was heightened distrust after Adana, Kaligian stated,
    apart from that major incident conditions did, indeed, improve for
    Armenians under the constitution, with acts of violence substantially
    decreased.

    However, less headway was made on the other issue most critical to the
    ARF, that of land reform. While the CUP never officially retreated
    from its promises to restore lands confiscated from Armenians under
    the Sultan and to improve conditions for the peasants, neither did they
    take any action, ultimately convincing the ARF that their pledges had
    not been made in good faith. The CUP's failure to act proved to be a
    "crippling blow" to relations with the ARF, said Kaligian.

    Kaligian explained that in a joint CUP and ARF meeting in
    Constantinople on April 1, 1911, in response to worsening security
    conditions "the CUP agreed to take steps to control persecution by
    having the government arm all villages, Armenian and Kurdish."

    Impatience with Unfulfilled Promises

    In the summer of 1911, the ARF held its 6th World Congress, with the
    main item on the agenda being relations with the CUP. The congress
    passed a resolution stating, among other things, that "despite a
    series of hopeful initiatives ... the CUP has gradually withdrawn from
    constitutional and democratic principles" and "failed to take steps
    to combat and cleanse itself of right-wing elements which, increasing
    their numbers over time, have developed a preponderant influence."

    Therefore, "if, after the party's appeal, the CUP and the cabinets
    drawn from it do not show through their deeds that the realization of
    their repeated promises are imminent, the Western Bureau is authorized
    to cease its relations with the CUP."

    Kaligian noted that it was not simply a clear case of the CUP's being
    uninterested in carrying out promised reforms. The CUP, in fact, was
    struggling to maintain control and was confronted with a series of
    crises, culminating in the Balkan Wars of 1912-13. The year 1912 would
    be critical for the two parties: disagreements over the parliamentary
    elections that year, in which the CUP sought to limit the number of
    potential Armenian elected representatives, combined with ongoing
    frustration over unkept promises, led the ARF to break off relations.

    In the wake of the Balkan Wars, the European powers sought to place
    inspectors to oversee the Armenian provinces and institute the
    promised reforms. Such a measure was bitterly opposed by the CUP and
    the Ottoman leadership in general. For various reasons, the inspectors
    did not arrive in Constantinople until May 1914-only months before
    the outbreak of World War I and too late to have any impact.

    With the outbreak of war, Kaligian explained, a final breach came
    when the CUP offered the ARF a deal it could not accept: to organize
    an uprising among the Armenian population in the Russian Empire
    (roughly in today's Republic of Armenia) in exchange for autonomy
    after the war. The ARF refused, saying that Armenians in Russia would
    do their duty as Russian subjects and the Armenians in the Ottoman
    Empire would do their duty as citizens. Talaat Pasha and the CUP
    leadership seemingly regarded this as a final act of be-trayal.

    Kaligian ended his presentation with the outbreak of World War I.

    Following his lecture there was a lengthy discussion period and he
    signed copies of Armenian Organization and Ideology Under Ottoman
    Rule, 1908-1914.

    More information about the lecture is available by calling
    617-489-1610, faxing 617-484-1759, e-mailing [email protected], or writing
    to NAASR, 395 Concord Ave., Belmont, MA 02478.
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