Why Does No-one Remember the Assyrian Victims of Turkey's Christian Holocaust?
A famous painting by Leonardo de Mango, showing the stoning of the Christian population of Siirt in 1915 (Wikipedia).You
may have heard of the Armenian genocide. You've probably heard of
Stalin's starvation of the Ukrainians, and the atrocities committed by
the European empires in Africa. You've definitely heard of the
Holocaust.
Yet chances are you've never heard of the Assyrian
genocide, even though this was just as brutal and costly. It was
perpetrated alongside the Armenian massacre, yet only one of the twin
programmes has lived on in infamy.
The Assyrian genocide occurred
100 years ago, and decimated a people whose territory stretched from the
areas now known as Iraq, Turkey, Syria and Egypt. Today, this very same
area is the world's fiercest conflict zone, the wounds which opened a
century ago showing no sign of healing.
Which makes it all the more important that we remember the horrors inflicted on the Assyrians all those years ago.
Ethnic cleansing
Historians
today describe the Assyrian Genocide as a programme of extermination
carried out by the Ottoman Empire upon the Chaldean, Syriac and Assyrian
populations. All three peoples were Christian, and the Ottomans
attempted to wipe them out during a wider ethnic cleansing campaign,
which also included the Armenian and Greek genocides.
The Assyrian
extermination campaign actually lasted from 1914 to 1923, Turkey's
rulers carrying on the killing long after their empire had been
dismantled. The death toll varies depending which historical scholar or
record you consult.
"Estimates on the overall death toll vary,
with some contemporary reports placing the figure at 270,000, and
estimates range to as many as 750,000," reported Dr. Israel W. Charny,
the editor of two-volume Encyclopedia of Genocide and executive director
of the Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide.
Charny groups the
Assyrian Genocide together with the massacre of Greeks and Armenians in
a "Christian Holocaust", which he claims was "the precursor to the
Jewish Holocaust in WWII."
"To this day, the Turkish government ostensibly denies having committed this genocide" Charny adds.
Ottoman Jihad against native Christian populations
Sabri
Atman, who is also one of the most well-known lecturers on the Assyrian
Genocide, said in an interview with the Armenian Weekly this year that
the Ottoman Empire was bent on "ethnically annihilating all non-Muslim
citizens living under the Ottoman occupation, with the objective of
homogenising Turkey in accordance with their goal to create a nation of
'One Religion'.
"Their motto was 'One Nation, One Religion.' To
achieve their goal, jihad (or holy war) was declared on Nov. 14, 1914 in
all of the Ottoman mosques... The main plot was to get rid of all the
Christian minorities of Turkey,."
Atman added that "Denial is a form of continuation of the genocide. It is to be killed twice."
Hannibal
Travis, a Professor of Law at Florida International University, wrote
an article on the Assyrian Genocide in 2006, suggesting that "the
Ottoman Empire's widespread persecution of Assyrian civilians during
World War I constituted a form of genocide... a deliberate and
systematic campaign of massacre, torture, abduction, deportation,
impoverishment, and cultural and ethnic destruction.
"Established
principles of international law outlawed this war of extermination
against Ottoman Christian civilians before it was embarked upon, and
ample evidence of genocidal intent has surfaced in the form of
admissions by Ottoman officials.
"Nevertheless, the international community has been hesitant to recognize the Assyrian experience as a form of genocide."
The
Assyrian Genocide still causes controversy today. Here Turks in
Australia protest their state parliament's adoption of a motion
recognising the genocide (photo Reuters).
Finally, a monument
An
Assyrian genocide monument, in memory of the Assyrian victims of the
Christian genocide of the Ottoman Empire during World War One, was
erected on 19 October in Athens. The monument's opening was attended by
Kyriakos Betsaras, the president of the Assyrian Union of Greece, as
well as the current and former Mayors of Athens.
Sabri Atman spoke
at the ceremony, called on "Turkey and all nations around the world to
recognise this historical reality," adding: "In recent years, Assyrians
have been working diligently towards greater public awareness and
worldwide recognition of the Assyrian Genocide.
"The ethnic
extermination of hundreds of thousands of our people and the destruction
of our lands forever changed the demographics of the area we called
home for thousands of years. We Assyrians standing here today are the
children of a nation which was almost completely eliminated from the
face of the earth," he said.
"I'm also proud to stand in front of
you today knowing that over 20 countries have officially recognized the
Armenian Genocide. It is my hope that in the future, countries will
continue to follow in this pattern, and will also include the
recognition of Assyrians and Greeks as victims of the same Genocide."
Monuments
commemorating the victims of the Assyrian genocide have also been
erected in Sweden, Belgium, France, Armenia, Australia, Wales and the
United States. Whether Turkey follows suit, however, remains to be seen.
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