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Vahram Dadrian: To the Desert

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  • Vahram Dadrian: To the Desert

    Why we should read...

    `To the Desert: pages from my diary' by Vahram Dadrian
    English language edition translated from the Armenian by Agop J Hacikyan,
    (408pp, Taderon Press, London, 2006)

    Armenian News Network / Groong
    April 2, 2007

    By Eddie Arnavoudian


    Anyone interested in the debate on the Armenian Genocide has good
    reason to say a big thank you to Agop J Hacikyan for translating and
    to Ara Sarafian from Taderon Press for editing and publishing this
    English language edition of Vahram Dadrian's `To the Desert: pages
    from my diary'. Little known and even less commented upon this Diary
    with entries that begin on 11 May 1915 and end on 26 June 1919
    constitutes an invaluable, indeed an irreplaceable primary source.

    This second printing like the first also opens laudably with a `New
    Dedication' in which Vahram Dadrian's nephews affirm that its
    republication is `... not undertaken with the intention of condemning
    the Turkish and Kurdish peoples. 'It is offered rather as `a testament
    to the human spirit to overcome adversity and as a tribute to genocide
    victims past, present, and, regrettably, future.' This New Dedication
    sets excellent and necessary democratic terms for any serious
    contemporary discussion of the genocide.

    Reading these Diaries we can reconstruct, with no a-priori knowledge,
    the central mechanisms of the anti-Armenian genocide machine organised
    by the Young Turk government in 1915: the propaganda that isolated
    Armenians in society and made them targets of mass hatred, the
    formation of death squads, the arrest and murder of the local Armenian
    leadership, then the deportation of a defenceless population through
    land that had become hostile territory and finally the forced march
    into the deadly Syrian deserts.



    I.


    Penned by 15 year old Vahram, son of the well to do Dadrian family
    from Chorum in north central Anatolia, the very first entry suggests
    something of the Young Turk's anti-Armenian propaganda campaign. At a
    public gathering of Muslims and Christians to bid farewell to soldiers
    going to the war front, the words of a `leader of the Union and
    Progress Party' `chilled the hearts of the Christians'. 11 May 1915
    `We are going off to fight' said this Young Turk leader`and, God
    willing, we will smash the heads of all the giaours (i.e. Christians),
    infidels, who are the enemies of our faith and our homeland.'(p8)

    Another `fanatic Turk' asked `So what are we waiting for? Let's begin
    cleaning up the giaours inside the country first...' (p8). Like those
    of the Nazi regime later, Young Turk leaders also understood that they
    could not succeed in their project to uproot the entire Armenian
    community from historical Armenia and Anatolia without first securing
    the collaboration of a substantial segment of ordinary Turkish people
    in addition to those serving in the army, the police and the security
    forces. Thus the campaign that depicted Armenians as traitors, as
    less than human and so deserving of any cruelty that a frenzied mob
    was capable of. Here the Young Turks merely continued earlier Ottoman
    State policy of whipping up hatred for Armenians.

    Together with the preparation of Turkish public opinion for the
    destruction of Armenians went the task of organising the instruments.
    Central here were unofficial death squads, formed in close
    collaboration with local government officials. 2 June 1915:

    `(A) new law has been passed which allows Yusuf (a convicted
    criminal) and all bandits like him to be pardoned and set free,
    provided they join the chetes (irregular troops)...(A) few days
    later he came down to the city and was received by the governor
    with great honour. A few days after that everyone condemned to
    life imprisonment was also liberated. Under Yusuf's command, all
    these murderers formed an army of assassins.' (p10-11)


    Thereafter on the pretext of searching for weapons and literature
    began the raids, the rounding up, detention and murder of anyone
    deemed a leader of Chorum's Armenians community. Left disorganised
    and powerless the Armenian population was then forced to leave their
    homes for deportation centres hundreds of miles away, on the edges of
    the Syrian deserts. There were no measures in place to tend or care
    for them. Deportees were refused the time to make arrangements to
    safeguard their property or to secure financial means of survival on
    their journey.

    >From the earliest stages supposedly protective police escorts `used
    their whips on the poor souls who were incapable of walking fast and
    couldn't even keep up with the horse-drawn carriages'. `Men and women'
    `were beaten over and over again'. Along the journey to desert
    destinations in the reigning atmosphere of anti-Armenian hatred
    deportees were robbed, plundered, beaten, starved, murdered or
    abducted with impunity. Slowly but surely men and women were wasted
    away, reduced to miserable wretches, to powerless victims. If they did
    not succumb to human executioners many fell, victim to illness,
    disease and hunger.

    Here the Vahram Dadrian's Diaries become more than a historical record
    of Young Turk political barbarism. They tell heartrending stories of
    the terrible cruelty that man is capable of inflicting on man. Many of
    the entries remind us of tragedies in our own time when racist and
    nationalist hate campaigns against Muslims in the former Yugoslavia
    also swept former friends, neighbours and business partners into a
    tidal wave of vicious violence against people who had now become `the
    enemy'.

    Gathered into camps at the desert's edges, surviving deportees were
    prepared for the final phase of what was a death march into the core
    of Deir Zor. Though the Dadrians were fortunate to escape that
    infamous mass grave where tens of thousands more perished, it features
    throughout the volume as the ultimate nightmare, the living hell that
    all attempted their utmost to avoid. 4 September 1916:

    `News of the martyrdom of Armenians in Deir Zor filled our hearts
    with terror. We have hundreds of relatives, friends, and
    compatriots there. Have they all been killed? Even the thought of
    it numbs the mind.' (p166)


    That this genocide machine operated with a deadly uniformity
    throughout both historical Armenia and other regions of Anatolia is
    underlined by another important aspect of Vahram Dadrian's Diaries.
    Besides his own, he also recorded horrific eye-witness accounts from
    other refugees he met in desert camps, among them Sarkis from Mush,
    Karekin from Trabzon, Khachig Aghbar from Zeitun, Takouhi from Harpoot
    among others.


    II.


    Herded in camps devoid of all elementary facilities, there were never
    any plans for the resettlement of Armenian communities that had been
    deported from their homelands. Quite the contrary... Even in these
    squalid centres and deadly deserts there was to be no relaxing of the
    vice of central power seeking the utter destruction of its Armenian
    victims, both as individuals and as a national group. 20 March 1916:

    `(government inspectors)...have been registering the name and
    birth date of every Armenian refugee. Since the deportation they
    have registered us at least twenty times.' (According to)
    `pessimists... the government is trying to establish the exact
    number of remaining Armenians in order to improve their
    extermination methods.' (p138)


    The pessimists appear to have been correct. Young men were the first
    targets with attempts to conscript them, use them as cheap labour and
    then murder them. On 16 April 1916, only 22 from a group of five
    hundred had been earlier conscripted returned to Dera. Any attempt at
    the recovery of an exhausted and weakened people was impeded further
    by assaults on what remained of the Armenian Church and by a campaign
    to force Armenians to convert to Islam. 14 August 1916:

    `The question of Armenians converting to Islam gains momentum from
    one day to the next. After the arrest of the village priest, my
    uncle Hagop Dadrian, Djamdjian and Kehyayan of Caesarea, and Minas
    and Garabed Geovderelian of Sis were arrested five days ago. In
    the neighbouring villages they have also arrested a few
    influential people to prevent them from campaigning against the
    conversions (p163).'


    Through the genocide years Vahram Dadrian and his family escaped the
    worst. Well off, they had resources in the early stages to hire carts
    for transport. They had cash and jewellery with which to bribe their
    way through crises that for other became vicious and fatal. When they
    had `no money left' and `no more gold or jewellery to sell' they still
    had `extra clothes and shoes' to exchange for wheat (p133). With
    friends in Istanbul they could still receive cash with which to afford
    rent for putrid rat and scorpion infested rooms in desert villages
    while the less fortunate were forced to live and often die in caves.
    (p134)

    Most of the Dadrians survived and rebuilt their lives in the Diaspora.
    There, before his early death in 1948 Vahram Dadrian not only edited
    and published these diaries but also wrote a novel based on his
    personal experience.

    `Forsaken Love' (326pp, 2006) translated into English and edited by
    Ara Melkonian and Ara Sarafian is also published by Taderon Press. A
    literary evaluation requires separate consideration but this novel
    merits note here as a valuable historical document, one that
    significantly supplements the Diaries. This is so particularly in
    relation to its exposure of the role of Armenian accomplices upon whom
    the Young Turks relied. Moreover, in this age of anti-Muslim and
    anti-Arab bigotry, `Forsaken Love' incorporates a more positive vision
    of Armenian-Arab relations and of the role that Arab people played in
    the survival of Armenian refugees.


    * * * * *

    There are many honest historians, Armenian, Turkish and foreign who
    debate the 1915 Genocide and even its definition as such. But there
    are also fabricators who intend more than just to deny the fact of
    genocide. They also deny any Young Turk culpability for what happened
    to the Armenians. Thus they serve to exonerate the criminals and by
    doing so legitimise the virulent racist and chauvinist xenophobic
    nationalism that defined the Young Turk political attitude to, and
    action against, the Armenians. Vahram Dadrian's `To the Desert: pages
    from my Diary' is a necessary riposte to such fabrication.

    These Diaries will furthermore help refocus debate away from abstract,
    a-historical and frequently tendentious discussions of the 1915
    genocide. They bring into relief the scale of a crime that is often
    concealed by dogmatic discourses about genocide definition. There can
    in fact never be a single definition of genocide. Neither the Jewish
    experience at the hands of the Nazis nor the Armenian at Young Turk
    hands can be used as a defining model. Genocide will take different
    forms depending on the conditions, the politics, the social
    organisation and the history of the state within which it occurs.

    In the case of the Armenian Genocide Vahram Dadrian's Diaries show
    that the charge of genocide need not be dependent on any comprehensive
    central organisation, explicit central instruction or statement of
    intent to annihilate all Armenians. The Diaries readily reveal that
    the mass deaths that followed the deportations organised by the
    Ottoman State and the Young Turks in 1915 did not come about
    accidentally, or as unintended consequences of the chaos or turmoil of
    war. The Young Turk government framed the conditions, the laws and the
    forces that led to the uprooting of the Armenian people, to their
    terminal destruction as a viable national community in their homelands
    and to the death of one and a half million innocent men, women and
    children. This is sufficient evidence to indicate criminal Ottoman and
    Young Turk culpability for genocide.

    `Have Vahram Dadrian's `To the Desert: pages from my diary' at the top
    of your reading list' should be the advice of all seeking to enlighten
    people about the 1915 Armenian experience of genocide.
    General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”
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