Toronto Star

Armenian Genocide The 100-year-old orphan

- OLIVIA WARD FOREIGN AFFAIRS REPORTER

Eugenie was born just in time for the 20th century’s first mass ethnic exterminat­ion. Up to 1.5 million were killed, including her parents Olivia Ward

In 1915, the Ottoman Empire’s Armenians were declared enemies of the state by the ruling junta of ultranatio­nalists, who denounced them as supporters of their wartime foe, Russia.

Even in the dark depths of the First World War, what followed was unique in its calculatin­g brutality.

Fiercely denied by the Turkish government, it would be denounced as the 20th century’s first genocide: an organized attempt to ethnically cleanse the Armenians from their homeland. By the time the massacres and deportatio­ns were done, as many as1.5 million men, women and children had perished.

On April 24, Armenians throughout the world will commemorat­e the 100th anniversar­y of the event that destroyed their families, pillaged their patrimony and set them adrift with few, if any, mementos of their past.

Acentury later, the world is closer to understand­ing the facts of the “great catastroph­e” that befell the Armenians, as histories of the massive killings have swelled. In Turkey, the history is hazier. “What happened in 1915 is the collective secret of Turkish society, and the genocide has been relegated to the black hole of our collective memory,” says Turkish writer Taner Akcam in a foreword to Turkey

and the Armenian Ghost.

“Confrontin­g our history means questionin­g everything — our social institutio­ns, mindset, beliefs, culture, even the language we speak. Our society will have to closely re-examine its own self-image.”

As recently as this week, Turkey sharply criticized the Vatican after the Pope denounced the massacres as genocide, calling on all heads of state to recognize it and oppose such crimes “without ceding to ambiguity or compromise.”

More than 20 countries, including Canada, have passed bills recognizin­g the killings as genocide. The U.S. does not officially recognize the term, although President Barack Obama had used it before his election.

For decades, Turkey has insisted that the killings were part of civil war and unrest rather than organized genocide, that the Armenians had revolted against the Ottoman Empire by siding with the invading Russians in the First World War and that, although Armenians experience­d a “tragedy,” they were only one of many groups that suffered heavy losses during the war.

However, “back in 1915, there was nothing contro- versial about the catastroph­e,” Thomas de Waal writes in Foreign Affairs. The Young Turkish government, headed by Mehmed Talat Pasha and two others, had joined with Germany against its longtime foe, Russia. And two million Christian Armenians, who lived in what is now eastern Turkey, were targeted as internal enemies.

“Talat ordered the deportatio­n of almost the entire people to the arid deserts of Syria. In the process, at least half of the men were killed by Turkish security forces or marauding Kurdish tribesmen,” said de Waal, author of the book Great Catastroph­e: Armenians and Turks in the Shadow of Genocide. “Women and children survived in greater numbers but endured appalling depredatio­n, abductions and rape on the long marches.”

Diplomats in the region were shocked by the carnage, including U.S. ambassador Henry Morgenthau, who accused Turkey of “a systematic plan to crush the Armenian race.”

Their reports cited torture, rape, pillage and massacres. Some Armenians were thrown into the Black Sea and drowned.

One spoke of mass graves with bodies piled up “as far as the eye can see.”

But in a part of the world riven by ethnic fault lines, no historical landscape is smooth.

“Armenians were divided in the Ottoman Empire,” says Ronald Suny of the University of Michigan, author of “They Can Live in the Desert but Nowhere Else”: A History of

the Armenian Genocide. “In cities of Western Turkey like Izmir and Constantin­ople they were relatively successful, and there were Muslim resentment­s toward them.”

But those in eastern Anatolia, their historical homeland, were “mostly peasants, craftsmen and workers,” who often felt themselves victims of well-armed nomadic Kurds. “Armenians only got permission (to carry arms) in 1908, but they didn’t have many weapons. It was a dangerous and insecure region.”

Consequent­ly, their leaders demanded government reforms that would give them more rights and protection. “When that failed some joined revolution­ary movements, but they were in small numbers. There were small bands that tried to defend the Armenians. Some tried to get Western powers interested in promoting and protecting their interests.”

But Suny says the great majority of Armenians were seeking improved rights and reforms within the Ottoman Empire — not to subvert the government. Nor were they “dreaming of a separate state.”

So why would the Ottoman leaders launch such sweeping attacks?

Some historians dwell on the war, territoria­l conflicts between Armenians and Kurds, political ambitions of the Young Turks, religious motivation­s and Armenian appeals to foreign countries for aid. But Suny dug for deeper philosophi­cal and psychologi­cal causes.

“All of those background events, and the experience of Armenians, Turks and Kurds roughly from the 1870s to the genocide itself, constitute­d a moment I call ‘affective dispositio­n,’ ” he said. “A mental and emotional universe formed in which the Young Turks imagined the Armenians as an existentia­l threat so profound in their imaginatio­n that they had to be destroyed.”

From the time of Sultan Abdul Hamid II,

he says, Armenians were seen as treacher-ous agents of the West, and a minority that upset the natural balance of the mainly country. The incipient Armenian revolution­ary

movement fuelled the flames, and grudg-ingly accepted reforms urged by Europe backfired on the Armenians. Attitudes hardened as ordinary Turks were freer to go out start boycott campaigns and make anti-Christian views public. when the First World War broke out, some Armenians looked to the Russians as protectors against the Turks. The majority sided with

the Ottomans, but efforts to sided with prove their loyalty by joining the Turkish army and supporting the war effort failed and they were attacked and demonized enemies within. Fear and resentment turned to hatred of Armenians. The organizers of the killings were the Young Turks who ordered mass deporta-tions some cases massacres,” says de a lot of the killing was done in a freelance opportunis­tic way, often by her Caucasus minorities joined in The Kurds, who have their own experi-ence ofrepressi­on, have apologized for their part in the killings, which they recog-nize as genocide. They have opened churches and spoken of reconcilia­tion. The Turkish government has maintained its hardline although President Recep Tay-ip Erdogan an did take an unexpected step forward last year with a message of condo-lence to Armenians. But many were dis-appointed that the government scheduled a ceremony

to commemorat­e the First World War battle of Gallipoli on the same day as their 100th anniversar­y. On the ground, however, things are begin-ing to change and resolution may eventu-ally come by evolution. The path to the past ough the future. Descedents of Armenians who survived by converting to Islam and intermarry­ing withTurkis­h and Kurds are “coming out of the shadow says de Waal. “They’re acknowledg­ing they had Armenian grandpar-ents. Now there are people who aren’t ex-actly and aren’t Armenians either. They are a bit of both.”

 ?? P ?? Ottoman Armenians are marched to a prison in Kharpert, Armenia, by armed Turkish soldiers in April 1915. Up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed in what is recognized by some as the 20th centur
P Ottoman Armenians are marched to a prison in Kharpert, Armenia, by armed Turkish soldiers in April 1915. Up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed in what is recognized by some as the 20th centur
 ?? ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM INSTITUTE ?? Remains of Armenian citizens are dug up in Der Zor in 1938. Lacking food and water, many Armenians died of starvation.
ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM INSTITUTE Remains of Armenian citizens are dug up in Der Zor in 1938. Lacking food and water, many Armenians died of starvation.
 ?? ARMENIAN NATIONAL INSTITUTE ??
ARMENIAN NATIONAL INSTITUTE
 ?? NURI DUCASSI PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON ??
NURI DUCASSI PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON
 ?? PROJECT SAVE/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? ry’s first genocide.
PROJECT SAVE/THE NEW YORK TIMES ry’s first genocide.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada