Journal of Genocide Research
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Perception of the other's fate: what Greek Orthodox
refugees from the Ottoman Empire reported about the
destruction of Ottoman Armenians
Hervé Georgelin
Given the policy of denial about the reality of the Young Turk planned annihilation of the Ottoman Armenian population, I believe that it is useful to consider whether this attitude was ever shared by the Ottoman subjects themselves, and how the Greek Orthodox group, the Rum, perceived the government’s treatment of theirArmenian neighbours. Did solidarity exist among Christians, of whatever denomination,on Ottoman lands? Were the Rum informed about what was happening, andat what level?Were they interested in what was being perpetrated, and how did theyaccount for what happened?
In the period under scrutiny, the Rum were also brutalized in diverse ways. From the end of the Balkan Wars (1913) onwards, the Greek Orthodox populations still living on the reduced Ottoman territories faced the harsh policy of the Committee of Union and Progress, which aimed especially to reduce the Orthodox presence in territories possibly claimed by Greece: Eastern Thrace, the Aegean region and the Pontic seashores. This policy took different forms and was of different intensity depending on the location: fiscal harassment, displacement of whole settlements towards the inner lands of Anatolia, severe treatment of Greek Orthodox conscripts
in forced labour battalions (amele tabrurlari) provoking desertion, and, as an overall result, the flight of the Orthodox population in the Aegean region to the islands recently conquered by Greece.1 The deserters were searched for in a brutal fashion.2 The Hellenic citizenship of Greek Orthodox residents was submitted to scrutiny by the local authorities, contesting a number of naturalizations by previous Orthodox Ottoman subjects, and threatening those concerned with renewed conscription and taxation. Even voices from Germany acknowledged the facts of
“the systematic persecution of Greeks by the Young Turks since spring 1914.”3
During the conflict proper, the Pontic shores were particularly targeted:
In 1916–1917, they exiled us from Agatsoli [close to Sinop]. From all the places, they exiled the Hellenes. They brought us, the people of Agatsoli to Tas¸ko¨pru¨ , and we stayed one and a half years, we suffered a lot, illnesses came and we wanted to leave. But the Turks
would not let us go to our places.4
As a consequence, the possibility of helping other people was limited for a group that was itself under pressure. Besides, it was an official stipulation of the Armenian “tehcir” (deportation) that other Ottoman people of whatever creed were forbidden to provide assistance to the “displaced” persons.5
In the following, I will describe and analyse how the difference between
Armenian and Orthodox Christians was maintained and altered in the Ottoman context, as a historical background for the attitude of the Orthodox towards Armenian victims. I will then turn to the Rum and their memories of their normal social life on the Ottoman lands and of the major events that marked the end of the Ottoman Empire and made the reestablishment of the previous normalcy impossible. Finally, I shall consider the extent to which the late Ottoman history of the Armenians was known to the Orthodox, and how sources in Greece after 1924 can be of use when researching the past of the Ottoman Armenians.
Publication details, including instructions for authors and subscription information:
Perception of the other's fate: what Greek Orthodox
refugees from the Ottoman Empire reported about the
destruction of Ottoman Armenians
Hervé Georgelin
Given the policy of denial about the reality of the Young Turk planned annihilation of the Ottoman Armenian population, I believe that it is useful to consider whether this attitude was ever shared by the Ottoman subjects themselves, and how the Greek Orthodox group, the Rum, perceived the government’s treatment of theirArmenian neighbours. Did solidarity exist among Christians, of whatever denomination,on Ottoman lands? Were the Rum informed about what was happening, andat what level?Were they interested in what was being perpetrated, and how did theyaccount for what happened?
In the period under scrutiny, the Rum were also brutalized in diverse ways. From the end of the Balkan Wars (1913) onwards, the Greek Orthodox populations still living on the reduced Ottoman territories faced the harsh policy of the Committee of Union and Progress, which aimed especially to reduce the Orthodox presence in territories possibly claimed by Greece: Eastern Thrace, the Aegean region and the Pontic seashores. This policy took different forms and was of different intensity depending on the location: fiscal harassment, displacement of whole settlements towards the inner lands of Anatolia, severe treatment of Greek Orthodox conscripts
in forced labour battalions (amele tabrurlari) provoking desertion, and, as an overall result, the flight of the Orthodox population in the Aegean region to the islands recently conquered by Greece.1 The deserters were searched for in a brutal fashion.2 The Hellenic citizenship of Greek Orthodox residents was submitted to scrutiny by the local authorities, contesting a number of naturalizations by previous Orthodox Ottoman subjects, and threatening those concerned with renewed conscription and taxation. Even voices from Germany acknowledged the facts of
“the systematic persecution of Greeks by the Young Turks since spring 1914.”3
During the conflict proper, the Pontic shores were particularly targeted:
In 1916–1917, they exiled us from Agatsoli [close to Sinop]. From all the places, they exiled the Hellenes. They brought us, the people of Agatsoli to Tas¸ko¨pru¨ , and we stayed one and a half years, we suffered a lot, illnesses came and we wanted to leave. But the Turks
would not let us go to our places.4
As a consequence, the possibility of helping other people was limited for a group that was itself under pressure. Besides, it was an official stipulation of the Armenian “tehcir” (deportation) that other Ottoman people of whatever creed were forbidden to provide assistance to the “displaced” persons.5
In the following, I will describe and analyse how the difference between
Armenian and Orthodox Christians was maintained and altered in the Ottoman context, as a historical background for the attitude of the Orthodox towards Armenian victims. I will then turn to the Rum and their memories of their normal social life on the Ottoman lands and of the major events that marked the end of the Ottoman Empire and made the reestablishment of the previous normalcy impossible. Finally, I shall consider the extent to which the late Ottoman history of the Armenians was known to the Orthodox, and how sources in Greece after 1924 can be of use when researching the past of the Ottoman Armenians.
Comment