The 1914 cleansing of Aegean Greeks as a case of violent Turkification
Author: Matthias Bjørnlund
DOI: 10.1080/14623520701850286
Publication Frequency: 4 issues per year
Published in: Journal of Genocide Research, Volume 10, Issue 1 March 2008 , pages 41 - 58
Introduction
In 1992, Greek historian Ioannis Hassiotis wrote that "[i]t is strange that both Greek and Armenian historians should have treated the first persecutions of the Greeks in 1913-14 and the Armenian Genocide of 1915 as separate phenomena."1 The tendency to treat as separate phenomena various aspects of CUP policies of what I would dub "violent Turkification" - interconnected policies of, for example, ethnic cleansing and genocide aimed at the homogenization of the Ottoman Empire - is not new, nor can it merely be seen in the writings of Greek and Armenian scholars. Before, during, and after WWI, the wide range of mainly Western diplomats, missionaries, etc. in the empire would primarily witness and report on the specific aspect of CUP policies that was the Armenian genocide - a fact that has often been reflected in scholarly accounts that have likewise tended to focus on this event rather than on the persecution of other groups.2 Two main reasons for this seem to be that: (1) before, during, and after the Armenian genocide many such observers (especially missionaries) worked among Armenians rather than among, for example, Greeks or Assyrians; and (2) these observers were therefore generally more receptive to the suffering of those they had often literally built their lives around, and were placed at geographical locations where they could mainly observe the destruction of the Armenians. A third reason is that many saw the Armenian genocide, with its widespread, large-scale, and systematic massacres and death marches, as more condensed in time and more radical in its intent and execution than other campaigns of destruction.
But a number of observers did see other non-Turkish groups as targets of CUP policies and would view these policies as connected. To name a few examples: in the Ottoman Senate, Ahmed Riza would during WWI, as the only high-level and vocal Turkish voice of dissent, criticize the persecution of Armenians, Greeks, and Arabs and the confiscation of their property.3 Danish diplomatic minister at Constantinople, Carl Ellis Wandel, reported on how the CUP would use extermination to bring a stop to what they considered as Arab, Armenian, and Greek domination in the Ottoman parliament that would lead to their loss of power.4 George E. White suggested that the purpose of the CUP was to "create a uniform state, one in Turkish nationality, and one in Moslem orthodoxy" through deportation of Armenians and Greeks and suppression of the "unorthodox" Alevis.5 Member of the American Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief, William Walker Rockwell, stated that the number of Armenians and Syrians had been severely decimated as a result of CUP policies and that there had been "awful misery among the Palestinian Jews."6 H. F. Ulrichsen, MP, member of the organization Danish Friends of Armenians,7 and secretary to Wandel 1914-16, contended that the CUP and the Kemalist "'cleansing policy' ['Udrensningspolitik'] [] had as its aim the removal of all the foreign bodies - Christians and Jews - which were influencing Turkey to such a large degree."8
Such views have now begun to be reflected by researchers of the CUP and early Kemalist periods who emphasize the role of "ethnic reconfiguration"9 or "demographic engineering,"10 the planned, interconnected, and proactive (as opposed to "accidental," isolated, or reactive) elements of these policies. While Turkish historiography has traditionally denied or downplayed such policies, these scholars, whether or not they use the "g"-word, now suggest that the Armenian genocide was an aspect of a policy of Turkification, albeit usually described as its most extremely violent aspect.11 According to Taner Akcam, the CUP had prior to WWI "formulated a policy that they began to execute in the Aegean region against the Greeks and, during the war years, expanded to include the Assyrians, the Chaldeans, the Syrians, and especially the Armenians, a policy that eventually became genocidal. [] Detailed reports were prepared [by the Special Organization] outlining the elimination of the Christian population. These measures were implemented in the Aegean region in the spring of 1914."12 This study aims to take a closer look at these pre-war persecutions of Aegean Greeks as an aspect of violent Turkification, i.e. as more than an isolated (series of) incident(s) with little or no relation to other instances of CUP group persecution or to any overall CUP goal of Turkification. The sources consist of published reports, memoirs, etc., and scholarly works, with an emphasis on unpublished Danish archival material that supplements existing knowledge of the events.
The beginnings of violent Turkification
Seen from the vantage point of observers in the major harbour city of Smyrna (Izmir), and in Constantinople (Istanbul), the Ottoman capital, CUP policies of group persecution began in earnest with the attempted ethnic cleansing of Ottoman Greeks living along the Aegean littoral.13 Attempts at removing non-Turkish influences from the economy had been initiated by the CUP after a radical faction of the Committee had gained power in 1913, and this policy was supplemented with the cleansing of more than 100,000 Greeks from the Aegean and Thrace in the spring and summer of 1914.14 Papers reported that thousands of Greeks in Thrace were forced by the authorities to embark for Greece or convert to Islam,15 and that Greeks from around Rodosto were reported to be suffering on the fields and roads while Muslim Albanians and Cretans were installed in their houses.16 This was apparently the result of careful deliberations and preliminary research by the CUP, though it was decided to hide the connection between, on the one hand, the CUP and government agencies like the Ministry of War, and, on the other hand, the Special Organization (SO) that executed of the operation.17
The main "Danish" witness to these events, Alfred van der Zee, Danish consul at Smyrna, vilayet of Aidin (Smyrna) since 1910, was in fact Dutch.18 He was born in the Netherlands, May 9, 1872, a businessman running the local offices of the family business W. F. van der Zee, and who spoke Dutch, English, French, Italian, German, Greek, and Turkish.19 Also, he was a shipbroker and an agent for the Danish shipping company DFDS.20 Vice consul at the Danish consulate in Smyrna at the time was Dutch Levantine John Atkinson de Jongh who had held this position since 1877.21 In June 1914, Van der Zee reported to Wandel, his superior in Constantinople, that a large-scale, systematic, and violent banishing of "the generally peaceful and hard-working Greeks" was carried out on the orders of the central government.22
This policy was partly dictated by perceived security concerns. The CUP believed the Ottoman Greeks to be suspect on account of their alleged ties to the Greek state, and, more specifically, they wanted to avoid that Greeks living along the coastline could come to serve as a fifth column. The danger was believed to be imminent as Greece, through the intervention of the European Powers, had recently come to control the nearby islands of Chios and Mytilene (Lesbos). These islands, it was stated, could be used to launch attacks.23 Also, the persecution of Aegean (Ionian) Greeks could serve to put pressure on the Greek government to solve the overall islands dispute in a manner beneficial to the Ottoman government.24 But the islands dispute and security concerns were apparently not the only reasons, as economic, political, and ethno-religious concerns seem to have made the cleansing policy part of a larger project of Turkification. Van der Zee reported that in March 1914, the valis of Smyrna and the nearby regions had made inspection tours to the coastal towns and villages of the vilayets, "advising" the local officials to force out the Greeks:
Author: Matthias Bjørnlund
DOI: 10.1080/14623520701850286
Publication Frequency: 4 issues per year
Published in: Journal of Genocide Research, Volume 10, Issue 1 March 2008 , pages 41 - 58
Introduction
In 1992, Greek historian Ioannis Hassiotis wrote that "[i]t is strange that both Greek and Armenian historians should have treated the first persecutions of the Greeks in 1913-14 and the Armenian Genocide of 1915 as separate phenomena."1 The tendency to treat as separate phenomena various aspects of CUP policies of what I would dub "violent Turkification" - interconnected policies of, for example, ethnic cleansing and genocide aimed at the homogenization of the Ottoman Empire - is not new, nor can it merely be seen in the writings of Greek and Armenian scholars. Before, during, and after WWI, the wide range of mainly Western diplomats, missionaries, etc. in the empire would primarily witness and report on the specific aspect of CUP policies that was the Armenian genocide - a fact that has often been reflected in scholarly accounts that have likewise tended to focus on this event rather than on the persecution of other groups.2 Two main reasons for this seem to be that: (1) before, during, and after the Armenian genocide many such observers (especially missionaries) worked among Armenians rather than among, for example, Greeks or Assyrians; and (2) these observers were therefore generally more receptive to the suffering of those they had often literally built their lives around, and were placed at geographical locations where they could mainly observe the destruction of the Armenians. A third reason is that many saw the Armenian genocide, with its widespread, large-scale, and systematic massacres and death marches, as more condensed in time and more radical in its intent and execution than other campaigns of destruction.
But a number of observers did see other non-Turkish groups as targets of CUP policies and would view these policies as connected. To name a few examples: in the Ottoman Senate, Ahmed Riza would during WWI, as the only high-level and vocal Turkish voice of dissent, criticize the persecution of Armenians, Greeks, and Arabs and the confiscation of their property.3 Danish diplomatic minister at Constantinople, Carl Ellis Wandel, reported on how the CUP would use extermination to bring a stop to what they considered as Arab, Armenian, and Greek domination in the Ottoman parliament that would lead to their loss of power.4 George E. White suggested that the purpose of the CUP was to "create a uniform state, one in Turkish nationality, and one in Moslem orthodoxy" through deportation of Armenians and Greeks and suppression of the "unorthodox" Alevis.5 Member of the American Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief, William Walker Rockwell, stated that the number of Armenians and Syrians had been severely decimated as a result of CUP policies and that there had been "awful misery among the Palestinian Jews."6 H. F. Ulrichsen, MP, member of the organization Danish Friends of Armenians,7 and secretary to Wandel 1914-16, contended that the CUP and the Kemalist "'cleansing policy' ['Udrensningspolitik'] [] had as its aim the removal of all the foreign bodies - Christians and Jews - which were influencing Turkey to such a large degree."8
Such views have now begun to be reflected by researchers of the CUP and early Kemalist periods who emphasize the role of "ethnic reconfiguration"9 or "demographic engineering,"10 the planned, interconnected, and proactive (as opposed to "accidental," isolated, or reactive) elements of these policies. While Turkish historiography has traditionally denied or downplayed such policies, these scholars, whether or not they use the "g"-word, now suggest that the Armenian genocide was an aspect of a policy of Turkification, albeit usually described as its most extremely violent aspect.11 According to Taner Akcam, the CUP had prior to WWI "formulated a policy that they began to execute in the Aegean region against the Greeks and, during the war years, expanded to include the Assyrians, the Chaldeans, the Syrians, and especially the Armenians, a policy that eventually became genocidal. [] Detailed reports were prepared [by the Special Organization] outlining the elimination of the Christian population. These measures were implemented in the Aegean region in the spring of 1914."12 This study aims to take a closer look at these pre-war persecutions of Aegean Greeks as an aspect of violent Turkification, i.e. as more than an isolated (series of) incident(s) with little or no relation to other instances of CUP group persecution or to any overall CUP goal of Turkification. The sources consist of published reports, memoirs, etc., and scholarly works, with an emphasis on unpublished Danish archival material that supplements existing knowledge of the events.
The beginnings of violent Turkification
Seen from the vantage point of observers in the major harbour city of Smyrna (Izmir), and in Constantinople (Istanbul), the Ottoman capital, CUP policies of group persecution began in earnest with the attempted ethnic cleansing of Ottoman Greeks living along the Aegean littoral.13 Attempts at removing non-Turkish influences from the economy had been initiated by the CUP after a radical faction of the Committee had gained power in 1913, and this policy was supplemented with the cleansing of more than 100,000 Greeks from the Aegean and Thrace in the spring and summer of 1914.14 Papers reported that thousands of Greeks in Thrace were forced by the authorities to embark for Greece or convert to Islam,15 and that Greeks from around Rodosto were reported to be suffering on the fields and roads while Muslim Albanians and Cretans were installed in their houses.16 This was apparently the result of careful deliberations and preliminary research by the CUP, though it was decided to hide the connection between, on the one hand, the CUP and government agencies like the Ministry of War, and, on the other hand, the Special Organization (SO) that executed of the operation.17
The main "Danish" witness to these events, Alfred van der Zee, Danish consul at Smyrna, vilayet of Aidin (Smyrna) since 1910, was in fact Dutch.18 He was born in the Netherlands, May 9, 1872, a businessman running the local offices of the family business W. F. van der Zee, and who spoke Dutch, English, French, Italian, German, Greek, and Turkish.19 Also, he was a shipbroker and an agent for the Danish shipping company DFDS.20 Vice consul at the Danish consulate in Smyrna at the time was Dutch Levantine John Atkinson de Jongh who had held this position since 1877.21 In June 1914, Van der Zee reported to Wandel, his superior in Constantinople, that a large-scale, systematic, and violent banishing of "the generally peaceful and hard-working Greeks" was carried out on the orders of the central government.22
This policy was partly dictated by perceived security concerns. The CUP believed the Ottoman Greeks to be suspect on account of their alleged ties to the Greek state, and, more specifically, they wanted to avoid that Greeks living along the coastline could come to serve as a fifth column. The danger was believed to be imminent as Greece, through the intervention of the European Powers, had recently come to control the nearby islands of Chios and Mytilene (Lesbos). These islands, it was stated, could be used to launch attacks.23 Also, the persecution of Aegean (Ionian) Greeks could serve to put pressure on the Greek government to solve the overall islands dispute in a manner beneficial to the Ottoman government.24 But the islands dispute and security concerns were apparently not the only reasons, as economic, political, and ethno-religious concerns seem to have made the cleansing policy part of a larger project of Turkification. Van der Zee reported that in March 1914, the valis of Smyrna and the nearby regions had made inspection tours to the coastal towns and villages of the vilayets, "advising" the local officials to force out the Greeks:
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