Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenians Won't Forget 20th-Century Atrocity

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

  • Armenians Won't Forget 20th-Century Atrocity

    ARMENIANS WON'T FORGET 20TH-CENTURY ATROCITY
    by John Krafchek

    Waterloo Region Record
    April 5, 2010 Monday
    Canada

    Nearly 300,000 Armenian soldiers conscripted into the Turkish army were
    killed in March 1915. The following April, 254 Armenian political,
    religious and intellectual leaders were arrested in Constantinople,
    then executed.

    These martyrs are among the 1.5 million Armenians killed from 1915-23
    in the 20th century's first genocide.

    On April 24, Armenians, including Canada's 80,000, will commemorate the
    victims of Turkey's ultranationalistic government. Headed by the Young
    Turks, it intended to exterminate the Ottoman Empire's 2.5 million
    Armenians in order to form an exclusively Turkish state. It implemented
    the genocide with little interference during the First World War.

    A total of 500,000 Armenians fled to different countries to avoid
    relocation marches into the deserts of Syria, Arabia and Mesopotamia
    where starvation, dehydration and exhaustion killed adults and
    children. Victims were also bayoneted, drowned, raped and abducted
    into harems.

    In the 1930s and '40s, my mother attended events at the Armenian hall
    in Galt with my great-grandma, Marig Manasian. Mom remembers two women
    scarred with reminders of when 250,000 Armenian women were forced to
    work as slaves in Turkish harems. One bore her purple tattoo on her
    face while the prettier one, Melina, bore hers on her arm.

    The late Rev. Varant Bedrossian of the Armenian Apostolic Church,
    who served as pastor to Armenians in Cambridge and other southwestern
    Ontario cities, learned of the genocide while living in Aleppo, Syria.

    When he griped about being poor, his parents recalled the death
    and plundering.

    "People lost family, identity and property," said Bedrossian. "All
    the suffering makes Armenians emotional people."

    His grandfather, a wealthy farmer in Sasson, Turkey, owned villages
    and farms. The Turks took everything, including the lives of his
    grandfather and 60 other relatives. Like hundreds of thousands of other
    Armenian children, the genocide left his father, age 6, an orphan.

    The Turks also tried eradicating the Armenians' language and Christian
    religion. To avoid death, some converted to Islam and others, like
    Bedrossian's mother's family, spoke Turkish.

    A few Armenians retaliated. My great-uncle, Mark Chichchian, fought
    the Turks at Van until Russian soldiers arrived. Dressed as a Turkish
    officer, he sailed across Lake Van in Armenia and battled beside the
    Russians. Afterwards, he journeyed to France, then settled in Detroit.

    Armenians were murdered before 1915. To stop revolts over high taxes
    and meagre civil rights for non-Muslims, 200,000 were slaughtered
    from 1894-96 under Sultan Abdul Hamid II. He also tried quashing
    the notion of Armenian self-rule being promoted by Russia. Turkish
    soldiers barged into Armenian homes to kill the men.

    When one such soldier arrived at my great-grandparents' house, my
    great-grandma greeted him with a rifle as my great-grandpa, Bedros,
    hid in a closet. Shortly after, he immigrated to Canada to work at
    Galt Malleable Iron with other Armenians. Marig and their children
    joined him months later.

    During the Armenian genocide, the British, Russian, Austrian and
    American governments condemned it.

    However, after the Ottoman Empire collapsed, it received little
    outside attention.

    Although the succeeding Turkish government attempted to bring some of
    its perpetrators to trial, Turkey now denies its occurrence. It labels
    the genocide a domestic dispute where 300,000 Armenians and Turks died.

    To the Turkish denial, Bedrossian said, "They can't hide the truth."

    Despite Turkey's denial of the Armenian genocide, Armenians will
    gather in Cambridge, Detroit, Paris and other world communities on
    April 24 to remember its 1.5 million victims.

    http://news.therecord.com/article/693366
Working...
X