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ANKARA: What Happened In 1915: Genocide Or Fate?

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  • ANKARA: What Happened In 1915: Genocide Or Fate?

    WHAT HAPPENED IN 1915: GENOCIDE OR FATE?

    Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
    Nov 23 2006

    Turkish researchers argue that most of the Armenians died during
    the First World War years due to the bad war conditions. According
    to the Turkish sources most of the Ottoman Armenians died in famine,
    bad weather conditions and epidemic diseases. The Ottoman documents
    and modern Turkish exports accept that many Armenians were killed
    in communal clashes. Kurds and Circassians in particular attacked
    the Armenian villages in order to get valuables. Mostly the Kurdish
    tribes also organized counter attacks against the Armenian civilians
    to take revenge. However most of the loses were due to the bad
    war circumstances. The Armenian historians generally do not accept
    'bad war circumstances' and they argue that "epidemic diseases cannot
    remove hundred and thousands of Armenian people. They tend to believe
    in that Turks massacred all the Armenian population. However the
    scholarly articles prove the reverse. For instance researcher Ellen
    Marie Lust-Okar describe the circumstances the Armenians faced when
    they arrived in Syria, one of the Ottoman provinces at that time:

    "Diseases spread rapidly. In Aleppo, more than 35,000 persons were
    said to have died from typhus between August 1916 and August 1917
    alone. In almost all villages between Aleppo and Mosul 50 percent
    of the population is believed to have died, and in the district of
    Ra'sal-'Ayn, this was to have reached 88 per cent. That thousands
    of Armenians and Arabs alike perished during the first years of
    immigration..." (Ellen Marie Lust-Okar, 'Failure of Collaboration:
    Armenian Refugees in Syria', Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 32, No. 1,
    January 1996, pp. 53-68, p. 57).

    Not only the Armenians and Arabs but also the Turks and the Kurds
    were also deeply affected by the bad weather, epidemics and famine.

    The Ottoman documents clearly show that more Muslim people died that
    the Armenian people due to these reasons during these years. Of course
    the Ottoman Government was responsible for all these loses, yet we
    have to accept that they were not able to provide the basic needs
    under the military attacks from almost all directions. The Armenian
    collaboration with the occupying Russians in the Eastern Anatolia
    and with the French armies in the Cilicia and the south worsened
    the security of the state. Thus the Istanbul Government decided to
    relocate the Armenian population to the remote part of the Empire. As
    a result, most of the Armenians from the Eastern and south eastern
    part of the State were forced to locate in the Syrian province in
    order to cut the link between the Armenians and the Russians. The
    decision obviously made the immigrating Armenians more vulnerable to
    the diseases, famine and weather conditions. However all these cannot
    be classified as systematic slaughter or genocide.

    Istanbul Armenians continued their normal life and many Armenians
    were among the richest and most powerful Ottoman citizens in Istanbul
    and some other parts of the State. Ten thousands of the Armenians
    continued to live in Turkey even the Ottoman Empire was collapsed and
    modern Turkey was established. Even some of the relocated Armenians
    in 1915 returned later to their own towns.

    Another reason made the life worse for the ordinary Armenian people in
    the Ottoman Empire was the Armenian nationalist fanatics. The extremist
    Armenian nationalist fist hit the Armenian population. The armed
    Armenians killed more Armenian than the Turks between 1900-1911. They
    terrorized the relations between the Muslims and the Armenians. The
    extremist attacks against the Turkish, Kurdish and Circassian
    villages caused counter attacks. Many Muslim women were raped,
    killed and tortured. The conservative Kurdish villages were provoked
    by these Armenian attacks, and the security forces were not able
    to stop the communal attacks under the world war conditions. The
    clashes reached its peak when the Armenian extremists occupied the
    Van province. The Armenians were uniformed and armed. They had an
    independent Armenia flag and they handled the city to the occupying
    Russian forces. Though most of the Armenian population were not
    extremist and not in co-operation with the occupying forces, the
    irregular Kurdish gang counter-attacks, defense attacks and revenge
    campaigns badly affected the ordinary Armenians as well. At the end
    of the day more than 520,000 Muslims were slaughtered by the armed
    Armenian groups and many Armenians were killed by the Kurdish and
    Circassian tribes (asirets).

    Today there are more than 100,000 Armenians in Istanbul. They have
    their own churches, schools and newspapers. They can freely educate
    their people in Armenian language, and the Armenian Patriarch provide
    many services special to the Armenians. Of course the Turkey Armenians
    also have problems like any other Turkish citizen, yet the European
    Union membership process has helped a lot in improving the rights. Even
    the Armenia citizens now prefer Turkey to live and work instead of
    Republic of Armenia. More than 70.000 Armenia citizens work in Turkey,
    mostly in Istanbul city with no serious problem.
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