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CHRONOLOGICAL CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY COMMITED BY TURKS FROM 1878 TO 1999

August 16, 2013 By administrator

 

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1878 June 4. Turkey sells Cyprus to England.
1879 Kurdish revolt at Badinan by Obeydalla.

 

1894 September-1896 August. Sultan Abdul Hamit applies the policy’ of genocide to the Armenians. In August and September 1894, Armenians are slain in Sassun. In October 1895 takes place the first organised genocide in Constantinople and Trebizond and in November and December 1895 the authorities organized a great massacre throughout the country. In June 1896, the massacre of Van takes place. After the capture by the Armenians in 26-8-1896 of the Ottoman Bank, another massacre takes place in Constantinople. Total number of victims is 300.000.

 

1896 May 12. Murders of Greeks and conflicts between Greeks and Turks in the island of Crete.
1909 end of March. New massacres of the Armenians organized by the New-Turks at Adana, Tarsus and other towns of Cilicia. Victims are 30.000 Armenians and some American missionnaries.
1909 Revolution of the Arabs in Yemen is suppressed in bloodshed by the New-Turks.

 

1911 October 1. Assassination of Emilianos, Bishop of Grevena by the Turks.
1912 Kurdish uprising in Mardin under Bedirhan and H. Remo, and in Bitlis under Seyh Selim.

 

1912 The turkish army in retreat from East Thrace loots the villages of Didymotichon and Adrianopoli districts. Villages of the Malgara district are burnt. The same happens in Kessani. Assassinations and massacres accompany the destruction and looting in this predominantly greek region.
1913 February. The turkish authorities compel the Greek inhabitants of the district of village Crithea to leave their village in East Thrace. A brutal looting follows.

 

1913 The reoccupation of Eastern Thrace by the turkish army leads to atrocities and massacres of Greeks. 15.690 are the victims of these massacres. In the regions of Malgara and Charioupoli many villages are also destroyed. Massacres were followed by looting.
1914 February 8. The Dutch Westerneck and the Norwegian Hoft are appointed as General Inspectors of the Armenian provinces.

 

1914 May 25. The Greek Orthodox (Ecumenical) Patriarcate protests for the persecution of Christians and commands all churches and schools to be closed.
1914 May 27. The turkish authorities at Pergamum command all Christian population to leave the town within two hours. The terrorized inhabitants take refuge in the Greek island of Mytilini.
1924 July 10. Kurdish revolt of Nasturi in Hakkari. It was suppressed by the 7th turkish Army corps after 79 days 36 villages were destroyed 12 others were levelled down to the earth.

 

1925 March 3. The great Kurdish revolution bursts out at Elazig under Seyh-Sait 10.000 Kurds seize Harput and attack Diyarbakir, the Capital of Kurdistan After the complete destruction of 48 villages, the,revolution was suppressed at 7/10/1927 drowned in Kurdish blood.
1926 May 16. Mount Agri Kurdish revolt takes place. The rebels caught prisonner, the 28th turkish infantry division. The revolt after being spread to the regions of Hakkari, Siirt and Mardin, was suppressed after fierce fights with more powerful forces at 17/7/1926.
1927 May 30. A great Kurdish revolution in Diyarbakir and Agri under Seyh Enver. It was suppressed after violent fights at 7/10/1927. 2000 Kurdish fighters were killed. For many days the waters of Murat river were turned red by the blood of the slain Kurdish fighters.

 

1928 Two Kurdish uprisings took place. The first under Resul Aga at Siirt, and the second under Ali Can. Accurate information lacking, owing to Martial Law.
1930 June 2. Kurdish uprising at Agri region. It was suppressed at 18-9-30.
1930 August 31. Turkish newspaper Milliet publishes a declaration of Premier Ismet Inonu <<Only the turkish nation has the right to have national claims in this country. No other element has such a right>>.

 

1930 September 30. Turkish paper Milliet publishes a statement of the turkish minister of Justice : <<The Turk is the only master in his country. Those who are not pure Turks have one right in this country : The right to be servants, the right to be slaves>>. This is the way Turkey understands the human rights and behaves to the minorities of Armenians, Greeks, Syrians and Kurds. Even today 12 million Kurds have not a school, their language, their music and dances are prohibited, their leaders persecuted and the Kurdish people killed.

 

1935 A Kurdish uprising under Buban in Bitlis and in Siirt under Abdul Rahman takes place.
1937 A Kurdish revolution under Seyh Risa,bursts at Dersim. Details are not known because of the severe censorship by turkish authorities.
1937 May 23. The turkish government forbids the edition of the newspaper of Constantinople Son Telegraph, because it has referred to the Kurdish sufferings.
1938 November 10. Death of Kemal Ataturk, the butcher of Kurds, Greeks and Armenians who saved his country from partition.

 

1941 May. Mobilisation of 20 classes of the Greek and Armenian minorities living in Turkey and having Turkish citizenship, in order to exterminate them in the same manner, as they have already done during World War I, through the forced-labor battalions.
1942 November 11. The law of taxation on property of the non Muslims of Turkey (Varlik Vergisi ) is voted. It is a hideous attempt of economic extermination of the Greek and Armenian communities, which were exposed undefended to the excesses and abuse of power by the turkish economic authorities.

 

1955 September 6. The turkish authorities organize a great pogrom against the Greeks of Constantinople. 29 Churches were burnt and 46 looted. The graves of the Ecumenical Patriarchs and Christian cemeteries were vandalised. Thousands of shops were destroyed. Hundreds of women raped. Vandalisms at a smaller scale have takes place in Smyrna.
1974 July 20. The turkish army invades the independent and armless island of Cyprus, member of U.N.O. and seizes the 40% of it, on pretext that this is necessary for the Turkish-Cypriot minority which equals 18% of the whole population.

 

1974 July-August. Despite the resolutions of the U.N. Security Council No 353, 357, 358, 359, 360 etc which urged : <<The withdtawal without delay from the Republic of Cyprus of foreign military personnel>>. The invading turkish forces have turned into a permanent occupation army, which forl0 years does not conform with the above resolutions, despises U.N.O., challenges every conscientious man ofthe World and undermines world peace.
1978 1978 The Turkish fascist state initiates a pogrom against Alevi-muslims
all over Turkey. All over Turkey, Grey Wolves murder hundreds of people.
The place where the most people are killed is Kahramanmaras. The
repression and criminalisation of Alevi-muslims in Turkey, continous also
in the present time
 

 

1978 december 25 1978 December 25. Turkish fascists massacre hundreds of Kurds in Marash .
1978 December 28 1978 December 28. Proclamation of Martial Law in 15 provinces of Turkish
Kurdistan prohibiting for 18 years now any information about the
sufferings of the Kurdish people. The fascist government of Ankara hopes
that they will achieve by force the submission of the enslaved peoples of
Asia Minor. They hope they will continue to occupy the country of Armenia,
Kurdistan, North Cyprus and the Greek fatherland of East Thrace and West
Asia Minor. The future will prove how wrong they are. Every free and
conscientious man of the world must help for that.
 

 

1980 September 12 1980 September 12. Coup led by General Kenan Evren overthrows the
governing MHP replacing one brand of fascism with yet another lasting
until 1983.
 

 

1983 November 15 The illegal Turkish puppet regime declares independence
for the “Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus” (“TRNC”) in the occupied
part of Cyprus which has now been systematically Ethnically Cleansed of
over 200,000 indigenous Greek Cypriots. The “illegal” declaration is
immediately “Deplored” by the UN Security Council which declares the
“Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus” “Legally Invalid” in Resolutions
541(1983) and 550 (1984) which also “Condemns” this and all other
secessionist actions.
 

 

1984 Turkey begins a crackdown on Kurds seeking autonomy. In the following
years many Kurdish Villages are razed to the ground and emptied of
inhabitants who are moved to other parts of Turkey or forced to flee as
refugees. Those who speak out against the Turkish regime are summarily
imprisoned or assassinated.
 

 

1993 The Turkish brutalities against the Kurdish people continue and are
stepped up. Turkey showing ABSOLUTELY NO RESPECT for international laws
and agreements invades Northern Iraq in its attempt to butcher the Kurdish
people
 

 

1995 Turkish soldiers from the Hakkari Mountain Commando Brigade slaughter
and dismember the bodies of Kurdish resistance fighters. They then take
photographs of themselves posing with the victims of their barbaric crime
and sell them as trophies at $2 a piece.
 

 

1996 January 27 January 27. Turkish naval forces briefly invade and occupy the island
of Imia which was deemed as Greek Territory by the Paris 1947 convention.
Only US intervention prevents a war. This is part of an endless list of
challenges to Greek sovereignty, which include illegal Turkish claims to
almost every Greek island in the Aegean, even the island Crete, and the
daily violation of Greek Air Space and Territorial Waters
 

 

1996 August 12-14 Turkish occupation and security forces together with
MHP Grey Wolves terrorists sent by the Turkish Government to occupied
Cyprus brutally beat and murder Cypriot refugees peacefully protesting
against Turkeys illegal occupation and ethnic cleansing of northern
Cyprus, in the UN buffer zone in front of United Nations onlookers and the
worlds media who capture the scenes on video. Tassos Isaak is clubbed to
death on August 12 by Turkish thugs and his cousin Solomos Solomou is shot
dead on August 14 by a so-called “minister” of the puppet occupation
regime.
 

 

1996 A 58-year-old Greek Cypriot Civillian, Petros
Kakoullis, was shot and killed while out collecting Snails, by the Turkish
occupation troops, receiving three bullets, two on the chest and one on
the neck.
 

 

1999 Turkey captures Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan and after torturing
him and depriving him of legal representatives subjects him to an inhume
trial in glass cage, demanding the death penalty from a specially set-up
Kangaroo Court.
 

 

1999 The death toll of Kurds killed in Turkish military operations rises
to over 40,000 and according to the figures published by Turkeys own
“parliament”, 6,000 Kurdish Villages have been systematically emptied of
all inhabitants and 3,000,000 Kurds have been displaced.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: CHRONOLOGICAL CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY COMMITED BY TURKS FROM 1878 TO 1999

Armenian Church in Turkey Demands List of ‘Categorized’ Armenians

August 13, 2013 By administrator

ISTANBUL—The director of a Turkey-based Armenian church organization has asked the Interior Ministry to submit to it the list of Armenians codified in Turkish records as ethnic minorities.

TURKEY-ARMENIA-RELIGION-DIPLOMACYNazar Ozsahakian, the Chairman of the Holy Trinity Episcopal Foundation, has demanded the list, citing a Turkish law on freedom of information as a justified reason for accessing the records.

Knowledge about the Turkish government’s secret use of codes to categorize minority citizens was discovered last week by the Turkish-Armenian news agency Agos, despite evidently being in use since 1923. Armenians are marked with a number 2, Greeks are marked with 1, and Jews with number 3 in Turkish government registries.

Ozsahakian has told the Ministry’s Population and Citizens’ department that the list of Armenians residing in the Istanbul region is necessary for them ahead of the foundation elections.

“Since 1923, the Armenian community has been marked with code number ‘2’ in the population registers; the records are available in your agency. It is mainly the voters in the Sariyer region that elect [members of] the Bolajikyo Holy Trinity Episcopal Foundation. The Armenian community members of Sariyer are the main voters of our church’s foundation. But we are planning to conduct the election outside of the region as well, involving also the voters currently residing in Istanbul in order to allow for a more democratic poll. Hence, pursuant to the Law on Information, we request you to provide the Armenian community’s list, which bears the code number two,” reads the request.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian Church in Turkey Demands List of ‘Categorized’ Armenians

Organizations urge Barzani to apologize for genocides

August 13, 2013 By administrator

August 13, 2013 – 15:46 AMT

The American Mesopotamian Organization and Iraqi Christian Relief Organization sent a letter to Masoud Barzani, the President of the Kurdish Regional Government 168104in Iraq, offering him “a noble challenge to issue a formal apology to the Armenian and Assyrian descendants of the survivors of the genocides committed by the Kurdish allies of the Ottoman Turks against the indigenous Christian populations of the region, during and subsequent to WWI,” according to Assyria Times.

“In the past several months, your regional government has been successful in convincing several European governments to formally recognize the “Kurdish genocide” committed by Saddam’s regime. We can certainly empathize with and affirm the suffering of the Kurdish people of Iraq, particularly since the Assyrian Christians, too, suffered loss of life and property during the same period. This provided a missed opportunity for you to make an attempt to amend the troubled and strained relations between our two nations by including the sufferings of the Assyrians within your efforts to seek recognition of the “Kurdish Genocide”.

The last few hundred years of Assyrian-Kurdish relations have been mired with massacres, forced deportations and the deforcement of land and personal possessions of Assyrians by Kurds. As a direct result of these heinous acts, the Assyrian presence has dwindled significantly in Northern Iraq, South Eastern Turkey, and North Western Iran. Additional adverse consequences of these atrocities have been the marginalization of the political and human rights of the indigenous Assyrians by the Kurds. Today’s expansion of the Kurdish population is a direct benefactor of the massacres perpetrated by their not so distant ancestors. This rise in population has not only resulted in the renaming of historical Assyria as Western, Eastern, Northern and Southern “Kurdistan”, but it has also resulted in the renaming of the Assyrian regions and cities and replacing them with Kurdish names,” the letter says.

“In light of your ambitious efforts for the world to consider you as a legitimate, duly elected representative government of all Kurds in Iraq; hence, as their spokesperson, we request you to issue apologies for past atrocities committed by Kurdish tribes and warlords against the indigenous Christian populations of the region, including Assyrians and Armenians, while allied with the Ottoman Turks.As you are no doubt aware, there is clear and convincing evidence, consisting of extensive corpus of academic research, documents, and archival material, which prove Genocide, was perpetrated against the entire Christian population of the former Ottoman Empire during and following the First World War. The nascent, Young-Turk government systematically executed a policy of extermination against its own Christian citizens through massacres, death marches and forced deportations. As a consequence of these barbaric acts, several millions of Assyrians, Armenians and Greeks lost their lives and those that survived lost everything they owned from personal belongings to their homes and agricultural lands,” it says.

“Now, we are challenging you to issue a formal announcement, apologizing for the suffering and genocide of the Assyrians and Armenians, and acknowledging the direct involvement and active participation of the Kurdish tribes. Although it would behoove you to rise to the occasion, you will simply ignore our challenge and demand for justice. Be reminded that you must stand on the very high moral grounds you expect and demand of your oppressors. Take responsibility for the past atrocities as you expect the same from the Iraqi government,” the letter concludes.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Organizations urge Barzani to apologize for genocides

Armenian Genocide memorial project to be reviewed in Pasadena

August 13, 2013 By administrator

August 13, 2013 – 09:56 AMT

In couple of years, Armenians all over the world will be commemorating the 100th anniversary of the first genocide of the 20th century when 1.5 million Armenians 168069were massacred.

To keep the memory of 1.5 million Armenians alive, 166 memorial monuments have been erected in 33 countries worldwide. Those who erected the monuments want the history to stay alive and the people of the world to be informed of that barbaric event.

The Armenian community in Pasadena wanted to bring their share in the commemoration effort. The Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial Committee has planned a very impressive memorial to be constructed in Pasadena Memorial Park by 2015, with adequate informational inscriptions about the genocide, PASAGMC said in a press release.

On July 16, 2013, the Recreation and Parks Commission unanimously approved the proposed design by Catherine Menard, a student at the Pasadena Art Center College of Design.

The City of Pasadena has scheduled the City Council hearing for September 9 for the review and approval of the memorial design.

The PASAGMC asks the community members attend the City Council hearing and show support of the proposed memorial project.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian Genocide memorial project to be reviewed in Pasadena

What Our Words Mean: Towards the Vindication of ‘Medz Yeghern’

August 8, 2013 By administrator

The Armenian Weekly, editorial

Shoah’ or ‘Holocaust’?

A crime against humanity may trigger a catastrophe for the victims, as exemplified by the obliteration of Jewish life throughout continental Europe during World War II. The close relationship between evil, calamity, and crime should be regarded as one of the logical reasons for the adoption of the word Shoah (Catastrophe) as the name of a catastrophic crime against humanity.

Lemkin-208x300

Raphael Lemkin

It is interesting to recall that when the term genocide had not yet been coined, the Armenian extermination that began in 1915 was called “administrative holocaust” by Winston Churchill (1929). According to journalist William Safire (1929-2009), it appears that Raphael Lemkin’s word “struck many as too clinical a description of what happened” in Nazi Germany, and therefore gradually yielded its place to holocaust to name the Jewish genocide.2

In 1981, the abovementioned editorial of The Armenian Weekly criticized the use of “Armenian Holocaust” as “basically wrong as far as the Armenian experience is concerned” and claimed that such use was the consequence of a “bandwagon mentality…fairly common in North American society.”3 This unfounded criticism may have been elliptically directed to the title of the bibliography published by historian Richard Hovannisian the year before, The Armenian Holocaust. However, as historian Israel Charny noted in 1999, “the regular use of the word ‘holocaust’ in describing the many outrages committed against the Armenians” makes evident that the term “was used in the English language to indicate wholesale and organized destruction of a civilian population” before Lemkin’s genocide.4 That was, for instance, the case of books published in 1913 (Z. Ferriman Duckett, The Young Turks and the Truth About the Holocaust at Adana in Asia Minor, during April 1909) and in 1923 (Charles Dobson, The Smyrna Holocaust),5 and even afterwards, as historian Bernard Lewis did in 1968 (“the terrible holocaust of 1915, when one and a half million Armenians perished”),6 25 years before he dismissed the label “genocide” as the “Armenian version of this history.” As late as 2007, Italian historian and journalist Alberto Rosselli published L’Olocausto armeno (The Armenian Holocaust), which reached its third edition in 2011.

It may come as a surprise to many readers that, contrary to popular belief, the word Shoah is widely and officially used in several languages by Jews and non-Jews alike, from presidents to journalists, from Europe to South America. The Yad Vashem Museum in Jerusalem “consider[s] it important to use the Hebrew word Shoah with regard to the murder of and persecution of European Jewry in other languages as well.”7 One main reason, as Charny has pointed out, is that “…the generic word ‘holocaust,’ while still reverberating with the meaning it took on after World War II as the genocide of the Jews, belongs historically to all peoples who suffer cataclysmic extermination and annihilation,”8 including the Armenians. French Jewish filmmaker Claude Lanzmann, the author of the nine-hour groundbreaking documentary “Shoah,” has claimed that “Holocaust” is “a completely improper name” to describe what happened: “To reach God 1.5 million Jewish children have been offered? The name is important, and one doesn’t say ‘Holocaust’ in Europe. This was a catastrophe, a disaster, and in Hebrew that is shoah.”9

Shoah has steadily begun to take its place alongside “Holocaust” in the English-speaking world as well; the best proof is the American Heritage Dictionary.10 This includes President Barack Obama’s April 8, 2013 statement on Holocaust Remembrance Day: “I join people here in the United States, in Israel, and around the world in observing Holocaust Remembrance Day. Today, we honor the memories of the six million Jewish victims and millions of others who perished in the darkness of the Shoah. … On my recent trip to Israel, I had the opportunity to visit Yad Vashem, Israel’s national Holocaust memorial, and reaffirm our collective responsibility to confront anti-Semitism, prejudice, and intolerance across the world.”11 Note that the statement calls the event Shoah, including Jewish and non-Jewish victims, and that both mentions of Holocaust are titles (Holocaust Remembrance Day, Holocaust memorial). Neither Holocaust nor Shoah are legal terms, but, even if for obvious reasons, the presidential statement did not use the legal term “genocide” at all, nor did it mention premeditation or systematic extermination.

 

‘Yeghern’ or ‘Aghed’?

The same relationship of evil, calamity, and crime may be discerned in the Armenian case. According to literary scholar Marc Nichanian, “the proper word for the Armenian genocide, one that expresses the complete annihilation of a people, is Aghet or ‘Catastrophe,’ which is the exact equivalent, semantically and otherwise, of the Hebrew Shoah.”12

The word aghed, the same as yeghern, had been used before 1915 to name the massacres of 1909.

Bibliographical evidence shows that aghed appeared for the first time to name the events of 1915 on the cover of Setrag Shahen’s book, The Suffering Ones (New York, 1917), and in a play with the subtitle “Images of the exile of the Armenian aghed.”13 The word was used in the epilogue to the book Hushartzan Abril Dasnemegui (Monument to April Eleven), which was published on the first commemoration of the arrests of Armenian intellectuals (1919): “On this occasion, a group of intellectuals surviving the terrible Aghed felt the duty of making an statement of respect and mourning for the memory of their unfortunate brothers.”14 It was also used by surviving writer and editor Teotig (1873-1929) in articles published in 1920 (“in the days of the Armenian Aghed” and “on the news of the Aghed”),15 and likely by other survivors, too. It did not show up again on a book title until at least 1930,16 but appeared as medz aghed (“great catastrophe”) in the title of two memoirs by writer and political activist Liparit Nazariantz (1877-1947) published in 1927 and 1928 in the monthly “Hairenik” of Boston.17 Incidentally, the word aghed was also used to name the massacre of Marash in 1920 and the great fire of Smyrna in 1922 in their own time.

Literary scholar Krikor Beledian’s claim, however, that “the word aghed has been the most frequently employed to name the catastrophe of 1915”18 has not taken into account the frequency with which both words yeghern and aghed were recorded in texts—an enormous task yet to be fulfilled—and, above all, in book titles during the first decades after 1915, and, of course, later.

Nevertheless, Hagop Oshagan (1883-1948), a foremost novelist and critic who survived Turkish persecution between 1915 and early 1918 in Constantinople, has been credited as having “invented the name Aghed as the proper name of the event, and announced that his project was to ‘approach the Catastrophe’” in an interview published in August 1931 in the same monthly.19 In fact, Oshagan aimed to write about the process (the “Catastrophe”) and the outcome of 1915; he published the first two volumes of his novel, Mnatsortats (Those Who Remained), from 1931-33, but never tackled the event itself—in a planned third volume, The Hell—for the rest of his life. As his son, writer and literary scholar Vahé Oshagan (1922-2000) explained, the only reason Oshagan père put off the novel “was his fear that his heart might not resist the shock of a visit to the site of the massacres, and that was exactly what happened.”20

At the intersection of history and literature, it should become clear—even to those historians who tend to see the genocide in terms of contingency and not continuity21—that 1915, far from being an isolated event ascribed to a given set of political-military events having arisen early that year, was an integral part of a decades-long process that was aimed at gradually erasing, physically and spiritually, an entire people. The forcible expulsion of Armenians from their ancient homeland into the twilight zone of history was the zenith of this genocidal catastrophe. “The modern catastrophe is not linked to a single event, which would only be the genocide of 1915. It is rather part of a long process, composed by mini-events that started after the Congress of Berlin (1878). The massacres of 1894-1896, the latent repression of following years, the massacres of Cilicia in 1909, constituted the core of this immense drama,” points out Beledian.22 Therefore, it sounds reasonable to suggest the name Aghed (Catastrophe) for the entire cycle of Turkish destruction from 1878-1922 (tantamount to Shoah as the name for the cycle of Nazi destruction from 1933-45) that encompassed the systematic annihilation of the Medz Yeghern (Great Evil Crime) of 1915-17 (compare with the “Final Solution” of March 1942 to April 1945). The explicit legal and implicit existential content of “crime” and “evil” in the word yeghern might satisfy the terminological approaches of both historians and literary scholars.

 

‘Yeghern’ = ‘Aghed’?

The subtitle “genocide” appears to have worked as a magic wand for Armenian Americans during the many U.S. screenings of German filmmaker Eric Friedler’s documentary “Aghét: a Genocide” (“Aghét: ein Völkermord”) from Capitol Hill to California in 2010. After being exposed to a relentless repetition of “Great Calamity” over the years, its sponsors and watchers probably saw the word aghed as another fancy word for literate Armenians and a “synonym” of Medz Yeghern. If such were the case, any translator of Medz Yeghern as “catastrophe,” “calamity,” or “disaster” from the United States to Turkey would be at pains to explain how it had come to “replace” Aghed as a “synonym,” and how the memory and use of Aghed had been almost completely lost to present-day Armenians. Anyone proficient in the Armenian language may subscribe to literary scholar Taline Voskeritchian’s comment, “I am not certain how many people in the U.S.-Armenian community use the term aghét when they talk about the genocide, but they are perhaps two handfuls at the most,”23 and make it extensive over the rest of the Armenian world, where aghed (աղէտ) is commonly used for natural catastrophes. For instance, 25 years after the terrible earthquake of 1988, Gyumri, the second city of Armenia, is still called aghedi kodi (աղէտի գօտի, “disaster zone”).24

Italian historian Aldo Ferrari categorically pointed out the semantic difference between yeghern and aghed in the article “La Turchia e il genocidio del popolo armeno: un problema historiografico?” (“Turkey and the Genocide of the Armenian People: A Historiographical Problem?”), first published in 2002: “On April 24, 1915 it started what Armenians call ‘the great catastrophe’ (mec ałet [aghed]) or ‘the great crime’ (mec ełern [yeghern]).”25 Turkish journalist Yavuz Baydar probably does not read Italian; otherwise, in 2010 he would have  refrained from writing that April 24, 1915 is “now commemorated as the symbolic beginning of what Armenians call ‘Meds Yeghern’—or ‘Aghet’—(Catastrophe), which most of them regard as ‘genocide.’”26

 

‘Tseghasbanutiun’ in 1933

It is noteworthy that British historian Arnold Toynbee gave his 1916 book Atrocities in Armenia the subtitle, The Murder of a Nation. Former U.S. Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire (1913-1916) Henry Morgenthau likely borrowed the subtitle for chapter 24 of his memoirs, first published in 1918, when former U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt almost literally used “great crime” when advocating for an American declaration of war to Turkey: “We should go to war…because the Armenian massacre was the greatest crime of the war, and failure to act against Turkey is to condone it.”27 Lemkin, who had first proposed qualifying “the destruction of racial, religious, or social collectivities a crime under the law of nations” in 1933,28 combined the latent concepts of “greatest crime” and “murder of a nation” to create the word genocide in 1943.

A notable journalist and political figure, Shavarsh Missakian (1884-1957), first used tseghasbanutiun with its contemporary meaning in December 1945.29 Its oldest known recording in a dictionary is from 1968.30

However, the oft-repeated statement that Missakian’s use was first31 should be taken with a grain of salt. French historian Yves Ternon more than 20 years ago underscored that tseghasbanutiun predated Lemkin’s invention of the concept and noted that it had been used in Mardiros Sarian’s little known booklet “Fait accompli,” but stated that it “was hardly used to qualify the massacres of 1915.”32 The latter claim is inaccurate, since Sarian transcribed the conversation he had reportedly overheard in February 1916—a translation of the actual dialogue in Turkish—between an Ottoman military officer, Hüsni Bey (later revealed to be of Albanian origin), and Young Turk official Nejib Bey, where Hüsni Bey labeled the annihilation with the Turkish equivalent of tseghasbanutiun: “What was our government’s purpose in annihilating this race this way—in its entirety and with such antihuman tortures? To tell you the truth, I have never been able to understand what led to that decision. What harm could this race have done us in that life and death struggle, since we had taken soldiers between the age of 20 and 45 from the Armenians on the eve of the war during the general conscription? How could the old men, children, women, and young girls of the Armenians have hurt us? And furthermore, in what century, in what country, in what legend has a tseghasbanutiun like that one carried out with such bestial methods, ever been seen before?”33

Indeed, it would be ahistorical to translate tseghasbanutiun as “genocide” here. Sarian published his small book in 1933, coincidentally the same year that Lemkin made his proposal to define a crime that still would not have a name for a decade. It remains an open question whether the booklet could have inspired Missakian, a keen student of language who may have coined the Armenian word independently and who, nevertheless, should maintain the credit for linking tseghasbanutiun with “genocide.”

We may surmise that Sarian created a compound word, tsegh-a-sbanutiun (“race murder”), to translate the likely Turkish original, bir ırkın katli, instead of using the expression, tseghi me sbanutiun (“murder of a race”); the Turkish ırk (“race”) was also used with the meaning of “nation” in the early 20th century,34 the same as the word tsegh (“race”) in Armenian. There is nothing odd in this: Other languages such as German, French, Greek, and Polish had even older terms to designate the concept of race extermination.35 Morgenthau similarly employed “race extermination” instead of “extermination of a race” in his telegram of July 16, 1915: “Deportation of and excesses against peaceful Armenians is increasing, and from harrowing reports of eye-witnesses it appears that a campaign of race extermination is in progress.”36

 

The Meaningful Term ‘Medz Yeghern’

“They have in the collective memory of Europe the memory of the Holocaust, Gulag, Porrajmos (murder of the European Roma in the Third Reich), Holodomor (Soviet famine catastrophe in the Ukraine), Aghet or Yeghern (genocide of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire), and other genocides, sociocides, ethnocides, and other social crimes, and above all the gigantic forceful demographic shifts in Central and Eastern Europe triggered by the two war decades of 1912-1922 and 1939-1949.”37

This excerpt comes from a 2009 article by Stefan Troebst, a professor at the University of Leipzig, in a collection about Poland and its neighbors over the past two centuries. Such use of yeghern in a study completely unrelated to the Armenians is just one example of how this word is slowly becoming recognizable in academic scholarship, while many Armenian Americans have boisterously protested and condemned the use of Medz Yeghern, claiming to have never heard the word.

Medz Yeghern has also begun to permeate genocide studies, as exemplified by the extensive article “Genocide” of the New Catholic Encyclopedia by Professor Siobhan F. Nash-Marshall from Manhattanville College. Despite her adoption of the mistranslation “Metz Yeghern = Great Calamity,” probably due to misleading information in her sources, she has accurately established the relation between Medz Yeghern and genocide on the same level of the usage of Shoah and genocide, namely, as proper name and qualifier. For instance, here is the beginning of her critique of Lemkin’s definition of genocide: “The shortcomings of Lemkin’s definition, which is historically based, concern those significant features of the crimes against the Armenians and Jews that Lemkin himself viewed as paradigm instances of genocide (the Metz Yeghern and Shoah, respectively) and that Lemkin did not adequately include in his definition of genocide.”38

The establishment of its credentials should help Medz Yeghern, the Great Evil Crime, to recover its status as distinctive proper name—above the pedestrian use of the common name “Armenian Genocide” as proper name—and assert the unique identity of what historian Hilmar Kaiser has labeled “the first administratively organized genocide of history.”39 It would also help debunk the mistaken assumption that Medz Yeghern, the proper name of the systematic and premeditated annihilation of the Armenians by the Turkish state, is “a meaningless term to all those who do not speak Armenian,” in the words of Armenian-American commentator Harut Sassounian.40 We have brought enough proof that it is a meaningful way to name the event, as it is the case with Shoah, Porrajmos, Holodomor, or Sayfo for the Jewish, Roma, Ukrainian, or Assyrian genocides.

 

Notes

1 The Armenian Weekly, April 11, 1981.

2 William Safire, Safire’s Political Dictionary, New York: Oxford University Press, 2008, p. 319. For a groundbreaking etymological study of the use of the word before and after 1948, see Jon Petrie, “The Secular Word HOLOCAUST: Scholarly Myth, History, and 20th Century Meanings,” Journal of Genocide Research, 1, 2000, pp. 31-63.

3 The Armenian Weekly, April 11, 1981.

4 Israel W. Charny (ed.), Encyclopedia of Genocide, vol. 1, Santa Barbara (Ca.): ABC-CLIO, 1999, p. 42.

5 Petrie, “The Secular Word HOLOCAUST,” p. 33. Charny has wrongly ascribed the authorship to Dr. N[azaret] Daghavarian and Khosrov (penname of Armen Ardontz) and dated the book in 1911 (Charny, Encyclopedia, p. 42).

6 Bernard Lewis, The Emergence of Modern Turkey, second edition, New York: Oxford University Press, 1968, p. 356 (the first edition, in 1961, wrote “holocaust of 1916”).

7 See www1.yadvashem.org/yv/en/holocaust/resource_center/the_holocaust.asp.

8 Charny (ed.), Encyclopedia, p. 43 (emphasis in original).

9 The New York Times, Dec. 6, 2010.

10 See http://americanheritage.yourdictionary.com/shoah.

11 See www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/DCPD-201300229/…/DCPD-201300229.htm.

12 Marc Nichanian, “Sarafian and the Conquest of Exile,” in Nigoghos Sarafian, The Bois de Vincennes, translated by Christopher Atamian, Dearborn (MI): The Armenian Research Center, University of Michigan-Dearborn, 2011, p. 9

13 S. Shahen, Tanjvatznere (Patkerner hay agheti taragrutenen), New York: Haig, 1917. The title of sociologist Bakhshi Ishkhanian’s book, Agheti yev tarapanki ashkharhits (ayts tiurkahay pakhstakannerin) (From the Land of Catastrophe and Suffering: Visit to the Turkish Armenian Refugees) (Tiflis: Press of the Viceroy of the Caucasus, 1915), does not specifically name the event.

14 Hushardzan April Tasnemeki (Monument to April Eleven), Constantinople: O. Arzuman, 1919, p. 128.

15 Teotig, “Hay verki ‘banase’ner” (Panaceas of Armenian Wounds), in idem, Amenun taretsuytse (Everyone’s Almanach), vol. X-XIV, Constantinople, 1916-1920, p. 170; idem, “Migamatzner hay horizonen” (Nebulae of the Armenian Horizon), in idem, p. 181.

16 See the catalogue of Armenian books for the years 1915-30 in the Hagop Meghapart Project (www.nla.am/arm/meghapart).

17 R. Lernian [Liparit Nazariantz], “Metz agheti nakhorein” (On the Eve of the Great Catastrophe), Hairenik Amsakir, March, April and June 1927; idem, “Metz agheti orerun” (In the Days of the Great Catastrophe), Hairenik Amsakir, December 1927, March 1928, and June 1928.

18 Krikor Beledian, “L’expérience de la catastrophe dans la littérature arménienne,” Revue d’histoire arménienne contemporaine, 1, 1995, p. 131.

19 Marc Nichanian, The Historiographical Perversion, translated by Gil Anidjar, New York: Columbia University Press, 2009, p. 15.

20 Vahé Oshagan, “The Theme of the Genocide in Diaspora Prose,” Armenian Review, Spring 1985, p. 57.

21 See the discussion in Taner Akçam, The Young Turks Crime against Humanity: The Armenian Genocide and Ethnic Cleansing in the Ottoman Empire, Princeton and London: Princeton University Press, 2012, pp. 126-129.

22 Beledian, “L’expérience de la catastrophe,” p. 135.

23 Taline Voskeritchian, “Between Massacre and Genocide: On Eric Friedler’s ‘Aghét: Nation Murder,’” Jadaliyya, May 16, 2011 (www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/1591/between-massacre-and-genocide_on-eric-friedlers-ag).

24 See www.armtimes.com/tag/4539.

25 Aldo Ferrari, L’Ararat e la gru: Studi sulla storia e la cultura degli armeni, Milan: Mimesis, 2003, p. 233.

26 Today’s Zaman, April 26, 2010.

27 Theodore Roosevelt, Letters and Speeches, New York: Library of America, 2004, p. 736 (emphasis added).

28 Raphael Lemkin, “Genocide as a Crime under International Law,” American Journal of International Law, 1, 1947, p. 146.

29 Haraj-50, Paris: Haratch, 1975, pp. 185-186.

30 Ardashes Der Khachadurian, Hrant Kankruni, and Paramaz G. Doniguian, Hayots lezvi nor bararan (New Dictionary of the Armenian Language), Beirut: G. Doniguian and Sons, 1968, p. 855.

31 See Beledian, “L’expérience de la catastrophe,” p. 131; Khatchig Mouradian, “From Yeghern to Genocide: Armenian Newspapers, Raphael Lemkin, and the Road to the UN Genocide Convention,” Haigazian Armenological Review, vol. 29, 2009, p. 128.

32 Yves Ternon, Enquête sur la négation d’un génocide, Rocquevaire: Parenthèses, 1989, p. 218. See also Kurt Jonassohn with Karin Solveig Björnson, Genocide and Gross Human Rights Violations in Comparative Perspective, New Brunswick (NJ): Transaction, 1998, p. 151.

33 Mardiros Sarian, Fe d’agombli yev Astutzo dem paterazm. Polis Nuri Osmaniyei mej Ittihatakanneru gaghtni voroshumnere. hayots bnajnjman sharzharitneru masin (Fait Accompli and War against God. The Secret Decisions of the Ittihadists in Nuri Osmaniyeh, in Constantinople: On the Motives for the Extermination of the Armenians), Paris: n.p., 1933, p. 4.

34 See Stephan Astourian, “Modern Turkish Identity and the Armenian Genocide,” in Richard Hovannisian (ed.), Richard Hovannisian (ed.), Remembrance and Denial: The Case of the Armenian Genocide, Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1999, pp. 45-46.

35 Jonassohn and Björnson, Genocide and Gross Human Rights Violations, p. 151.

36 Quoted in Ara Sarafian (ed.), British Parliamentary Debates on the Armenian Genocide, 1915-1918, Reading: Taderon Press, 2003, p. 64. Morgenthau’s memoirs or telegrams do not seem to contain the expression “race murder” ascribed to him (Samantha Power, “A Problem from Hell”: America and the Age of Genocide, New York: Perennial, 2002, p. 1: title of the chapter, “Race Murder,” p. 6: “What he called ‘race murder’ was under way”).

37 Stefan Troebst, “Europäisierung der Vertreibungserinnerung? Eine deutsch-polnische Chronique scandaleuse 2002-2008,” in Martin Aust, Krzysztof Ruchnewicz and Stefan Troebst (eds.), Verflochtene Erinnerungen: Polen und seine Nachbarn im 19. und 20. Jahrundert, Cologne, Weimar, and Vienna: Böhlau, 2009, p. 245.

38 Siobhan F. Nash-Marshall, “Genocide,” in Robert L. Fastiggi (ed.), New Catholic Encyclopedia, supplement 2009, Detroit: Gale/Cengage Learning, 2010, pp. 352-353.

39 Hilmar Kaiser, Luther Eskijian, and Nancy Eskijian, At the Crossroads of Der Zor: Death, Survival, and Humanitarian Resistance, London: Gomidas Institute, 2001, p. XI.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: What Our Words Mean: Towards the Vindication of ‘Medz Yeghern’

Senior House Members Cosponsor Genocide Resolution

August 7, 2013 By administrator

Senior_Congress_MembersLeft to right: Representatives Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), Eliot Engel (D-NY), Henry Waxman (D-CA), and Nita Lowey (D-NY) are among the senior House leaders cosponsoring the Genocide resolution.

Senior Members of the U.S. House Back Passage of the Measure Urging “Fair, Just, and Comprehensive International Resolution” of Turkey’s Crime of Genocide

WASHINGTON—Senior Congressional leaders serving on key foreign policy and appropriations panels have lent their support to a groundbreaking human rights measure that seeks improved Armenian-Turkish ties based upon Turkey’s acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide and a just international resolution of this still unpunished crime, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

Among the top House Committee leaders supporting H.Res.227, the Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice Resolution are: Representatives Eliot Engel (D-NY), the Ranking Member of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Scott Garrett (R-NJ), the Chairman of the Financial Markets Subcommittee on Capital Markets; Rush Holt (D-NJ), the Ranking Member of the Natural Resources Subcommittee on Energy; Steve Israel (D-NY), the Chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee; Nita Lowey (D-NY), the Ranking Member on the Appropriations Committee; Grace Napolitano (D-CA), the Ranking Member of the Natural Resources Subcommittee on Water and Power; Devin Nunes (R-CA), the Chairman of the Ways and Means Subcommittee on Trade; Janice Schakowsky (D-IL), the Chief Deputy Whip; Allyson Schwartz (D-PA), the Vice Ranking Member on the Budget Committee, Brad Sherman (D-CA), the Ranking Member on the Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Terrorism, John Tierney (D-MA), the Ranking Member of the Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittee on National Security; Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), the Ranking Member on the Budget Committee, and; Henry Waxman (D-CA), the Ranking Member of the Energy and Commerce Committee.

Introduced and spearheaded by Congressmen David Valadao (R-CA), Adam Schiff (D-CA), Michael Grimm (R-NY) and Frank Pallone (D-NJ) in May of this year, the Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice Resolution reflects and reinforces previous U.S. affirmation of the Armenian Genocide as a crime of genocide, citing the U.S. Government’s May 28, 1951 written statement to the International Court of Justice regarding the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, President Ronald Reagan’s April 22, 1981 Proclamation and Congressional adoption of Armenian Genocide legislation in 1975 and 1984.  H.Res.227 builds on the record of past U.S. Executive and Legislative branch affirmation of this crime, and calls on “the President to work toward equitable, constructive, stable, and durable Armenian-Turkish relations based upon the Republic of Turkey’s full acknowledgment of the facts and ongoing consequences of the Armenian Genocide, and a fair, just, and comprehensive international resolution of this crime against humanity.”

ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian discussed the very real, modern day consequences of Turkey’s denial of the Armenian Genocide – and international community inaction in the face of that denial.  “Turkey’s obstruction of justice has, over the course of nearly a century, allowed Ankara to consolidate its hold on the genocidal gains of its crimes against the Armenian people, blocking the return to the Armenian nation of key elements—indispensable elements—of viability that long sustained the Armenian people on their ancient homeland,” explained Hamparian, in a May 9th op/ed. “This denial poisons Armenian-Turkish relations, fosters wave after wave of anti-Armenian intolerance within Turkey, threatens Armenia’s and Artsakh’s security, and, of course, fuels regional tensions.”

Prominent supporters of this bipartisan measure also include the two Members of Congress of Armenian heritage, Congresswomen Anna Eshoo (D-CA), the Ranking Member of the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Communications and Technology; Jackie Speier (D-CA), the Ranking Member of the Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittee on Energy Policy, Health Care and Entitlements; Tim Bishop (D-NY), the Ranking Member of the Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment, and; Jim McGovern (D-MA), the Co-Chair of the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission, and Representatives Gus Bilirakis (R-FL), Bruce Braley (D-IA), Michael Capuano (D-MA), Tony Cardenas (D-CA), Judy Chu (D-CA) , David Cicilline (D-RI), Chris Collins (R-NY), Jim Costa (D-CA), Joe Courtney (D-CT), Jeff Denham (R-CA), Janice Hahn (D-CA), James Langevin (D-RI), Barbara Lee (D-CA), Grace Meng (D-NY), Gary Peters (D-MI) , John Sarbanes (D-MD), and Dina Titus (D-NV).

Armenian Americans across the country are reaching out to their U.S. Representatives during their annual August recess to educate and advocate in support of H.Res.227, as part of a broad range of issues of concern to the Armenian American community. To send a free ANCA Webmail, visit: www.anca.org/justice.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Senior House Members Cosponsor Genocide Resolution

Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice Resolution gains more support

August 6, 2013 By administrator

August 6, 2013 – 10:02 AMT

Senior Congressional leaders serving on key foreign policy and appropriations panels have lent their support to a groundbreaking human rights measure that seeks improved Armenian-Turkish ties based upon Turkey’s acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide and a just international resolution of this still unpunished crime, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

Among the top House Committee leaders supporting H.Res.227, the Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice Resolution are: Representatives Eliot Engel (D-NY), the Ranking Member of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Scott Garrett (R-NJ), the Chairman of the Financial Markets Subcommittee on Capital Markets; Rush Holt (D-NJ), the Ranking Member of the Natural Resources Subcommittee on Energy; Steve Israel (D-NY), the Chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and others.

Introduced and spearheaded by Congressmen David Valadao (R-CA), Adam Schiff (D-CA), Michael Grimm (R-NY) and Frank Pallone (D-NJ) in May of this year, the Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice Resolution reflects and reinforces previous U.S. affirmation of the Armenian Genocide as a crime of genocide, citing the U.S. 167556Government’s May 28, 1951 written statement to the International Court of Justice regarding the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, President Ronald Reagan’s April 22, 1981 Proclamation and Congressional adoption of Armenian Genocide legislation in 1975 and 1984. H.Res.227 builds on the record of past U.S. Executive and Legislative branch affirmation of this crime, and calls on “the President to work toward equitable, constructive, stable, and durable Armenian-Turkish relations based upon the Republic of Turkey’s full acknowledgment of the facts and ongoing consequences of the Armenian Genocide, and a fair, just, and comprehensive international resolution of this crime against humanity.”

ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian discussed the very real, modern day consequences of Turkey’s denial of the Armenian Genocide – and international community inaction in the face of that denial. “Turkey’s obstruction of justice has, over the course of nearly a century, allowed Ankara to consolidate its hold on the genocidal gains of its crimes against the Armenian people, blocking the return to the Armenian nation of key elements—indispensable elements—of viability that long sustained the Armenian people on their ancient homeland,” explained Hamparian, in a May 9th op/ed. “This denial poisons Armenian-Turkish relations, fosters wave after wave of anti-Armenian intolerance within Turkey, threatens Armenia’s and Artsakh’s security, and, of course, fuels regional tensions.”

Source PanARMENIAN.Net

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice Resolution gains more support

BY: Zeynep TOZDUMAN This writing is dedicated to 7 August 1933, the Assyrians suffered genocide in Iraq.

August 6, 2013 By administrator

BY: Zeynep TOZDUMAN

EAST SYRIAC GENOCIDE   — Turkish and English version
In general, the count of the Assyrian genocide in our country who are members of the same ring Assyrian / Syriac and Aramaic / Syriac genocide known. It is Zeynep TOZDUMAN Pictureperceived as the Nestorians and Chaldeans, or to any other known halkmış.

In today’s Assyrian / Syriac people of ancient Assyrian, Chaldean and Babylonian civilizations heir.
These days, Tur Abdin (Mardin and vicinity), in Christianity is still the heir of the old state.

Nestorians (Eastern Assyrians, Assyrians) for the years 1843-1846 were the first massacres. This mass slaughter, Cizre and Hakkari Bedirhan Miri Miri-Botan by Nuru was to intimidate the Ottoman Empire. Assyrian, the Russians and their cooperation İngiliz’lerle “grounds” acts of destruction during World War II for the public to have all of a hindrance.

Nuru Bey, the Turkish and Kurdish forces in the war is a military force that defeated the Assyrians and set fire to the patriarchate. Turkish troops, and for that they did not support the Badr Khan Bey Nuru had to resort to a second military operation which killed 10 thousand Assyria experienced very hard moments. Against this, even more so in the Ottoman Army Ruler, reckoning with England and France, followed by the movement of a punishment, and that the nature of operations resulted in an agreement with the Emir on the same days.

Attempting to sever the roots of such massacres Assyrians, down at the bottom of an attack took place added pressure in 1907, the territory of Iran. In the context of the Turkish-Iranian border wars, not only the Turkish and Kurdish troops battle the forces of Persia expulsion border region but also for working with Pers’lerle Tergavar ‘(so many Christians in the village area) also attacked the Assyrians in. Urmia Assyrians fled to the survivors.

These days, though forgotten how terrible massacres For the first 1 Outshine them happened in World War II, but these days, the south-east Turkey, the Assyrian Church of the East on the Apostolic neglected historical ruins consist of a single person has resulted in even dispensed. In 1915, after the withdrawal of Russian troops in the north west of Iran, which lasted for five months during the invasion of the Turkish-Kurdish slaughter of countless Christians, causing the expulsion and escape.

Gawar’lı Assyrian men, deprived of all the imprisoned Urmia, Ismail (Simko) Qalla Aga village “were then put to the sword.” Dilman’daki killed and his boys over the age of 12, women should be forced to convert to Islam and Muslims evlendirilmişlerdir force. Children are orphans, and the Kurdish families in trauma. Russia and Tabriz fleeing hunger and disease is broken.

Acts of destruction of the Chaldeans (Adda-i-Sharia which is an important metropolitan among those killed.), The Syriac Orthodox Christians, Catholics and Protestants, and eventually included the. About 70 thousand Assyrians living in the mountains, at the end of Urmia in Iran to escape impartial saved. Some of them were taken by the Russians in the Caucasus. Patrik Kurdish traditions and customs of Semun by the Kurdish leader Simko in a manner inconsistent with 140 men, he was shot from behind brutally murdered. Losses due to the constant attacks that quite a few people realized the Kurds, the British withdrew from the right and from where Bakuba sent to Hamadan. Efforts to return to their homeland after the end of the war in 1918 resulted in a bloody way.

Sevres delegates participating in the Assyrian, Assyrian Assyrian Christians in order to guarantee the security of the state demanded.

However, diplomats involved in the talks at Sevres, Assyrians during the war, they denied the alliance. Instead, the Treaty of Sevres in the future “for the safety of the Assyrian-Chaldeans” are required to provide a full guarantee 62.madde including the establishment of an autonomous Kurdistan, has been added. Such as whether the rights recognized in the Treaty of Sevres, salvation for the Syrian people until the present day yararlandırılmadılar.

REPUBLIC OF TURKEY One of the first actions of the Syrian homeland after the installation of Hakkari (1 to 28 September 1924) “Nestorian Uprising” was extermination and techni-cal. Kemalist power “Western Armenia Ermenisizleştirildikten” after the first goal was to suppress the Nestorians. Official history literature “Nestorian uprising” 12 to 18 September 1924, the event, is the essence of an uprising. Kemalist republic in Lausanne for the homogenization of the border of the National Pact had had registered his “internal expansion” campaign. Internally driven out of the operation of a re-occupation of the Nestorians of Hakkari, local Christians is a continuation of policies yurtsuzlaştırma and exile. Kurdish officers in the army troops had participated in the operation. 18th Ihsan Nuri Azadi captain in the regiment is a member of the organization (that is, the commander of the military wing of the organization, then Hoybun Pain Rebellion started) had both. During this operation three lieutenants and troops fleeing and 3 to 4 September 1924, TC 350 Kurdish soldiers. ‘Against, Beytülşebab rebellion started. September 12 to 18 as a result of the Turkish army continues military operations outside of Hakkari Nestorians were forced to withdraw. Is not known how much of human life is lost tens of Tîyar valley village about 20 thousand Nestorians, with the support of the Kurdish tribes, were expelled from their homes into Iraq and Iran detached.

Over the tragedy continues, the project Assyrian emigration to Canada in 1925, as well as return and border crossing desperate efforts, as well as adventurous as you settle in places far from civilization Khabur River basin plans and other massacres in Iraq at the end of 1933, Simele led to slaughter. Assyrians first act was to kill the Iraqi army. 7 – From August 1933, the Catholic, Jacobite, and gather together peacefully slaughtered the men of Assyria.

Gabriele Yonan (holocoust forgotten) 1915/1916 the number of murdered 20 years of the mountainous region of Hakkari with only 30 thousand, 45 thousand and the number of that in Mosul and the Tigris is.

Assyrians 1915 until 1924, the victim of at least 400 thousand to 500 thousand claims to be considered on the basis of their claim Seyfo center (Assyrian genocide center) via the world are trying to make their voices heard. Is of course not possible to determine the exact number of victims. How is calculated in, the number of victims is not down to a minimum of 200 thousand to 300 thousand. I understand that at that time the church records of baptism.

1915 until today, the Assyrians, the massacres, oppression, intimidation and the number of Mesopotamia, the homeland of homogenization unfortunately these days because of the policies of three thousand remained. The most ancient people of Mesopotamia in the last six years, which to be occupied territory of the monastery of Mor Gabriel’s case law on non-stop shot. Moreover, the Mor Gabriel’s case, was the subject of bargaining hit the Diaspora genocide studies. Parable of two birds with one stone. Both tie the hands of the Assyrians in the country, both in Europe and the languages ​​of the Assyrians living in the U.S. …

In order to prevent another genocide need to confront the past of our history in this land. Or yüzsüzleşeceğiz confrontation with our past, or to the whole world.

Zeynep TOZDUMAN

Bibliography:

· Recep Marash Armenian genocide in 1915

· The prosecution, deportation and destruction Tessa Hofmann

· Holocoust forgotten Gabriele Yonan

This writing is dedicated to 7 August 1933, the Assyrians suffered genocide in Iraq.

Turkish Version

DOĞU SÜRYANİ  SOYKIRIMI

Genelde Süryani soykırımı deyince; ülkemizde aynı halka mensup olan Asur/Süryani ve  Arami/Süryani soykırımı  bilinmektedir. Sanki Nasturiler ve Keldaniler başka bir halkmış gibi algılanır ya da hiç bilinmez.

Günümüz Asuri/Süryani halkı kadim Asur, Kalde ve Babil uygarlıklarının mirasçısıdır.

Bu gün Turabdin (Mardin ve civarı) bölgesi halen en eski Hıristiyanlığın mirasçısı durumundadır.

Nasturilere (Doğu Süryanileri, Asurlar) yönelik ilk katliamlar 1843-1846 yıllarında yapılmıştır. Bu kitlesel katliamlar, Cizre-Botan Miri Bedirhan ve Hakkari Miri Nurullah tarafından Osmanlı’ya gözdağı vermek amacıyla yapılmıştır. Asurların, Ruslar ve İngiliz’lerle iş birliği yaptıkları ”gerekçesiyle” imha eylemleri dünya savaşı sırasında hiç bir engelle karşılaşmadan tüm halka yönelik olmuştur.

Nurullah Bey, Kürt ve Türk savaş güçlerinin de içinde yer aldığı bir askeri güçle Asurları yendi ve patrikhaneyi ateşe verdi. Türk birliklerinin destek vermediği ve bunun için de Nurullah Bey’in Bedir Han’a başvurmak zorunda kaldığı ikinci bir askeri harekatta ise 10 bin Asur’un yaşamını yitirdiği çok sert anlar yaşanmıştır. Bunu Osmanlı ordusu’nun Emir’e karşı daha çok da İngiltere ve Fransa ile hesaplaşma mahiyetinde olan bir cezalandırma hareketi izlemiştir ve harekat aynı günlerde Emir ile yapılan bir anlaşma ile sonuçlanmıştır.

Asurlar bu tür katliamlarla köklerinden koparmaya çalışılırken, altta alta gerçekleşen baskılara 1907’de İran topraklarında bir saldırı daha eklendi. Türk-İran sınır savaşları bağlamında, Türk ve Kürt Birlikleri sadece Pers savaş güçlerini sınır bölgesinden sürmekle kalmayıp ayrıca Pers’lerle işbirliği yapan Tergavar’ (Çok sayıda Hıristiyan köyünün olduğu bölge) daki Asurlulara da saldırdılar. Hayatta kalan Asurlar ise Urmiye’ye kaçtı.

Bu gün unutulmuş olan bu ilk katliamlar ne kadar korkunç olsa da 1. Dünya savaşı’nda yaşananlar bunları gölgede bırakmakla kalmayıp, bu gün Türkiye’nin güney doğusunda ihmal edilmiş tarihi kalıntılardan ibaret Apostolik Doğu Asur Kilisesi’ne bağlı tek bir kişinin bile kalmaması sonucunu doğurmuştur. Rus Birliklerinin 1915’te İran’ın kuzey batısından çekilmesiyle sonraki beş ay boyunca süren Türk-Kürt işgali süresince sayısız Hıristiyan’ın kılıçtan geçirilmesine, sürülmesine ve kaçmasına sebeb olmuştur.

Gawar’lı Asur erkekleri, Urmiye’de her şeyden yoksun bir şekilde hapsedilip, İsmail (Simko) Ağa’nın Qalla köyü’nde “kılıçtan geçirildiler” . Dilman’daki 12 yaşından büyük erkek çocukları katledilip, kadınlar Müslüman olmaya zorlanıp ve zorla müslümanlarla evlendirilmişlerdir. Travma içindeki yetim ve öksüz çocuklar ise Kürt ailelere verilmiştir. Rusya’ya ve Tebriz’e kaçanlar ise açlık ve hastalıktan kırıldı.

İmha eylemleri Keldaniler’i (çok önemli bir Metropolit olan Adda-i Şer’de öldürülenler arasındaydı.), ortodoks Süryani Hıristiyanları ve nihayetinde katolik ve protestanları da kapsıyordu. Dağlarda yaşayan yaklaşık 70 bin Süryani, sonunda İran’daki tarafsız Urmiye’ye kaçıp kurtuldular. Halkın bir kısmı Ruslar tarafından Kafkaslar’a götürüldü. Patrik Şemun ise Kürt önder Simko tarafından Kürt gelenek ve törelerine aykırı bir şekilde 140 adamıyla birlikte arkadan vurularak hunharca katledilmiştir. Kürtler’in gerçekleştirdikleri sürekli saldırılar nedeniyle epeyce kayıplar veren halk, İngilizlerin bulunduğu Hamadan’a doğru çekildi ve buradan Bakuba’ya gönderildiler. 1918’de savaşın bitiminden sonra yurtlarına dönme çabaları ise kanlı bir şekilde sonuçlandı.

Sevr’e katılan Asur delegeleri, Asurlu Hıristiyanların güvenliğini güvence altına almak amacıyla bir Asur devleti talebinde bulundular.

Ancak Sevr’de görüşmelere katılan diplomatlar, savaş sırasında Asurlularla ittifak yaptıklarını inkar ettiler. Bunun yerine Sevr antlaşması’na gelecekte “Asur-Kıldanilerin güvenliği için” tam garanti sunması gereken bir otonom Kürdistan’ın kurulmasını içeren 62.madde eklendi. Süryani halkı için Sevr kurtuluş olmadığı gibi Lozan’da tanınan haklarından da günümüze değin yararlandırılmadılar.

T.C. kurulduktan sonra ilk eylemlerinden biri anayurdu Hakkari olan Süryanilere  ( 1-28 Eylül 1924 ) “Nasturi Ayaklanması’’  Tedip ve Tenkil yapmıştır. Kemalist iktidar Batı Ermenistan “Ermenisizleştirildikten” sonra ilk hedefi Nasturileri bastırmak oldu. Resmi tarih literatüründe “Nasturi ayaklanması” 12-18 Eylül 1924’de olan olay; özünde bir ayaklanma değildir. Kemalist cumhuriyetin, Lozan’da tescil ettirdiği Misak-ı Milli sınırında homojenleşmek için yaptığı “iç genişleme” harekatıdır. Nasturilerin Hakkari dışına sürülmesi operasyonu içerde yapılan bir yeniden işgal, yerli Hıristiyanları yurtsuzlaştırma ve sürgün politikalarının bir devamıdır. Harekata katılan ordu birlikleri içinde Kürt subaylarda vardı. 18. Alayın içinde Azadi örgüt üyesi olan yüzbaşı İhsan Nuri (ki, daha sonra Ağrı İsyanını başlatan Hoybun örgütünün askeri kanadının komutanı)’ de vardı. Bu harekat sırasında 3 teğmen ve 350 Kürt asker birlikleriyle firar edip 3-4 Eylül 1924’te TC.’ye karşı, Beytülşebab isyanını başlatmıştır. Türk ordusunun sürdürdüğü askeri harekat sonucunda 12-18 Eylül arasında Nasturiler Hakkari dışına çekilmeye zorlandılar. Ne kadar insan hayatı kaybedildiği bilinmemekle birlikte Tiyar vadisinden onlarca köyde yaklaşık 20 bin Nasturi, Kürt aşiretlerinin de desteğiyle, yurtlarından koparılarak Irak ve İran içlerine sürülmüşlerdir.

Trajedi bitmedi devam ediyor; Asurların 1925 yılında Kanada’ya göç ettirilmesi projesinin yanı sıra, umutsuz geri dönüş ve sınır geçme çabaları, ayrıca yer yer medeniyetden uzak Habur Nehri havzasına yerleşmeleri gibi maceracı planlar, başka katliamlara ve en sonunda da 1933’te Irak’taki Simele katliamına yol açtı. Asurluları öldürmek Irak ordusunun ilk icraatı oldu. 7- Ağustos 1933’ten itibaren Katolik, Yakubi ve barışçıl Asur erkeklerini bir araya toplayıp katlettiler.

Gabriele Yonan (Unutulan bir Holocoust)  1915/1916 yıllarındaki sadece Hakkari dağlık kesiminde katledilenlerin sayısını 20 ile 30 bin, Musul  ve Dicle bölgesindekilerin sayısını ise 45 bin olarak vermektedir.

Asurlular 1915-1924’e kadar en az 400 bin ile 500 bin arasında kurban verdikleri iddiasına dayanarak taleplerinin dikkate alınması için Seyfo center (Süryani soykırım merkezi) aracılığı ile dünyaya seslerini duyurmaya çalışıyorlar. Kurbanların sayısını tam olarak saptamak mümkün değil elbette. Nasıl hesaplanırsa hesaplansın, kurban sayısı en az 200 bin ile 300 binden aşağı değildir. Bunu da o dönemde kilise vaftiz kayıtlarından anlıyoruz.

1915’ten günümüze değin Süryaniler; katliamlar, baskılar, sindirme ve tek tipleştirme politikaları yüzünden bu gün anayurdu Mezopotamya’da sayıları ne yazık ki üç bin kalmıştır. Mezopotamyanın en kadim halkı son 6 yıldır ise Mor Gabriel manastırının işgal edilmek istenilen topraklarıyla ilgili hukuk davası ile durmaksızın vuruluyor. Üstelik, Mor Gabriel davası, diasporada soykırım çalışmaları pazarlık konusu edilerek vuruluyor. Bir taşta iki kuş misali. Hem ülke içi Süryanilerin elini kolunu bağla, hem Avrupada ve ABD’de yaşayan süryanilerin  dillerini…

Bu topraklarda başka soykırımlar yaşanmaması için geçmiş tarihimizle yüzleşmek gerek. Tüm dünyaya karşı geçmişimizle ya yüzleşeceğiz ya da yüzsüzleşeceğiz.

ZEYNEP TOZDUMAN

Kaynakçalar:

·     1915 Ermeni soykırımı    Recep Maraşlı

·     Takibat,Tehcir ve İmha   Tessa Hofmann

·     Unutulan bir Holocoust   Gabriele Yonan

Bu yazımı 7 Ağustos 1933’de Irak’da soykırıma uğrayan  Süryanilere ithaf ediyorum.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: 7 August 1933, the Assyrians suffered genocide in Iraq.

SOAD take stage to call for Genocide recognition (video)

August 1, 2013 By administrator

PanARMENIAN.Net – System of a Down lead singer Serj Tankian challenged a capacity crowd at their July 29 Hollywood Bowl show to imagine a world in which those who claim to speak for the international community remained silent on the Holocaust – as they do on the Turkish Government’s genocide 167177perpetrated against its Armenian, Greek and Assyrian populations from 1915-1923.

With Daron Malakian’s soulful riffs of the Armenian ballad “Zepiuri Nman” (Like a Breeze) in the background, Tankian stated: “Imagine if this is the 1940s, and World War II had just started, and America decided not to enter the war on the side of Britain. Imagine if, Americans became allies with Nazi Germany and decided that we’re going to push away the Holocaust, never use the word Holocaust in Government policy. Imagine what a life that would be. Imagine being Jewish and living in L.A. and not hearing your President or your Congress use the word Holocaust. That’s exactly what Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians feel when our government doesn’t use the word genocide.”

The four members of System of a Down have been at the forefront of calling on the U.S., and international community as a whole, to work toward a truthful and just resolution of the Armenian Genocide, and all genocides, since the very inception of their Grammy award-winning band. Their efforts are spotlighted in the documentary “SCREAMERS” – which highlights international inaction in the face of the Armenian and Darfur genocides. Tankian and System of a Down drummer John Dolmayan travelled to Washington, DC in April, 2006, for a three-day advocacy campaign urging Congress to speak truthfully about this crime.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: SOAD take stage to call for Genocide recognition (video)

Armenian psychologists to look into genetic aspects of Genocide

July 29, 2013 By administrator

Ahead the 100th commemoration of the Armenian Genocide, psychologists are going to launch a study into the crime’s genetic aspects, Armenpress reported.

Genocide genetic AspectsThe research, expected to target some 2,500 Armenians in Armenia and the Diaspora, is aimed at revealing the forms of the traumatic memory transfer.

Speaking to the agency, the head of the Yerevan State Medical University’s Medical Psychology Chair, Khachatur Gasparyan, has said
the project will be carried out with the assistance of the State Committee of Science (Ministry of Education and Science of Armenia).

“For us, it is interesting to know how the Armenian Genocide trauma is transferred from one generation to another,” he said. “We came up with the idea on the Genocide day as we were heading home from the Genocide complex late in the evening. With the people’s flow being large, we would pause at times. I tried, at that moment, to observe different people’s reaction in the crowd. What interested me was the behavior of a child of five or six who was shouting at his mother, asking her why music was on. I came to realize that the child couldn’t understand why so many people go to the memorial with flowers in hands; he couldn’t understand the trauma of the Massacre. We don’t know at this point what information has reached the child”.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian psychologists to look into genetic aspects of Genocide

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