RookieArcher -
welcome to our forum - and I appreciate that you come here asking questions - that should be asked - and not spouting (uniformed, insensitive and racist....so-called answers). I don't have the time right at this moment to answer all of your questions but believe me I can and will answer all of them. Not everyone - not even most other Armenians - possess much of the knowledge I possess concerning this issue - including - believ it or not and understanding and appreciation of the Turkish position (and by this I mean the position that the Turkish people and governments were in during these times as opposed to the denial efforts - though I am quite familiar with these as well). Just to very briefy address one issue - Greeks and other Christians of trhe Empire and later in Turkey were very much targeted as well - as later even rthe Kurds were. You might not be familiar with the expulsions and massacres of Greeks that actually proceeded the Armenain Genocide proper (in 1913) as well as those that followed - from 1917-19 - then in 1922 - leading to the forced expulsion then then became the "population exchange" with greece. Your also not likely familiar with the brutal supressions of the Kurds that occured in the late 1920s/early 1930s - but believe me they were most ugly as well - and I have been to one former (Kurdish) town in Anatolia that was utterly destroyed by the Turks in the 1930s where only barren and still burned out looking stone walls remain. And if the Dashnaks had a program to advocate revolution, violence and seperation - whish they did at various time - believe me the Ottoman Sul;tans and later the Pan-Turckist had much worse - and they represented government policy where the Dashnaks were just a political party with limited influence among Armenians and even more limited capabilities. This is all I have time to address now - but I can provide a great many sources and links to information that corraborrates my points - believe me - there is overwhelming evidence for the Genocide of the Armenians - to doubt such is not an option for any educated person - and while not all is perhaps as black and white as some Armenians may like to see it (but can you blame considering the aggressive denials etc) - the essential truths of what happened correspond to a great deal more what you hear from the Armenain side then what is frequesntly spewed from the Turksih side. There are educated Turks - and I know many - who understand very much these events and there are incresing numbers of Turkish scholars who are speaking out for Genocdie recognition and who have some very good perspectives - Taner Ackam is one that you may know of and Haly Berktay is another. I will be happy to post some of their thinking on this - I have much of it.
welcome to our forum - and I appreciate that you come here asking questions - that should be asked - and not spouting (uniformed, insensitive and racist....so-called answers). I don't have the time right at this moment to answer all of your questions but believe me I can and will answer all of them. Not everyone - not even most other Armenians - possess much of the knowledge I possess concerning this issue - including - believ it or not and understanding and appreciation of the Turkish position (and by this I mean the position that the Turkish people and governments were in during these times as opposed to the denial efforts - though I am quite familiar with these as well). Just to very briefy address one issue - Greeks and other Christians of trhe Empire and later in Turkey were very much targeted as well - as later even rthe Kurds were. You might not be familiar with the expulsions and massacres of Greeks that actually proceeded the Armenain Genocide proper (in 1913) as well as those that followed - from 1917-19 - then in 1922 - leading to the forced expulsion then then became the "population exchange" with greece. Your also not likely familiar with the brutal supressions of the Kurds that occured in the late 1920s/early 1930s - but believe me they were most ugly as well - and I have been to one former (Kurdish) town in Anatolia that was utterly destroyed by the Turks in the 1930s where only barren and still burned out looking stone walls remain. And if the Dashnaks had a program to advocate revolution, violence and seperation - whish they did at various time - believe me the Ottoman Sul;tans and later the Pan-Turckist had much worse - and they represented government policy where the Dashnaks were just a political party with limited influence among Armenians and even more limited capabilities. This is all I have time to address now - but I can provide a great many sources and links to information that corraborrates my points - believe me - there is overwhelming evidence for the Genocide of the Armenians - to doubt such is not an option for any educated person - and while not all is perhaps as black and white as some Armenians may like to see it (but can you blame considering the aggressive denials etc) - the essential truths of what happened correspond to a great deal more what you hear from the Armenain side then what is frequesntly spewed from the Turksih side. There are educated Turks - and I know many - who understand very much these events and there are incresing numbers of Turkish scholars who are speaking out for Genocdie recognition and who have some very good perspectives - Taner Ackam is one that you may know of and Haly Berktay is another. I will be happy to post some of their thinking on this - I have much of it.
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