Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Turkish Genocide Of Assyrians: A Curse On The Kurds

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

  • The Turkish Genocide Of Assyrians: A Curse On The Kurds

    THE TURKISH GENOCIDE OF ASSYRIANS: A CURSE ON THE KURDS
    By Sadik Aslan

    Assyrian International News Agency AINA
    http://www.aina.org/news/20120806194815.htm
    Aug 6 2012

    (AINA) -- In 1918, when the Turkish genocide of Assyrians that is
    known as Seyfo (sword) culminated, the Turks rewarded the Kurdish
    warlord Seyid Riza with the title "General and liberator of Dersim
    (Erzincan)." Among the Christian prisoners Riza's forces had gathered
    for deportation and murder was also his Armenian friend Bogas Pasha,
    who turned to Riza, saying "My dear friend, I want to tell you
    something: you made a mistake. What you are doing to us today will
    tomorrow be upon you Kurds. Remember these words! Your turn will
    come also."

    So writes a Kurd from the village Shtrako in Turabdin, Turkey, at the
    website politikART. His name is Sadik Aslan and he is in jail in the
    city of Burdur in Turkey, probably for political reasons. The Kurds
    played an active part in the genocide Seyfo for both religious and
    economic reasons, Sadik Aslan writes. Under the heading Seyfo'nun
    laneti (Seyfo's curse), he describes the killing of the Assyrians in
    Turabdin and to some extent the Armenians in eastern Anatolia. The
    essence of his article is that when the Turks were finished with the
    Christians, they turned their weapons against their Kurdish allies.

    And the bloodshed did not end with the Seyfo, he writes and also
    links to confiscation of St. Gabriel Monastery's land. Journalist
    Augin Kurt Haninke has translated Sadik Aslan's article.

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The village Arnas is eight kilometers from my home village. In early
    July 1915 Assyrians in the neighboring village of Saleh were murdered
    in their own homes by Turkish soldiers and Kurdish villagers. The 70
    Assyrian families in Arnas learned what happened to Saleh. They could
    also hear the gunfire in Midyat. They took what little they could and
    began to flee. Those who could not flee were killed by the village's
    Kurds. The Kurdish Agha Nedjo, had in his youth grown up among the
    Assyrians and they had raised him as a son. When Seyfo broke out,
    he attacked the Assyrian family who had taken care of him first. The
    lady of the house asked, "Nedjo, my son, don't you recognize us?" He
    replied coldly, "That was yesterday, today is another day." While the
    husbands, fathers and brothers were killed in Fero Caves outside Arnas,
    the women were forced into slave labor or were murdered.

    The 20 Assyrian families who lived in my own home village Shtrako
    were murdered at the same time by their Kurdish neighbors. Only 12
    youngsters managed to flee and escape death. There was also a church
    of St. Aday [Thaddeus] from the first century which is now a mosque.

    It took time before I understood why this mosque is unlike other
    mosques. Neither did I know what had happened in the neighboring
    village of Zaz. To me it was the village where I got raisins and
    almonds from friendly ladies who patted me on the head while clamped
    down in my mother's skirts, when as a child I went with her to Zaz.

    There lived 200 Assyrian families there. When the Kurdish clans
    from my home village and other neighboring villages surrounded Zaz,
    the Assyrians took refuge in the church of St. Dimot, which had high
    walls. They held out for 20 days before hunger and thirst gained the
    upper hand. 366 people gave up when they believed the Kurds' vow not
    to harm them. But all were murdered outside the village. Only a few
    pretty girls were spared. A Turkish officer who had come from Midyat
    intervened when he heard about the barbarism and rescued the ones
    remaining in the church. They left the village but most still died
    of hunger, disease and attacks on the roads. When the genocide was
    over, a few went back to their homes in Zaz. These women whom gave
    me raisins and almonds were the remnants of the survivors.

    Another Assyrian neighboring village was Hah, with the church St.
    Mary. It was the village where I got the best tasting orange in my
    life from the nun Sedoke, who had a shining face in her black dress.

    She has also fled to Europe. I do not know if she's still alive. The
    villagers of Hah resisted for 45 days inside that church where the
    nun handed me the orange. Only three or four villages could resist
    like Hah. The other surrounding villages suffered from barbarism:
    Arbaye, Bote, Chelik, Deiro du Slibo, Habses, Kafarbe, Kafro Elayto,
    Kerboran, Sheherkan, Yerdo, Kfarze and others. In all these villages
    Assyrians were murdered by the Kurds who lived in the same village.

    For some years I studied in the town of Midyat. Among my classmates
    were Assyrian youth Tuma [Thomas], Musa, Salari, Gabriel, Ishak and
    others. In the winter, when we squeezed ourselves in the cold desks,
    I did not know that there was a time when the Assyrians were burned at
    Midyat's streets and beheaded. None of my classmates told me. Even in
    the days of joy there was a sadness in their eyes, like the Mona Lisa.

    Much later I understood this deep sorrow. They had inherited it from
    their parents and grandparents. But they hid it inside. They were
    burdened with grief. It was one of "the effects of the sword" --
    shyness, worry, chronic anxiety and docility.

    The city of Midyat was besieged by Kurdish clans on July 19, 1915. The
    Assyrians were invited by the authorities along with the Kurdish and
    Mhallami (Assyrian converts to Islam) clans to surrender. But their
    leaders Hanne Safar and Isa Zatte refused. After ten days, on July 29,
    the Assyrian resistance collapsed. The Assyrians had taken shelter
    in the church of St. Sharbel and in the residence of the Adokas family.

    Now there was a slaughter. The Assyrian leader Hanne Safar was
    captured and beheaded with his own sword, which he had received from
    the Sultan. His head was spiked on a pole and was paraded around
    Midyat's streets. An entire district was set on fire. Those who tried
    to escape were killed on the spot. Holes were opened in rooftops and
    fire thrown in so that all indoor choked to death. Women and children
    had gathered in two districts. All were murdered by death squads. Most
    people who tried to escape through various tunnels were murdered.

    Young men were thrown headlong from high rooftops and killed. Hundreds
    of young boys were lined down to the ground and their heads were
    trampled by horses' hooves. What was left of Midyat was a smoke-filled
    pile of debris.

    Even after the genocide had ended, nearly 7000 Assyrians were killed
    in various parts of Turabdin. In a few villages, Ahlah (Halakh),
    Bokesyono, Deir Qubbe, Marbobo and Znaver, Assyrians had been protected
    by some Kurds. How much of this action will reduce the size of our
    sins is difficult to know.

    As a child I used to hear different "hero stories" from the time
    of the "Decree on the Christians annihilation (in Kurdish Fermana
    Fellaha). But I found it difficult to place events in time and space.

    My thinking could go a few years back. The rest was a dark and distant
    time, when dark allegations flourished fresh round about my slender
    young at heart. There were statements such as: He who kills seven
    godless [non-Muslims] would go to paradise or the killer's palm
    would be converted to a rainbow and he will enter paradise. Then
    an Assyrian bride was kidnapped by one of my relatives who already
    had three wives. Hanne from Hah complained, crying in front of my
    grandfather and said, "Why are you doing this to us? We are the
    orphans under your protection."

    Then, when we as children ran around in the dusty streets and disturbed
    environment, usually the adults admonished us with epithets like
    Arnawit (Albanian), Yezidi, Ermeni or Serfillah (Christian skull). The
    latter marked the most derogatory epithet.

    When you become aware of the reality of the poor women in Zaz, the
    angelic nun in Hah, my classmates in Midyat, then your happy memories
    become clouded and disappear into thin air. This feeling keeps you
    hooked like a lasso, pushes you hard and puts a big lump in your
    throat. Then you will catch the eyes of a trapped Assyrian who cannot
    even draw his last load to defend himself. You will understand the
    vision's message. A glance that the words of Jesus on the cross says,
    "Forgive them, my Lord!"

    We usually hear or say that genocide was committed by the government
    and the terrorist groups that it had organized. The role of people,
    i.e ordinary people, was reduced to a minimum. Unfortunately it is
    not true with the historical facts that have emerged, particularly in
    Turabdin. Of course, the same applies for the killings of Armenians
    in some areas. Regarding the killing of Turabdin's Assyrians the
    central authorities did not always know what was happening. The
    attacks were organized usually on a local level. The attacks became
    reality through people's participation. The reason was religious and
    economic. The local Assyrians were farmers with large farming lands,
    living in large villages.

    A hate propaganda was launched, culminating in a rarely seen barbarism
    from Kurdish neighbors, who were Muslims, but who for centuries had
    lived with the Assyrians. The Kurds wre excited to seize Assyrian
    lands, homes, valuables and women. Few questioned the genocide. Those
    who went with the flow and gave tacit approval are not without guilt.

    They also carry some of the blame for the killings.

    In 1918, when Erzincan was "liberated", the Kurdish warlord Seyid
    Riza was awarded with the title "General of Dersim (Erzincan)" by
    the Turkish General Kazim Karabekir. Among the Christian prisoners
    Riza's forces had gathered for deportation and murder was also his
    Armenian friend Bogas Pasha, who turned to Riza, saying: "My dear
    friend, I want to tell you something: you made a mistake. What you
    are doing to us today will tomorrow be upon you Kurds. Remember these
    words! Your turn will also come."

    In 1915 when the Armenians were driven from Erzincan in death marches,
    an Armenian women was shouting to the marauding and murderous Muslims:
    "These lands will not be yours, you will not enjoy them in freedom."

    At the same time, when the Assyrians in Hakkari were expelled and
    murdered, a Nestorian-Assyrian woman turned about to see her home for
    the last time. Crying, she said in Kurdish: ne bi xatire we birano --
    "I hope you are not left in peace, brothers."

    Maybe it's their prophecies that have been fulfilled and their prayers
    heard, because the killings have not stopped in these parts after
    their departure. But we have not yet done what we need to remove the
    curse that hangs over us or to do penance for our sins. Therefore,
    today a monastery [St. Gabriel] in Turabdin is bleeding.

Working...
X