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  • The Armenian Genocide and the Middle East Today

    http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2015/04/the_armenian_genocide_and_the_middle_east_today_.h tml

    April 12, 2015
    The Armenian Genocide and The Middle East Today
    By Nancy Eskijian


    Friday the week after next, April 24, marks the hundredth anniversary
    of the Armenian Genocide. While some nations of the world recognize
    the Genocide, there are many deniers. Yes, the nation of Turkey denies
    there was a Genocide; they were merely putting down nationalist
    uprisings from a population that was largely disarmed and unarmed. Of
    course, this happened during WWI while the rest of the world was
    distracted. What Turkey does not answer is, how did 1.5 million
    Armenians die as well as hundreds of thousands of other Christians,
    through mass starvation, disease, a multitude of forms of murder, such
    as beheadings, crucifixion, drowning and other brutalities? How was a
    nation of orphans created? Why were thousands of women and children
    Islamized, taken into Turkish homes, orphanages, and harems? Why were
    churches burned and others turned into mosques, and a people's wealth
    confiscated, and dispersion throughout the world of all survivors? Why
    do very few Armenians remain in a homeland that was theirs for
    thousands of years?

    The Armenian Genocide generally proceeded in the following phases[i]:
    `The first phase of the Armenian Genocide was the conscription of
    about 60,000 Armenian men into the Ottoman army, their disarmament and
    murder by their Turkish fellow soldiers.'`The second phase of the
    extermination of the Armenian population started on April 24, 1915
    with the arrest of several hundred Armenian intellectuals and
    representatives of national elite (mainly in the capital of the
    Ottoman Empire, Constantinople) and their subsequent elimination.
    Hereinafter, Armenians worldwide started to commemorate the Armenian
    genocide on April 24 (1915).' This is considered the beginning of the
    Genocide by most Armenians, hence the hundred year commemoration.`The
    third phase of the genocide is characterized with the exile of the
    massacres of women, children, elderly people to the desert of
    Syria. Hundreds of thousands of people were murdered by Turkish
    soldiers, police officers, Kurdish bandits during the deportation. The
    others died of epidemic diseases. Thousands of women and children were
    subjected to violence. Tens of thousands were forcibly Islamized.'
    Yes, forced conversion is part of genocide.

    =80=9CThe fifth phase is the universal and absolute denial of the
    Turkish government of the mass deportations and genocide carried out
    against Armenians in their homeland.'

    I am not a Genocide scholar, but like most Armenians I am a descendant
    of a Genocide survivor, so I can tell a story that may capture some of
    the scope and breadth of the tragedy and, importantly, the tragedy
    that is repeating itself today.

    This story surrounds a man I never met, and one who died in that
    Genocide at the age of 34 years old. That man is my grandfather,
    Rev. Hovhannes Eskijian. His compassionate efforts to save Armenians
    was the subject of a book published in 2001, At the Crossroads of Der
    Zor, by Hilmar Kaiser, which is currently being translated into
    Armenian for the hundred year anniversary of the
    Genocide. Rev. Eskijian himself was an orphan, his father having been
    beheaded in front of his mother in 1895 during Turkish massacres of
    the Armenians during the period of 1895-1896, including the city of
    Urfa.

    He survived by hiding in a ditch for three days with his brother and
    others, and then was rescued to grow up in a Christian orphanage
    himself. Later he would dedicate his life to Christ, go into the
    ministry, be married, settle near Armenian villages in the Kessab area
    of Syria as their mutual pastor, start the building of a church in the
    village of Ekiz-Oluk, where my father was born, and then move to the
    city of Aleppo in 1913 where he was called as a pastor.

    Consequently, Rev. Eskijian was a Protestant minister in the city of
    Aleppo, Syria, during the Genocide. His activities during this
    critical time included many ways to assist the Christian
    Armenians. `The deportations of 1915 opened vast avenues of service
    before him and his assistants. Aleppo was the crossroads on the
    highway of deportation. Thousands of Armenians were brought in by
    various means to be by deported to the slaughterhouses of Der Zor, Ras
    ul Ain, Sheddade and elsewhere to die of starvation and fatigue.

    Buildings in Aleppo were filled with refugees and emptied to be filled
    again by newcomers, persecuted, half-naked and starving.
    Rev. Eskijian, and my grandmother, Mrs. Gulenia Eskijian, were busy
    every day with these people. Not only did they welcome many of these
    Armenians into their own home, but also served them outside their home
    in many hiding places. They administered food, medicine, money and
    protection to their utmost capacity, and opened orphanages for the
    children that could be saved.'[ii]

    The following is summarized from the compilation of M.H. Shnorhokian:
    In 1915 Armenians poured into Aleppo setting up makeshift tents,
    perhaps their last homes, amid filth, lice, corpses, and starving,
    sick people waiting to be sent to the desert. At two notorious
    deportation centers Karlik and the Railway Station in Aleppo,
    Rev. Eskijian helped destitute Armenians. Rev. Eskijian would find
    hundreds of these desperate Armenians and save them from the death
    marches.

    He had a special passport to enter these death stations and give help
    to the Armenians, which permit he utilized to the fullest. Giving up
    sleep, he listened for the sounds of the trains and headed to the
    stations. He went through the wagons and picked up the children,
    young girls and young men and brought them into town.

    >From a testimony of Rahel Megerdichian: Rev. Eskijian would also go to
    Karlik at night, picking up Armenian orphans, bringing them to his
    home under his coat. Mrs.

    Eskijian washed, clothed and fed them. He had agents who helped many
    Armenians to escape from Karlik, personally making a trip there to
    save Mrs. Megerdichian's brother.[iii]

    Rev. Eskijian obtained financial assistance, which was transmitted to
    the needy, from different sources, including the American Embassy in
    Aleppo. He found employment for many boys, girls and young women as
    servants in different Arab families. He found employment for many
    young Armenians with the German Railroad Company, opening tunnels for
    the Berlin-Baghdad railway. He sent quinine and financial assistance
    to Armenian refugees.[iv]

    He corresponded with the Mr. Jesse Jackson, the charge de affairs of
    the American Embassy to alleviate the suffering to the Armenians and
    tell the world. Soon after that came organized relief...thousands and
    thousands of lives were saved by his letter relief work.[v] The
    stories of his efforts and those with whom he labored, probably could
    fill volumes.

    During the months when Protestant Armenians were immune from
    deportation, Rev. Eskijian used that opportunity to its fullest
    capacity. (He would go through the trains passing through Aleppo, and
    pick up the children, young women and men--whether Protestant or
    non-Protestant and bring them into town.[vi]

    Then as now, the Christian Armenians had the opportunity to convert to
    Islam. As he said in one of his messages to his church as the dark
    clouds of war and Genocide fell on Aleppo: "Dear friends, be
    courageous. Let us die, but let no one deny his Lord. This honorable
    opportunity does not come to us often. I myself am ready for the
    gallows."[vii] He died the day before he was to be publicly hanged by
    the Turks for his activities. He had been warned several times by
    Turkish authorities to stop his humanitarian mission regarding
    incoming Armenian refugees. But he challenged that brutal order
    according to Bible truth: Obey God rather than men. Acts 5:29.[viii]

    At the time of this writing, the same spiritual and political forces
    that operated to destroy the Armenian people and other Christians in
    Turkey one hundred years ago, are at work to annihilate Christians in
    the Middle East, Pakistan, the Sudan, Nigeria, Kenya, Indonesia, among
    other places, and in the same brutal manner. Christians, and others,
    are beheaded, crucified, abducted, enslaved, raped, murdered, and
    tortured, forced to convert to Islam, and a refugee population is
    created again. There is nothing new under the sun.

    In 2014 alone the Der Zor memorial to the Armenian Genocide in Syria,
    an area where hundreds of thousands died, was destroyed by the Islamic
    State (ISIS). Churches and ancient manuscripts have been destroyed and
    burned in Syria, Iraq, and other places, crosses broken, graves
    destroyed. Grandfather's grave in Aleppo was desecrated three times
    that I know of in the past. The first church Rev. Eskijian started to
    build as a pastor in the village of Ekiz-oluk (which my father
    completed) was bombed by the Al Nusra front -- an Al Qaeda
    faction. The city of Kessab, an Armenian enclave where he started
    ministry over 100 years ago, was emptied of Armenians in 2014.
    Aleppo, where Rev. Eskijian served, has become a war zone. Lately, in
    corresponding by email with a pastor in Syria, he reported nearby
    bombings, blown out windows, shortages, lack of food and water and
    electricity and terror. His quote, `we are living in the stone age.'
    And this is just a small picture of what is happening on a massive
    scale and history repeating itself.

    The Genocide caused the death of 1.5 million Armenians, the dispersion
    of hundreds of thousands, including my father, grandmother, his
    brother, and several relatives both from my mother's and father's side
    of the family, the creation of over a hundred thousand orphans, many
    experiencing terrible fates, and a world of heinous crimes. I heard
    stories from my youngest years about miraculous escapes and
    tragedies. My cousin's grandfather was burnt alive in a church with
    other ministers, and her other grandfather was burnt alive in a
    building. Another cousin's grandmother refused to convert to Islam and
    her children died of starvation.

    My sister-in-law's father and aunt miraculously escaped death, two
    young children in the Syrian desert. My great grandmother escaped the
    City of Van, where the Turks were exterminating the Armenians with her
    son on her back walking into Russia. The Turks came three times to
    kill my young father and his remaining family. It wasn't just a few
    Armenians that had these stories; nearly every Armenian family had
    such stories. These narratives had impact on my view of life, as well
    as my siblings. We learned that life is serious and that massive pain
    can be inflicted, that our forefathers suffered greatly, and to be
    thankful for our safe, free and prosperous lives in the United States,
    using the opportunity to help others.

    However, we also learned of the triumph of Rev. Eskijian's life in
    Christ, and the many who served with him in his underground efforts,
    in the middle of suffering and under great pressure. John Minassian,
    his young assistant, estimated that thousands of Armenians were saved
    from death by his efforts, and the efforts of those who joined him in
    this endeavor.

    Several years ago and two generations later, I attended a conference
    as a pastor for my church. There were leaders from all over the world,
    including a Turkish minister. I was curious about this man, such an
    anomaly, a Turkish convert from Islam now a minister, and prayed that
    I could meet him. I wanted to tell him what had happened to the
    Armenian people, see his response to the horrible crimes against
    humanity committed by his country and people, but also see what common
    ground we had in Christ.

    One morning I had an opportunity to meet him. I went to him and
    explained how my grandfather, Rev. Hovhannes Eskijian had served his
    people in Aleppo, that he perished during the Armenian Genocide, the
    unfolding tragedy that he and others, tried to alleviate, that my
    family knew of many people who had died or whose lives were disrupted
    by this horrific event. Unexpectedly, I began to weep. At that point
    the pastor did what the prophets of old did in scripture, he repented
    with a true heart on behalf of the Turkish people, standing in the
    gap, and he did, as a brother in Christ would do, embraced me in his
    arms.

    Perhaps such an event many years after the Genocide is a foretaste of
    the only way, I believe, there will be conclusion of this sad and
    terrible history, a God conclusion, not a man conclusion. As all
    Armenians, I personally feel grief and anger, and want to see
    admission of guilt by the Turkish government, justice and restitution
    on earth. I have no right to forgive on behalf of those who perished
    and suffered. But by standing in the gap as a Christian there is a
    resolution. Someday God will settle all scores on earth at the great
    white throne judgment, and someday He promises to wipe away all
    tears-no looking back. Right now it is our job to pray for and assist
    our brothers and sisters. I think this is how Rev. Eskijian would have
    viewed it.

    The author may be reached at [email protected]

    [i] Website of the Armenian Genocide Museum Institute, National
    Academy of Sciences, Republic of Armenia

    [ii] Garabed Keverian, Tchanasser, No. 24, 1951

    [iii] Testimony of Rahel Megerdichian. Her husband Dr. Samuel
    Megerdichian of Kessab, was a classmate of Rev. Eskijian in Central
    Turkey College.

    [iv] Keverian, Tchanasser.

    [v] From an article written by John Minassian on the 10th anniversary
    of Rev. Eskijian's death. Mr.

    Minassian's life was saved through the efforts of Rev. Eskijian.

    [vi] Rev. E. Elmajian testimonial.

    [vii] Letter of Mrs. Yvenigi Jebijian, March 15, 1953, Aleppo, Syria.

    [viii] The statement of the policeman is taken from a letter of
    Mrs. Rahel Megerdichian, dated January 20, 1959.

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