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Official 1915 Document Swept Under The Carpet

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  • Official 1915 Document Swept Under The Carpet

    OFFICIAL 1915 DOCUMENT SWEPT UNDER THE CARPET

    Emre Can Daglıoglu 12.17.2014 21:43NEWS

    Journalist Murat Bardakcı has announced that a Turkish Historical
    Society [TTK] official removed 'dispatch registers' kept after the
    deportation law was issued in 1915 from the Ottoman archives, and hid
    them in the archive of another institution. According to Bardakcı,
    this was done not by official procedure, but was the outcome of an
    individual's interference. Even the newly changed administration of
    the Turkish Historical Society does not know where these documents
    are located at present.

    Murat Bardakcı, who has published the books titled 'Talat PaÅ~_a'nın
    Evrak-ı Metrukesi' (The Abandoned Documents of Talat Pasha) containing
    documents and private correspondence on the Armenian question found in
    the private archive of Talat Pasha, and 'İttihatcı'nın Sandıgı'
    (The Wooden Chest of the Unionist) containing the correspondence of
    high-ranking Unionist leaders, has made striking statements regarding
    the Ottoman archives, which state officials claim are open on every
    occasion. Bardakcı said that a Turkish Historical Society [TTK]
    official removed 'dispatch registers' kept after the deportation
    law was issued in 1915 from the Ottoman archives, and hid them
    in the archive of another institution. According to Bardakcı,
    this was done not by official procedure, but was the outcome of an
    individual's interference. Even the newly changed administration of
    the Turkish Historical Society does not know where these documents
    are located at present. Bardakcı added that he guessed that the
    'records on abandoned properties [emval-i metruke]' were in the same
    location as the abovementioned dispatch registers, and that a proper
    investigation could unearth all these documents.

    Dispatch registers

    The dispatch registers mentioned by Bardakcı are lists which include
    the number and names of Armenians subjected to forced deportation
    in 1915, and from which region they were deported. The dispatch,
    or deportation, was carried out according to orders received from
    central government, by the keeping of records by local administrators
    who implemented the deportation process on the Armenians who were
    forced out of their settlements, and the control and updating of these
    records at the places they were sent to. The 'records on abandoned
    properties', on the other hand, contained detailed information
    regarding which assets or properties of the deported Armenians
    were seized, the address, and number or kind of property, and also
    in the same location as the abovementioned dispatch registers, and
    also information on the Muslim refugees located in places from which
    Armenians were evacuated from, or on the institutions and persons the
    assets and properties were passed on to. Bardakcı points out that,
    although they do not cover all areas of settlement, a significant
    number of dispatch registers and abandoned property records are
    presently in the archive. The reason Bardakcı presumes the abandoned
    property records and dispatch registers are kept together is that the
    Directorate for the Resettlement of Tribes and Refugees ['İskan-ı
    AÅ~_air ve Muhacirin Muduriyeti'] to which the task of dispatch was
    assigned, was also charged with the classification and organization
    of abandoned properties.

    Taner Akcam: 'These registers can lead us to very important
    information'

    Historian Taner Akcam's comments on Murat Bardakcı's claims:

    "If the mentioned 'dispatch registers' are the books within which the
    Armenians deported from each town and province are kept, then their
    importance cannot be exaggerated. Because these registers could help us
    access a lot of information, including first and foremost the numbers
    of people exterminated. That is to say, from what we understand both
    from the Union and Progress trials that began in Istanbul in 1919, and
    from certain documents in the Ottoman archive, the 'normal' dispatch,
    or deportation, had to be done according to these documents. The
    Istanbul Court Martial Authority sought to access these documents
    during the hearings, and asked after their location.

    As far as we know, no document was delivered to the court during
    those years. Similar records must have been kept at places identified
    as destinations.

    Now let us imagine that we have the names and numbers of 50 families
    exiled from Zeitun and reached Aleppo, then we must also know how
    many families were forced to set out from Zeitun. The gaps in the
    figures could provide us detailed information regarding the acts of
    extermination. What I can finally say is that the Turkish Historical
    Society has acted in line with its reputation. Of course, one must
    also ask: Why were the abandoned property records, along with the
    dispatch registers, collected from the archives and concealed at a
    different location?"

    http://agos.com.tr/en/article/9974/official-1915-document-swept-under-the-carpet

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