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Star Tribune article

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  • Star Tribune article

    The Armenian Genocide
    Original Publication Date: 4/16/2000
    (c) 2007 Star Tribune. All rights reserved.

    Original Headline: Turk slaughter of Armenians is little-known // An
    author documents the overshadowed history of genocide during World War I
    in the former Ottoman Empire.

    By Eric Black; Staff Writer and Big Question blogger
    Follow the StarTribune for the news, photos and videos from the Twin Cities and beyond.


    "Who today remembers the extermination of the Armenians?"

    That remark was uttered by Adolf Hitler a few days before Germany's
    1939 invasion of Poland, which started World War II.

    Hitler said he had ordered death squads to "exterminate without mercy
    or pity, Polish men, women and children" who got in the way of
    Germany's aims. They needn't worry about history's judgment, he said,
    because history had already forgotten the massacre of more than a
    million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire just 25 years earlier.

    Vahakn Dadrian, who lectured in the Twin Cities last week, has made it
    his life's work to keep alive the history of the Armenian genocide.

    Armenians around the world commemorate the genocide every April. April
    24 was the date in 1915 when about 300 Armenian intellectual and
    professional leaders in the Ottoman capital of Constantinople (modern
    Istanbul) were rounded up, beginning a three-year killing spree.

    The Armenian Cultural Organization of Minnesota will mark the tragedy
    today with a lecture by Dadrian at the University of Minnesota.

    The Armenian genocide ranks as one of the 20th century's biggest cases
    of organized mass murder based on ethnic and religious differences. But
    it is far less well-known than the biggest case - the Nazi-organized
    slaughter of Jews, Gypsies and others - and several more recent ones
    such as those in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.

    Dadrian, director of genocide research at the Cambridge, Mass., and
    Toronto-based Zoryan Institute and author of a 1995 book, "The History
    of the Armenian Genocide," has devoted his adult life to documenting
    the tragedy. And Dadrian is among the founders of a field known as
    comparative study of genocide. He spoke twice in recent days, at St.
    Cloud State University and at the Jewish Community Center of
    Minneapolis, on his comparison between the Armenian genocide and the
    Holocaust.

    Modern Turkey, successor to the Ottoman Empire, denies that the deaths
    of the Armenians were part of a program of genocide. Many countries,
    including the United States, out of deference to the Turkish position,
    have avoided officially recognizing the tragedy as a genocide. In April
    1999, for example, President Clinton's statement on the anniversary
    referred to the "deportation and massacre" of "so many innocent lives,"
    but he avoided using the term "genocide."

    Dadrian said a resolution pending in Congress, with more than 100
    cosponsors, would recognize the genocide and authorize the United
    States to create an archive to preserve materials documenting the case.

    Turkish denial

    In the 19th century, Armenia was part of the declining Ottoman Empire.
    Anti-Armenian sentiment was a staple of Turkish politics. In 1894-96,
    more than 150,000 Armenians were slaughtered, Dadrian said.

    Early in the 20th century, the Ottomans lost their extensive holdings
    in the Balkan peninsula in a war that started with nationalist
    movements among several of the subject populations. Similar nationalist
    sentiments were stirring in the Armenian regions. Dadrian said the
    biggest part of the motive for the Turkish program of genocide was the
    fear that Armenian nationalism would lead to the empire's loss of more
    territory.

    The Turkish denial that its predecessors committed genocide, Dadrian
    said, relies on the argument that the government was merely trying to
    relocate a troublesome population out of a war zone.

    That argument was rebutted at the time by the U.S. ambassador to the
    Ottoman Empire, Henry Morganthau, who witnessed much of the genocide.
    In a 1917 book, he wrote: "When the Turkish authorities gave the orders
    for these deportations, they were merely giving the death warrant to a
    whole race; they understood this well, and, in their conversation with
    me, they made no particular attempt to conceal the fact."

    The way the Armenians were killed are staggeringly grisly and provide a
    macabre contrast to the relatively bureaucratic and hi-tech methods
    that the Nazis would employ 25 years later.

    In a policy that Dadrian said was "unparalleled in the annals of human
    history," the Turks "decided to rely not on soldiers but on
    bloodthirsty criminals." Dadrian said 30,000 to 35,000 convicts were
    released from prison to participate in the slaughter.

    With a world war raging, Dadrian said, Ottoman officials were anxious
    not to waste bullets or powder on the Armenians, so they employed four
    main methods to kill the Armenians:

    Many were beaten to death or killed with daggers, swords and axes.
    Massive drowning operations were conducted in the tributaries of the
    Euphrates River and the Black Sea. Bargeloads of Armenians were
    intentionally sunk. Dadrian, quoting Morganthau, said that in places
    the Armenian corpses became so numerous that the rivers were forced out
    of their beds, in one case changing the course of a river for a
    100-meter stretch.
    The method that Dadrian called "the most fiendish" was to pack Armenian
    women and children into stables or haylofts and then set them ablaze,
    burning the victims alive. Dadrian estimated that about 150,000 were
    killed by this method.
    Hundreds of thousands more died of hunger, thirst or exposure during
    forced marches in the desert. Dadrian said the Armenians were told they
    were being relocated but were marched along routes chosen to maximize
    the chances that none of the marchers would survive.
    Estimates of the number of Armenians killed vary. Dadrian said the best
    figure - just for the period 1915-1918 - is between 1.2 million and 1.3
    million out of a pre-war population of Armenians within the Ottoman
    Empire of about 4 million.

    Cases compared

    In comparing the tragedies that befell the Armenians and the Jews in
    the 20th century, and looking at other cases of genocide or
    near-genocide, Dadrian offered these observations:

    The Jews and the Armenians were historical victims of persecution. Both
    lacked a state of their own and had a minority status in every country
    where they lived. This combination made them "fair game" for their
    attackers.

    Armenians and Jews were legally barred from power positions in their
    societies, such as the military, government and civil service. Some
    their members prospered in commercial fields, which made them objects
    of envy and resentment. This element was also represented in the
    Hutu-Tutsi conflict in Rwanda, Dadrian said, where Tutsis were
    perceived as controlling an unfair proportion of wealth relative to
    Hutus.

    Relative wealth combined with lack of access to political or military
    power is a potent combination, Dadrian said, because it makes a group
    into appealing targets of persecution but leaves them essentially
    defenseless.

    Although the genocide victims were already hated groups in both cases,
    they were further degraded and vilified by official propaganda before
    the killing started. Dadrian said the term "vermin" was commonly used
    to describe Jews during the Nazi period and Armenians during the period
    leading up their genocide.

    Both genocidal campaigns occurred in the context of a larger war. Both
    target populations were described as a dangerous internal enemy, which
    made their massacre seem justifiable as an act of national security.
    One lesson the world can learn from the comparative study, Dadrian
    said, is that war itself can create the preconditions for genocide.
    "War provides incentives for becoming barbarous, and it presents a
    cloak or a guise for that barbarity," he said.

    A key similarity that Dadrian said is often overlooked is that both
    genocides were committed by particular political parties: the Nazis and
    the Young Turks. Those who conceive the Holocaust as perpetrated by the
    German nation or the German government are missing the fact that the
    nation and the government had been overwhelmed by the Nazis, he said.
    The Young Turk movement filled a similar role in the Turkish case.

    The same factor is present in many of the other 20th-century genocides,
    he said. For example, the Kurds of northern Iraq are being persecuted
    not by Iraqis in general but by the ruling Baath Party.

    The "killing fields" of Cambodia were created by the Khmer Rouge
    movement that took over that country. Dadrian called the Cambodian case
    especially unusual because it lacked an ethnic or religious component.
    The perpetrators and victims were ethnically similar but on opposite
    sides of a class and ideological divide.

    The Turks and the Nazis operated in "an absence of external
    deterrence," Dadrian said. While some rhetorical protests were filed in
    both cases, the perpetrators understood that their victims had been
    abandoned by the outside world.

    Timeline/Summary:Turkey and the Armenians 1915-1922

    The Turks believed that the Armenians would use an Allied victory to
    set up an independent state. When many Armenians openly rejoiced at the
    initial Allied success at the Dardanelles, the Turks turned upon them.
    Between 1915-22, more than a million Armenians were killed and another
    400,000 died in prison camps.

    April-November 1915: More than 600,000 Armenians killed.

    November 1915: 500,000 Armenians deported to Mesopotamia (modern day
    Iraq); 90,000 survive the war.

    August 1918: More than 400,000 Armenians killed by Turkish soldiers
    during the Turkish advance through Russia.

    February 1920: More than 30,000 Armenians killed; 80,000 fled to Syria.


    September 1922: Remaining 100,000 Armenians driven out by Turks. In
    1931, the Turkish government confiscated their property.

    Source: "First World War Atlas" by Martin Gilbert
    General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

  • #2
    Super article - really well presented. (and I liked the use of Gilbert as a source!) - however I think they confused the total world population of Armenians at that time (4 million) with those living in Ottoman EMpire (more like 2.5 million I believe). Also I very much dislike the (false) allusion that the Turks only "turned on" the Armenians because of Armenian desire for a homeland - it was more complicated then this. Would one say (to justify or explain) the holocuast that Germans decided to kill the Jews because Jews wished to be German? Well - I feel that this is the same level of analyis and it ignores the deeper realities of CUP/Turkish racism as well as the history (which OK does include Turkish fears of ethnics splitting off) - but more importantly the Genocide and Ottoman history of this period must take into account the CUP revolution (inlcuding the forces which led up to it) - which resulted in the (violent) transformation of Ottoman/Turkisn society from one of multi-ethnic/religious communities within an ancient empire - to the forming of a modern nation state based upong the principles of race and mono-religion.

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