In 1915, leaders of the Turkish government set in motion a plan to expel and massacre Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire. Though reports vary, most sources agree that there were about 2 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire at the time of the massacre. By the early 1920s, when the massacres and deportations finally ended, some 1.5 million of Turkey’s Armenians were dead, with many more forcibly removed from the country. Today, most historians call this event a genocide--a premeditated and systematic campaign to exterminate an entire people. However, the Turkish government does not acknowledge the enormity or scope of these events. Despite pressure from Armenians and social justice advocates throughout the world, it is still illegal in Turkey to talk about what happened to Armenians during this era.
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Contents
The Roots of Genocide: The Ottoman Empire
The Armenian people have made their home in
the Caucasus region of Eurasia for some 3,000 years. For some of that
time, the kingdom of Armenia was an independent entity--at the beginning
of the 4th century AD, for instance, it became the first nation in the
world to make Christianity its official religion--but for the most part,
control of the region shifted from one empire to another. During the
15th century, Armenia was absorbed into the mighty Ottoman Empire.
The
Ottoman rulers, like most of their subjects, were Muslim. They
permitted religious minorities like the Armenians to maintain some
autonomy, but they also subjected Armenians, who they viewed as
“infidels,” to unequal and unjust treatment. Christians had to pay
higher taxes than Muslims, for example, and they had very few political
and legal rights.
In spite of these obstacles, the Armenian
community thrived under Ottoman rule. They tended to be better educated
and wealthier than their Turkish neighbors, who in turn tended to resent
their success. This resentment was compounded by suspicions that the
Christian Armenians would be more loyal to Christian governments (that
of the Russians, for example, who shared an unstable border with Turkey)
than they were to the Ottoman caliphate.
These suspicions grew
more acute as the Ottoman Empire crumbled. At the end of the 19th
century, the despotic Turkish Sultan Abdul Hamid II--obsessed with
loyalty above all, and infuriated by the nascent Armenian campaign to
win basic civil rights--declared that he would solve the “Armenian
question” once and for all. “I will soon settle those Armenians,” he
told a reporter in 1890. “I will give them a box on the ear which will
make them…relinquish their revolutionary ambitions.”
The First Armenian Massacre
Between 1894 and 1896, this “box on the ear” took the form of a state-sanctioned pogrom. In response to large scale protests by Armenians, Turkish military officials, soldiers and ordinary men sacked Armenian villages and cities and massacred their citizens. Hundreds of thousands of Armenians were murdered.
The Rise of the Young Turks
In 1908, a new government came to power in Turkey. A group of reformers who called themselves the “Young Turks” overthrew Sultan Abdul Hamid and established a more modern constitutional government. At first, the Armenians were hopeful that they would have an equal place in this new state, but they soon learned that what the nationalistic Young Turks wanted most of all was to “Turkify” the empire. According to this way of thinking, non-Turks--and especially Christian non-Turks--were a grave threat to the new state
World War I
In 1914, the Turks entered World War I on the side of Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire. (At the same time, Ottoman religious authorities declared jihad, or holy war, against all Christians except their allies.) Military leaders began to argue that the Armenians were traitors: If they thought they could win independence if the Allies were victorious, this argument went, the Armenians would be eager to fight for the enemy. As the war intensified, Armenians organized volunteer battalions to help the Russian army fight against the Turks in the Caucasus region. These events, and general Turkish suspicion of the Armenian people, led the Turkish government to push for the “removal” of the Armenians from the war zones along the Eastern Front.
Genocide Begins
On
April 24, 1915, the Armenian genocide began. That day, the Turkish
government arrested and executed several hundred Armenian intellectuals.
After that, ordinary Armenians were turned out of their homes
and sent on death marches through the Mesopotamian desert without food
or water. Frequently, the marchers were stripped naked and forced to
walk under the scorching sun until they dropped dead. People who stopped
to rest were shot.
At the same time, the Young Turks
created a “Special Organization,” which in turn organized “killing
squads” or “butcher battalions” to carry out, as one officer put it,
“the liquidation of the Christian elements.” These killing squads were
often made up of murderers and other ex-convicts. They drowned people in
rivers, threw them off cliffs, crucified them and burned them alive. In
short order, the Turkish countryside was littered with Armenian
corpses.
Records show that during this
“Turkification”campaign government squads also kidnapped children,
converted them to Islam and gave them to Turkish families. In some
places, they raped women and forced them to join Turkish “harems” or
serve as slaves. Muslim families moved into the homes of deported Armenians and seized their property.
In 1922, when the genocide was over, there were just 388,000 Armenians remaining in the Ottoman Empire.
The Armenian Genocide Today
After the Ottomans surrendered in 1918, the leaders of the Young Turks fled to Germany, which promised not to prosecute them for the genocide. (However, a group of Armenian nationalists devised a plan, known as Operation Nemesis, to track down and assassinate the leaders of the genocide.) Ever since then, the Turkish government has denied that a genocide took place. The Armenians were an enemy force, they argue, and their slaughter was a necessary war measure. Today, Turkey is an important ally of the U.S. and other Western nations, and so their governments have likewise been reluctant to condemn the long-ago killings. In March 2010, a U.S. Congressional panel at last voted to recognize the genocide.
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