Armenian Christians and Turkish Muslims: Atrocity, Denial and Identity
A. Christian van Gorder, D. Phil., Queen’s, Belfast
Christianity and Human Rights Conference, November 12-13, 2004
Samford University, Birmingham, AL
I. Introduction
And this evening before sunset all of you will go back to your houses whether they are
mud or marble, and calmly close the treacherous shutters of your windows. Shut them
from the wicked Capital; shut them to the face of humanity, and to the face of your god.
Even the lamp on your table will be extinguished by the whispers of your clear soul.
- Grief, by Siamanto, translated by Peter Belakian and Nevart Yaghlian
Why is Armenian history important today? Before invading Poland, Adolph Hitler
scoffed, “Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians.”1 Earlier,
Hitler had warned, “We intend to introduce a great resettlement policy...Think of the
Biblical deportations, the massacres of the Middle Ages and remember the extermination
of the Armenians.”2 Historian Carolyn Forche felt, “Any 20th-century history of human
rights...must begin with the massacre of Armenians, then the largest Christian minority
population of Turkey... because it is the first instance of political mass murder3 made
possible by advanced technology and modern communications. ” 4
Beginning in April, 1915,5 entire villages were burnt to the ground with Armenians being
either evacuated on forced death-marches or killed inside their homes. Armenians claim
that between 1.5 and 2 million Armenians were murdered by order of Ottoman Interior
Minister Talaat Pasha.6 Turks admit atrocities, but counter that between 200,000 to
700,000 Armenians died. Turkish historians7 argue that, in 1915 there were fewer than
1.5 million Armenians8 in the entire Empire. Turks maintain there was never a state-
sponsored policy of “genocide” while admitting to “inter-communal warfare.”9 In 1985, a
United Nations Human Rights commission concluded that “at least one million were
killed.”10 The facts of this labyrinthine problem during an anarchical time and fraught
with political considerations11 may never be known. It is certain is that horrific brutality
caused the deaths and exile of almost all of Eastern Anatolia’s Armenian population.12
Death came in many guises: citizens in Trebizond were pushed onto boats and thrown
overboard; thousands more died in Syria’s open air concentration camp at Deir el-Zor.
Muslim Farid Esack observed that South Africa has become a land of “...nightmares, like
a childhood trauma and (historical tragedy) will reappear in nightmares and neuroses
until the child brings it out into the open and looks at it.”13 “Reconciliation” equates with
justice and a meaningful resolution of past atrocities instead of simply the re-opening of
old, festering wounds. Esack’s hopes for his homeland mirrors the lament that Armenians
share about the disputed historical nightmare of 1915.14 I will explore how these
unresolved histories affect present Muslim Turks and Christian Armenians in their faith
and identity development. What role might faith play in fostering reconciliation? What
lessons from Armenia, 1915 are instructive to Muslims, Christians and Jews committed
to interfaith partnerships for human rights?
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Depending on one’s vantage, the legacy of 1915 is either one of denial or character
assassination; of “genocide” or an unorganized “ethnic cleansing.” Armenian scholars,
such as Richard Hovannisian, argue that Turkish views have undergone many phases:
“There has been neither candid admission nor willing investigation, neither reparation nor
rehabilitation.”15 In contrast, strident Turkish assertions about Armenian accounts sends
an unambiguous message that negative stereotypes about “barbaric Turks” will no longer
go uncontested. The “memory” of these events remains to affect the religious identities of
Turkish Muslims and Armenian Christians. As a battleground for culture-religious
interpretation of history, Armenia 1915, provides an intriguing context for examining
ways that past atrocity becomes part of the present experience of a faith community.
Objective historicity16 will proceed with the task of sifting through the vituperative silt of
time to determine what actually transpired. Noted scholars have already written accounts
of the specific events of this period from their variant perspectives.17 The task for people
of faith committed to social justice and human rights is to extract lessons from these
competing narratives and to explore strategies for substantive reconciliation between
Turkish Muslims and Christian Armenians.
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