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Thierry Meyssan: Today’s Turkey continues the Armenian Genocide with the massacres of Deir ez-Zor and Kessab

May 14, 2015 By administrator

By Siranush Ghazanchyan,

Kessab-liberated-10-620x300“The world has just commemorated the centenary of the genocide of Turkish non-Muslims. However, contrary to conventional wisdom, this crime began with the Hamidian massacres of 1894-95, which were ordered by Sultan Abdülhamid II, and continued on a huge scale with the massacres perpetrated between 1915 and 1923, planned by the young Turks. They continue today with the massacres of Deir ez-Zor and Kessab, organized by Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. For 120 years, the Turkish power elite have been successively massacring non-Muslimns – to general indifference – in order to build a homogenous nation,” Thierry Meyssan writes in an article published by Voltaire Network.

According to the author, “the centenary of the genocide of Turkish non-Muslims prepared the stage for festival of hypocrisy.” “While certain states celebrated the memory of the victims in Yerevan, others showed themselves to be shameless.”

“President Erdoğan had the opportunity to confess to this very old story, of which he is in no way responsible. Had he done so, he could have made his country a normal state. But no! Instead he hung onto his lies, denying History and affirming that there had been “only”100,000 dead, and that they had been executed for their participation in terrorist activities,” the article reads.

“By draping itself in this absurdity, today’s Turkey is not only manifesting its support for the Hamidian massacres of Sultan Abdülhamid II (1894-95) – which caused between 80,000 and 300,000 victims – but especially for the crimes committed by the “Special Organization” of the Union and Progress Committee (UPC), starting from 1915 until the election of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk as President of the Republic (1923), which caused between 1,200,000 and 1,500,000 deaths – and its ideological continuity with the ancient régime. And this is what we all noted with horror when, last year in 2014, we watched the Turkish army accompany the al-Nusra Front (in other words al-Qaïda in Syria) to Kessab for the purpose of chasing away the Armenian population. Or again, when the same Turkish army helped Daesh to dynamite the Deir ez-Zor Memorial, which commemorated the 1916 extermination of more than 200,000 Armeniens in the camp that the Turks had built for them,” the author writes.

“Pan-Islamism, the project of Sultan Abdülhamid II and the Young Turks early in the 20th century, like the AKP today, aims to become the leader of the sunnite world, and in order to achieve this aim, it intends to create a homogenous sunnite state. This project required the extermination of the Christians (Armenians, Pontic Greeks, and Assyro-Chaldeans) and the Yezidis. They all died, exactly as Daesh is exterminating Christians and Yezidis today,” Thierry Meyssan continues.

According to him, the intervention of the Turkish army into Syrian territory, at Kessab and Deir ez-Zor, is coherent with this project, since Recep Tayyip Erdoğan hopes to annex Northern Syria once NATO has overthrown President Bachar el-Assad.

Thierry Meyssan is a French intellectual, founder and chairman of Voltaire Network and the Axis for Peace Conference.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, contenue, Kessab, Massacare, today, Turkey

Three great massacres and the heritage that could not be shared: Armenian orphans

December 4, 2014 By administrator

Nazan_Maksudyan_Mihran_Web_2_1318The third guest of The History Foundation’s Tuesday Talks series titled ‘Deportation-Massacre-Genocide 1915-2015’ was Nazan Maksudyan Assistant Professor, Head of the Department of Social Sciences at Istanbul University Kemerburgaz. Maksudyan held a speech titled ‘Three Generations, Three Massacres: Armenian Children and Orphans from 1895 to 1915 and we had the chance to talk to her about the perception of children during the Ottoman period, and the conditions and political roles of Armenian orphans.

EMRE CAN DAĞLIOĞLU the
I misakmanusyan@gmail.co

In your speech, you focused on three generations of Armenian orphans that draughty from three massacres, those of 1894-6, 1909 and 1915. Did you manage to access statistical data on thes the orphans?

It is very difficult to provice in statistics Regarding this matter. 50 thousand orphans are Mentioned for the 1894-96 Massacres. We know that the number of the dead stands at 200-300 thousand. The Therefore, the figure of 50 thousand is too high According to some, and too low for others. We know that 20-30 thousand people were Murdered during the 1909 Adana Massacre, and the number of children in Orphanages was at 3,500. However, there were of course that children never made it to Orphanages. In 1915, the matter Becomes even more complicated. It is said that 500-600 thousand children maanged to survive. Even if I were to define children as those aged 17 and lower, in the context of the massacres, the children in Orphanages during that period are often those under the age of 13. Because male children over the age of 13 were Perceived as a threat Murdered and often as well. Girls over the age of 13 were abducted, captured, or forced into marriage.

How does the perpetrator’s perception of children change in the massacres? What circumstances are children under Perceived as a threat? Under What circumstances are they protected?

This is another issue that can not be understood when approached from a nationalist perspective. The more hard-line racist approach that takes into account the ‘potential of the child to return’ and thinks that children must be Murdered as well. There are examples of this kind in history. However, children were deemed beautiful Immediately taken in by hh, or those Adopted were deemed intelligent. The Therefore, there is a perception that the children thes could be used for other means. The missionaries, on the other hand, come up with this viewpoint: “The Muslims took the intelligent Armenians because they were not bright themselves.” That, of course, is the product of another racist approach … Yet there is also the fact that , while slightly from the children who could use weapons were Perceived as a threat, whereas younger children were not. Confidence Gurkan Öztan also pointed this out at my speech at The History Foundation, the situation changed in the 1920s. In 1927, there was a debate where the view was Expressed, “Street urchins can not be of our kind; they must be of Armenian stock “. A new differentiation has emerged; National identity is imposed on children. During the time of the Empire, there was the view that children could be transformed into anything if they were beautiful and intelligent, that is why everyone wanted to claim the orphans as their own. The Americans, the Patriarchate and the State wanted to “save” these children.

What, in your opinion, was the reason for that?

This particular point is a complete mystery for me. I said it during my speech as well. Most of thes the children were ill and exhausted. And those who wanted to save them were also impoverished and tired. Today, in Istanbul, no one trieste to clam the Thousands of Syrian children are under similar conditions with a similar in motivation. I really can not make out why. Although I find absurd Americans based on the thesis of the Armenians being beautiful and intelligent, I do think that such a perception may have existed during that period.

Harput, 1910. Note on the back of the photograph, write the most probably by the missionary Maria Jacobsen: “I brought 8 children from poor Arapgir. Little is missing fingers and toes Vartuh is, three of them are blind, disabled the others. ‘ © KMA Archives, Denmark

As the 1894-96 Massacres and the 1909 Adana Massacre took place, a modernization campaign was A continuing throughout the Ottoman Empire. What was the role for thes appropriati deemed to children within this modernization campaign?

In fact, the role ascribed to children within such a perception, also Explains why orphans were politically importante. Groups such as women, children or the sick, in which the State did not take seriously before centralization, had to be taken under control after modernization. The modern state is Administered with concerns over population. This process, during which the State Consolidated its power, accelerated during the reign of Abdul Hamid II, and Continued at a similar pace. The Therefore, the State beg the children to take into consideration as its subjects. This is also why an institution like Hospice was founded in 1897, and Gathered abandoned children off the streets. Communities, in turn, this Perceived as an intervention into the domain of influence them. On the other hand, karakteristikleri that more strongly refer to identity, which we could describe as nationalism, beg that to constitute problems. In this sense, the activities of the State Concerning orphaned children were not ascribed a positive meaning. This meaning varies According to how one perceives the movement of Ottomanism, that came to the fore during the time of the Young Turks. In other words, is Ottomanism about everyone is putting away their differences and speaking English, or is it about everyone is retaining their differences? According to Jamal Pasha, everyone had to learn English, and some English was made mandatory at the orphanage. On the other hand, this leads to the loss of the community identity. This, to a certaine of the Extent, is the departure point of the dispute over the struggle to claim orphans.

What are the similarities between the thes of three generations of orphans?

As I Mentioned before, the fact that all the actors involved struggled to claim them as their own became a common fate of thes of the three generations. In 1894-96, the Abdul Hamid II regime clutched unto them on the on side one, while the missionaries tried to clinch them on the other. In 1909, this time it was the Young Turks Regime that tried to claim the children. Cemal Pasha, Governor of Adana at the time, tried to assume the care of the children, whereas Zabel Yesayan, on behalf of the Patriarchate, had to fight him for my them. Whereas in 1915, almost all state officials each Adopted a child; and in 1919, the Patriarchate tried to reclaim the children thes. Another similarity exists in the Efforts to sever their ties with them are the roots. In a world where identity was Determined via language and religion, they faced the threat of losing both. Almost 85% of orphans in the Abdul Hamid II period were taken into the care of American missionaries, and around 80% of them became a Protestant. None of the children who were taken into Orphanages after the Adana Massacre learned Armenian, and it is doubtful Whether they received religious education. After 1915, a great number of children to which it is impossible to put a figure to, were Adopted and Islamicized. And also, from what we know from the memoirs of orphans of thes the massacres, they Displayed Will we would not expect from a child with our contemporary perception. Adopted even when they were, they escaped the moment they saw an opportunity. Today we see that children can not take the ferry alone, but in those days, we read of children who went from Adana to Sivas alone to find their families are.

Did the Orphanages implement a mission to re-establish the ties with the children of thes to their roots, to combat the policy of severing their ties with them are the roots?

In the debate over state Policies, it is said that, especially in the 20 th century, that Orphanages were entirely the wrong method. The method used in Orphanages is described as very unhealthy, and adoption is Perceived as the correct method. Nevertheless, institutional solutions are Perceived as more progressive. The impact of Orphanages on identity is also a matter of debate. American Orphanages, within a policy of strict indoctrination, successfully carry out their duty of raising the children as Protestants. That is why complaints poured in to the Patriarchate throughout the 1890s; stating that missionaries were not bringing the children to Church, he made fun of children that crossed themselves. The same Turan Orphanage, founded in the aftermath of 1915 by Jamal Pasha and Halide Edip, although it did not have the same RESOURCES AS the Americans, tried to do a similer thing and Turkify the children.

In the context of ethnic engineering, leaving orphans was seen as an active method to be Implemented?

In the context of the idea of ​​the nation-state and the Fourteen Points of Wilson, we are talking about a period when forming a majority was importante, and population represented a real source of wealth. The potential to transform children acquires significance in this context. The Therefore, to reduce the number of Armenians and the increased the number of Muslims, is an idea that may seem reasonable. Note killing the children does not mean letting them remain Armenians. However, we do not know how much of this was the CALCULATE; because the orders issued do not include any provision to not kill the children. The orders include directives such as, place them in Orphanages, or distribute them to hh, but there is no clear order that states that they are not to be killed.

Halide Edip headmistress and the teaching staff are in the center, surrounded by boy and girl orphans (1918) © AGBU same Turan Orphanage

“It was not that easy to adopt a child and the clam the property of the child’s family”

There is also a narrative of heroism based on saving orphans during the Genocide. However, seizing the inheritance of the family by adopting the orphans thes was a method used especially in 1915. To what extent is this narrative of heroism related to the practice of adopting children for economic reasons?

In fact, the adoption was quite a Widespread practice during that period, because thes of children served a purpose in labor oriented work. Adopting children for economic reasons is of course that the thread of thought in explaining the process. However, we are talking about properties often Seized by the State itself. The Therefore, it was not that easy to adopt the child and seize the properties thes. I saw such an example in Mardin. The neighbor Adopted the child, and Seized the house that belonged to the child’s family. However, I do not know how such an explanation would be valid in the more general sense. There are many examples in which people Adopted orphaned children for purely humane reasons.

Source: Agos

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Massacare, orphans

Kobani: time running out for hundreds of besieged civilians

October 12, 2014 By administrator

UN warns of possible massacre if town falls after Isis takes control of government buildings

Syrian Kurdish refugee childrenSyrian Kurdish refugee children who fled Kobani with their families stand outside their tent at a refugee camp in Suruc, on the Turkey-Syria border. Photograph: Lefteris Pitarakis/AP

Islamic State (Isis) fighters are closing in on the centre of besieged Kobani, where the Kurdish militia have sworn that they will fight to the death, and hundreds of desperate civilians are trapped in streets rank with the smell of rotting bodies.

The extremist group is trying to cut off the city’s border crossing into Turkey, its last link to the outside world, and penetrate the western enclave where the Kurdish People’s Protection fighters (YPG) are most firmly entrenched. Those units stopped at least five suicide car bombs sent to blast through their last layers of defence in the past two days, activists and politicians inside the city said. But Isis is throwing fighters and ammunition at the exposed road to the border, and if that falls it would be a devastating blow to the Kurdish units.

“If they cut off the border, then everyone inside is going to die,” said activist and journalist Mustafa Abdi, who lived in Kobani until a week ago and edits the website kobanikurd.com.

“Isis can’t walk or shoot their way into the YPG strongholds, but if they can get their car bombs in it will do terrible damage. So far they have stopped them all with rocket-propelled grenades.”

The staunch defence has stemmed, but not stopped, Isis’s brutal advance through the city. On Friday the group took control of the government section of the city, including the main police station and town hall.

The UN warned of a massacre if the city falls, because even after a huge exodus of more than 200,000 refugees to Turkey there are still hundreds of civilians trapped inside. Two of them begged for a rescue mission in phone calls yesterday, as the battles raged through a powerful sandstorm that shrouded the city from journalists and anxious refugees who have been watching the fighting from the safety of Turkish soil, just a few hundred feet away.

“There is a terrible smell from bodies in the street. At first I didn’t know what it was,” said Welat Shaheen, a farmer who stayed in his home at the edge of the city when the rest of the family fled. “There are bombs and fighting all around, so no one really goes out.”

The 31-year-old is surviving on bulgar wheat and other dried food, eking out a tank of water stored up before the siege began. “I can’t wash myself, or wash dishes; it’s just for cooking and drinking. Please can someone come and get us out. If my water runs out, I will die.”

Another civilian, disabled engineer Berkal Karan, said he was eating only one meal a day to stretch out supplies. “I would like to leave, but everyone here now is trapped. When I hear voices I don’t know if they are Isis or YPG, so I am afraid to go out of my house.”

If Isis can take Kobani, it would give it full control of a long stretch of the Turkish border and a direct link between its stronghold of Raqqa in the east and positions in Aleppo province. It would also be a propaganda victory after its promises to hold prayers for the Muslim festival of Eid last week were derailed by the surprising strength of Kurdish resistance fighters.

Underlining the ideological gulf between Isis and its opponents, Kurdish fighters in the city are commanded by a woman, Heval (Comrade) Narin. Her forces have defied expectations by holding off Isis for more than 20 days, despite a paltry arsenal of light weapons that are no real match for their enemy’s huge array of heavy weapons, much of it raided from Iraqi army bases that the extremist group captured this summer.

The reputation of Kurdish forces may be bolstered by an efficient propaganda machine, but there seems little doubt that the men and women currently fighting in Kobani do it with the full knowledge that they are staring a brutal death in the face. A female fighter who was recently brought back to Turkey for burial had not just been decapitated, but had also had her breasts cut off, said Mehdi Aslan, head of a self-defence unit on the Turkish side of the border formed to stop the Isis fighters or supplies slipping into Syria.

Executions and mutilations appear to have only strengthened the resolve of fighters such as Azadin, a father of five who was ordered to leave for Turkey around a week ago because he has a family to support. He refused, saying that he would shoot himself rather than leave, relatives said. “Please don’t call, I’m fighting,” said a terse message on his voicemail when the Observer tried to contact him yesterday.

Despite their resolve, the group is now running low on ammunition and other supplies, mostly because the Turkish border has been tightly sealed for anyone wanting to travel into Syria. US air strikes, cheered by refugees watching the fight on the other side of the border, have helped to delay the Isis advance by taking out some of their largest guns.

“We are getting stronger,” said Anwar Muslim, a lawyer and head of the city council, who stayed on in Kobani after most of the officials left. “What we wanted from the beginning was to get rid of the heavy weapons so we can fight honestly. They tried everything to get inside [Kurdish-controlled areas], but for now they are still outside.”

However, even American officials have admitted that the air strikes alone are unlikely to save the city, with Isis being too well ensconced among its buildings to be bombed out. So the Kurds are desperately calling for further intervention, warning the world of a catastrophe that some fear it might already be too late to stop.

“For now, we consider Kobani lost, but we keep working and working,” said Abdi, the refugee activist. “It has been in the spotlight. People are watching it burning in front of their eyes and doing nothing. That’s still better than Kobani falling and dying with no one knowing about it.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: kobani, Massacare, Syria

Armenian Yazidis Blame Erdogan for Genocide of Iraqi Kin

August 20, 2014 By administrator

YEREVAN—Speaking at a press conference in Yerevan on Tuesday, the Chairman of the Yazidi Union of Armenia, Aziz Tamoyan, said Yazidis in Iraq are facing a genocide, voicing yazidi-exodusdeep dismay at the lack of interest shown by world leaders toward the plight of his co-ethnics and the possibility of their extermination.

Another Armenian Yazidi leader Bro Hasanyan traced the predicament of his co-ethnics in Iraq to the actions of Turkey and former prime minister and newly elected President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose efforts in aiding and abetting Islamic State fighters led to their presence and power in Iraq.

“A genocide is being carried out against the Yazidis in the 21st century and the President of Turkey Erdoğan, former President of Iraq Talabani, and the President of the Iraqi Kurdistan Region Barzani are responsible for it,” Hasanyan said.

Meanwhile, on the same day as the press conference, the government in Stepanakert announced that Artsakh is ready to welcome Yazidis fleeing persecution in Iraq.

Davit Babayan, the spokesman for Artsakh President Bako Sahakian, referred to the Yazidis as “brotherly” people facing genocide at the hands of radical Sunni insurgents, RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) reported.

“The Armenian people cannot be indifferent to what is now being done to the Yazidi people,” Babayan told Azatutyun.am. “The Yazidis are the only people who have become an integral part of the Armenian people.”

The Nagorno-Karabakh Republic is therefore willing to take in Yazidi refugees, he said. “Artsakh has many socioeconomic problems,” he said. “But if there are such applications we, as a state committed to democratic and humanitarian norms, will try to help those people as much as we can.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Massacare, Yazidi

ISIS militants massacre 80 Yazidis, kidnap women in Iraqi village

August 15, 2014 By administrator

Some 80 members of Iraq’s Yazidi minority have been massacred by Islamic State militants in a village in Iraq’s north, Kurdish yazidis.siofficials said.

“They arrived in vehicles and they started their killing this afternoon,” senior Kurdish official Hoshiyar Zebari told Reuters. “We believe it’s because of their creed: convert or be killed.”

In addition to the murders, local women were kidnapped from the village, another Kurdish official source told Reuters. A local Yazidi lawmaker confirmed the information.

According to BasNews, a Kurdish website, it was the Yazidi minority village of Kojo some 20 km south of Sinjar that came under attack by the Islamic State (former ISIS) radicals.

BasNews reports that around 80 men – the village’s whole male population – was slaughtered, while all the women were kidnapped.

The killings in the village lasted for about an hour, according to eyewitness reports, based on the testimony of Yazidi MP Mahama Khalil who spoke to survivors. Apparently, the massacre followed a five day ultimatum to convert to Islam or die.

“[An IS fighter] told me that the Islamic State had spent five days trying to persuade villagers to convert to Islam and that a long lecture was delivered about the subject today,” Reuters quotes a man from a neighbouring village as saying. “He then said the men were gathered and shot dead. The women and girls were probably taken to Tal Afar because that is where the foreign fighters are.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ISIS, Massacare, Yazidi

Massacre of Yedizis: The silent complicity of Turkey

August 10, 2014 By administrator

While Erdogan was elected new President of the Republic of Turkey, he so quick to defend certain causes close to his ideology, people are dying at the border without having to lift a finger or say a single word to arton102228-480x333condemn what amounts to genocide.

In truth it is not surprising that it is conspicuously absent in defending the Yazidi people. Christians, of which 500 were buried alive!

In truth complicit silence, like the case of Kessab denotes, whether to again prove, hatred and pure racism by the person to certain populations. Moreover, a strategy that could prove beneficial to him if by chance the djhadistes of Eil seized in northern Iraq. On one stone: Christian eliminated and expelled Kurds from their land. Djhadistes of murdering, violent, open the belly of pregnant women, as in 1915 under the Ottoman Empire! Terrible, similar to what was experienced Armenians in the desert with these children dying of thirst images.

Lack murdered not far from disaster as noted by the Swedish physician, Staffan Hasan, who testified that he had not seen anyone from the Turkish government to help the refugees.

And our leaders say, the UN and the USA Mr. Erdogan? We expect an answer!

Sunday, August 10, 2014,
Jean Eckian © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Massacare, yedizi

Every 20 years Turkey shows it’s ugly face “massacre” Sivas massacre remembered through new documentary

June 29, 2014 By administrator

Emrah Güler

It will be 21 years on July 2 since a group of fundamentalist Muslims torched a hotel in Sivas, burning 35 people alive, including artists, writers and musicians. On its anniversary, you can watch ‘Menekşe’den Önce’ (Before Menekşe)

n_68428_1The documentary ‘Menekşeden Önce’ follows the lives of the survivors and those who lost loved ones through the eyes of a young girl born into a tragedy.

“Time?” asks the woman, her voice bemused and heart-broken at the same time. “It doesn’t heal anything. It hurts more with each passing day.” The woman is a living testament to one of the most horrific, shameful and heart-breaking days modern Turkey has experienced. She is the mother of the two youngest victims that were among the 35 people who were burnt alive by fundamentalist Muslims in the central Anatolian city of Sivas on July 2, 1993.

The Sivas massacre, or the Madımak massacre (referring to the name of the torched hotel), has become a symbol of some of the darkest moments that humanity can endure. From the planning of the attack, including the involvement of the police and some politicians, to the controversial trial, then the case going back and forth with it eventually being dropped in 2012 due to charges against the suspects exceeding the statute of limitations.

The woman’s painful remarks are captured in a feature documentary that looks at that fateful day through the eyes of those who lost members of their family and friends, as well as the survivors. “Menekşe’den Önce” (Before Menekşe) of 2012 is a communal project, that was started by journalist and writer Soner Yalçın. Yalçın was arrested and charged for being linked to the alleged terrorist organization Ergenekon in Feb. 2011 while filming. The film was completed by Yalçın’s friends: Halide Didem, Elif Ilgaz, Zeynep Altıok, Tuğçe Tatari, Ebru Köktürk, Elif Yıldız, Melda Onur, Canan Kaftancıoğlu and Tuğba Ezeroğlu.

the Hurriyet Daily News reports.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: hotel, Massacare, Turkey

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