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Robert Fisk:
The forgotten
holocaust
The killing of 1.5
million Armenians by
the Ottoman Turks
during the First
World War remains
one of the bloodiest
and most contentious
episodes of the 20th
century. Robert Fisk
visits Yerevan, and
unearths hitherto
unpublished images
of the first modern
genocide
Published: 28 August
2007
The photographs,
never before
published, capture
the horrors of the
first Holocaust of
the 20th century.
They show a
frightened people on
the move men,
women and children,
some with animals,
others on foot,
walking over open
ground outside the
city of Erzerum in
1915, at the
beginning of their
death march. We know
that none of the
Armenians sent from
Erzerum in what is
today north-eastern
Turkey survived.
Most of the men were
shot, the children
including, no doubt,
the young boy or
girl with a
headscarf in the
close-up photograph
died of starvation
or disease. The
young women were
almost all raped,
the older women
beaten to death, the
sick and babies left
by the road to die.
The unique
photographs are a
stunning witness to
one of the most
terrible events of
our times. Their
poor quality the
failure of the
camera to cope with
the swirl and
movement of the
Armenian deportees
in the close-up
picture, the
fingerprint on the
top of the second
lend them an
undeniable
authenticity. They
come from the
archives of the
German Deutsche
Bank, which was in
1915 providing
finance for the
maintenance and
extension of the
Turkish railway
system. One
incredible
photograph so far
published in only
two specialist
magazines, in
Germany and in
modern-day Armenia
actually shows
dozens of doomed
Armenians, including
children, crammed
into cattle trucks
for their
deportation. The
Turks stuffed 90
Armenians into each
of these wagons
the same average the
Nazis achieved in
their transports to
the death camps of
Eastern Europe
during the Jewish
Holocaust.
Hayk Demoyan,
director of the
grey-stone Museum of
the Armenian
Genocide in the
foothills just
outside Yerevan, the
capital of
present-day Armenia,
stares at the
photographs on his
computer screen in
bleak silence. A
university lecturer
in modern Turkish
history, he is one
of the most dynamic
Armenian genocide
researchers inside
the remains of
Armenia, which is
all that was left
after the Turkish
slaughter; it
suffered a further
70 years of terror
as part of the
Soviet Union. "Yes,
you can have these
pictures, he says.
"We are still
discovering more.
The Germans took
photographs and
these pictures even
survived the Second
World War. Today, we
want our museum to
be a place of
collective memory, a
memorisation of
trauma. Our museum
is for Turks as well
as Armenians. This
is also [the Turks']
history."
The story of the
last century's first
Holocaust Winston
Churchill used this
very word about the
Armenian genocide
years before the
Nazi murder of six
million Jews is
well known, despite
the refusal of
modern-day Turkey to
acknowledge the
facts. Nor are the
parallels with Nazi
Germany's
persecution of the
Jews idle ones.
Turkey's reign of
terror against the
Armenian people was
an attempt to
destroy the Armenian
race. While the
Turks spoke publicly
of the need to
"resettle" their
Armenian population
as the Germans
were to speak later
of the Jews of
Europe the true
intentions of Enver
Pasha's Committee of
Union and Progress
in Constantinople
were quite clear. On
15 September 1915,
for example (and a
carbon of this
document exists)
Talaat Pasha, the
Turkish Interior
minister, cabled an
instruction to his
prefect in Aleppo
about what he should
do with the tens of
thousands of
Armenians in his
city. "You have
already been
informed that the
government... has
decided to destroy
completely all the
indicated persons
living in Turkey...
Their existence must
be terminated,
however tragic the
measures taken may
be, and no regard
must be paid to
either age or sex,
or to any scruples
of conscience."
These words are
almost identical to
those used by
Himmler to his SS
killers in 1941.
Taner Akcam, a
prominent and
extremely brave
Turkish scholar who
has visited the
Yerevan museum, has
used original
Ottoman Turkish
documents to
authenticate the act
of genocide. Now
under fierce attack
for doing so from
his own government,
he discovered in
Turkish archives
that individual
Turkish officers
often wrote
"doubles" of their
mass death-sentence
orders, telegrams
sent at precisely
the same time that
asked their
subordinates to
ensure there was
sufficient
protection and food
for the Armenians
during their
"resettlement". This
weirdly parallels
the bureaucracy of
Nazi Germany, where
officials were
dispatching hundreds
of thousands of Jews
to the gas chambers
while assuring
International Red
Cross officials in
Geneva that they
were being well
cared for and well
fed.
Ottoman Turkey's
attempt to
exterminate an
entire Christian
race in the Middle
East the
Armenians, descended
from the residents
of ancient Urartu,
became the first
Christian nation
when their king
Drtad converted from
paganism in AD301
is a history of
almost unrelieved
horror at the hands
of Turkish policemen
and soldiers, and
Kurdish tribesmen.
In 1915, Turkey
claimed that its
Armenian population
was supporting
Turkey's Christian
enemies in Britain,
France and Russia.
Several historians
including Churchill,
who was responsible
for the doomed
venture at Gallipoli
have asked whether
the Turkish victory
there did not give
them the excuse to
turn against the
Christian Armenians
of Asia Minor, a
people of mixed
Persian, Roman and
Byzantine blood,
with what Churchill
called "merciless
fury". Armenian
scholars have
compiled a map of
their people's
persecution and
deportation, a
document that is as
detailed as the maps
of Europe that show
the railway lines to
Auschwitz and
Treblinka; the
Armenians of Erzerum,
for example, were
sent on their death
march to Terjan and
then to Erzinjan and
on to Sivas
province. The men
would be executed by
firing squad or
hacked to death with
axes outside
villages, the women
and children then
driven on into the
desert to die of
thirst or disease or
exhaustion or
gang-rape. In one
mass grave I myself
discovered on a
hillside at Hurgada
in present-day
Syria, there were
thousands of
skeletons, mostly of
young people their
teeth were perfect.
I even found a
100-year-old
Armenian woman who
had escaped the
slaughter there and
identified the
hillside for me.
Hayk Demoyan sits in
his air-conditioned
museum office, his
computer purring
softly on the desk,
and talks of the
need to memorialise
this huge suffering.
"You can see it in
the writing of each
survivor," he says.
"When visitors come
here from the
diaspora from
America and Europe,
Lebanon and Syria,
people whose parents
or grandparents died
in our genocide
our staff feel with
these people. They
see these people
become very upset,
there are tears and
some get a bit crazy
after seeing the
exhibition. This can
be very difficult
for us,
psychologically. The
stance of the
current Turkish
government [in
denying the
genocide] is proving
they are proud of
what their ancestors
did. They are saying
they are pleased
with what the
Ottomans did. Yet
today, we are
hearing that a lot
of places in the
world are like
goldmines of archive
materials to
continue our work
even here in
Yerevan. Every day,
we are coming across
new photographs or
documents."
The pictures Demoyan
gives to The
Independent were
taken by employees
of Deutsche Bank in
1915 to send to
their head office in
Berlin as proof of
their claims that
the Turks were
massacring their
Armenian population.
They can be found in
the Deutsche Bank
Historical Institute
Oriental Section
(the photograph of
the Armenian
deportees across the
desert published in
The Independent
today, for example,
is registered photo
number 1704 and the
1915 caption reads:
"Deportation Camp
near Erzerum.")
A German engineer in
Kharput sent back a
now-famous photogaph
of Armenian men
being led to their
execution by armed
Turkish police
officers. The
banking officials
were appalled that
the Ottoman Turks
were using in
effect German
money to send
Armenians to their
death by rail. The
new transportation
system was supposed
to be used for
military purposes,
not for genocide.
German soldiers sent
to Turkey to
reorganise the
Ottoman army also
witnessed these
atrocities. Armin
Wegner, an
especially
courageous German
second lieutenant in
the retinue of Field
Marshal von der
Goltz, took a series
of photographs of
dead and dying
Armenian women and
children. Other
German officers
regarded the
genocide with more
sinister interest.
Some of these men,
as Armenian scholar
Vahakn Dadrian
discovered, turn up
26 years later as
more senior officers
conducting the mass
killing of Jews in
German-occupied
Russia.
Computers have
transformed the
research of
institutions like
the Yerevan museum.
Poorly funded
scholarship has been
replaced by a
treasure-house of
information that
Demoyan is going to
publish in scholarly
magazines. "We have
information that
some Germans who
were in Armenia in
1915 started selling
genocide pictures
for personal
collections when
they returned
home... In Russia, a
man from St
Petersburg also
informed us that he
had seen handwritten
memoirs from 1940 in
which the writer
spoke of Russian
photographs of
Armenian bodies in
Van and Marash in
1915 and 1916."
Russian Tsarist
troops marched into
the eastern Turkish
city of Van and
briefly liberated
its doomed Armenian
inhabitants. Then
the Russians
retreated after
apparently taking
these pictures of
dead Armenians in
outlying villages.
Stalin also did his
bit to erase the
memory of the
massacres. The
Armenian Tashnag
party, so prominent
in Armenian politics
in the Ottoman
empire, was banned
by the Soviets. "In
the 1930s," Demoyan
says, "everyone
destroyed
handwritten memoirs
of the genocide,
photographs, land
deeds otherwise
they could have been
associated by the
Soviet secret police
with Tashnag
material." He shakes
his head at this
immeasurable loss.
"But now we are
finding new material
in France and new
pictures taken by
humanitarian workers
of the time. We know
there were two or
three documentary
films from 1915, one
shot approvingly by
a Kurdish leader to
show how the Turks
"dealt" with
Armenians. There is
huge new material in
Norway of the
deportations in Mush
from a Norwegian
missionary who was
there in 1915."
There is, too, a
need to archive
memoirs and books
that were published
in the aftermath of
the genocide but
discarded or
forgotten in the
decades that
followed. In 1929,
for example, a
small-circulation
book was published
in Boston entitled
From Dardanelles to
Palestine by Captain
Sarkis Torossian.
The author was a
highly decorated
officer in the
Turkish army who
fought with
distinction and was
wounded at
Gallipoli. He went
on to fight the
Allies in Palestine
but was appalled to
find thousands of
dying Armenian
refugees in the
deserts of northern
Syria. In passages
of great pain, he
discovers his sister
living in rags and
tells how his
fiancιe Jemileh died
in his arms. "I
raised Jemileh in my
arms, the pain and
terror in her eyes
melted until they
were bright as stars
again, stars in an
oriental night...
and so she died, as
a dream passing."
Torossian changed
sides, fought with
the Arabs, and even
briefly met Lawrence
of Arabia who did
not impress him.
"The day following
my entry into
Damascus, the
remainder of the
Arab army entered
along with their
loads and behind
them on a camel came
one they called...
the paymaster. This
camel rider I
learned was Captain
Lawrence... Captain
Lawrence to my
knowledge did
nothing to foment
the Arab revolution,
nor did he play any
part in the Arab
military tactics.
When first I heard
of him he was a
paymaster, nothing
more. And so he was
to Prince Emir
Abdulah (sic),
brother of King
Feisal, whom I knew.
I do not write in
disparagement. I
write as a fighting
man. Some must fight
and others pay."
Bitterness, it
seems, runs deep.
Torossian eventually
re-entered Ottoman
Turkey as an
Armenian officer
with the French army
of occupation in the
Cilicia region. But
Kemalist guerrillas
attacked the French,
who then, Torossian
suspects, gave
weapons and
ammunition to the
Turks to allow the
French army safe
passage out of
Cilicia. Betrayed,
Torossian fled to
relatives in
America.
There is debate in
Yerevan today as to
why the diaspora
Armenians appea r to
care more about the
genocide than the
citizens of
modern-day Armenia.
Indeed, the Foreign
minister of Armenia,
Vardan Oskanian,
actually told me
that "days, weeks,
even months go by"
when he does not
think of the
genocide. One
powerful argument
put to me by an
Armenian friend is
that 70 years of
Stalinism and
official Soviet
silence on the
genocide deleted the
historical memory in
eastern Armenia
the present-day
state of Armenia.
Another argument
suggests that the
survivors of western
Armenia in what is
now Turkey lost
their families and
lands and still seek
acknowledgement and
maybe even
restitution, while
eastern Armenians
did not lose their
lands. Demoyan
disputes all this.
"The fundamental
problem, I think, is
that in the diaspora
many don't want to
recognise our
statehood," he says.
"We are surrounded
by two countries
Turkey and
Azerbaijan and we
have to take our
security into
account; but not to
the extent of
damaging memory.
Here we must be
accurate. I have
changed things in
this museum. There
were inappropriate
things, comments
about 'hot-bloodied'people,
all the old clichιs
about Turks they
have now gone. The
diaspora want to be
the holders of our
memories but 60
per cent of the
citizens of the
Armenian state are
"repatriates"
Armenians originally
from the diaspora,
people whose
grandparents
originally came from
western Armenia. And
remember that
Turkish forces swept
though part of
Armenia after the
1915 genocide
right through
Yerevan on their way
to Baku. According
to Soviet
documentation in
1920, 200,000
Armenians died in
this part of
Armenia, 180,000 of
them between 1918
and 1920." Indeed,
there were further
mass executions by
the Turks in what is
now the Armenian
state. At Ghumri
near the centre of
the devastating
earthquake that
preceded final
liberation from the
Soviet Union there
is a place known as
the "Gorge of
Slaughter", where in
1918 a whole village
was massacred.
But I sensed some
political problems
up at the Yerevan
museum
international as
well as internal.
While many Armenians
acknowledge that
their countrymen did
commit individual
revenge atrocities
around Van, for
example at the
time of the
genocide, a heavy
burden of more
modern
responsibility lies
with those who
fought for Armenia
against the Azeris
in Nagorno-Karabakh
in the early 1990s.
This mountainous
region east of the
Armenian state saw
fierce and sometimes
cruel fighting in
which Armenians
massacred Turkish
Azeri villagers. The
Independent was one
of the newspapers
that exposed this.
Yet when I arrive at
the massive genocide
memorial next to the
museum, I find the
graves of five
"heroes" of the
Karabakh war. Here
lies, for instance,
Musher "Vosht"
Mikhoyan, who was
killed in 1991, and
the remains of
Samuel "Samo"
Kevorkian, who died
in action in 1992.
However upright
these warriors may
have been, should
those involved in
the ghastly war in
Kharabakh be
associated with the
integrity and truth
of 1915? Do they not
demean the history
of Armenia's
greatest suffering?
Or were they as I
suspect intended
to suggest that the
Karabakh war, which
Armenia won, was
revenge for the 1915
genocide? It's as if
the Israelis placed
the graves of the
1948 Irgun fighters
responsible for
the massacres of
Palestinians at Deir
Yassin and other
Arab villages
outside the Jewish
Holocaust memorial
at Yad Vashem near
Jerusalem.
Officials later
explain to me that
these Kharabakh
grave-sites were
established at a
moment of great
emotion after the
war and that today
while they might be
inappropriate it
is difficult to ask
the families of "Vosht"
and "Samo" and the
others to remove
them to a more
suitable location.
Once buried, it is
difficult to dig up
the dead. Similarly,
among the memorials
left in a small park
by visiting
statesmen and
politicians, there
is a distinct
difference in tone.
Arab leaders have
placed plaques in
memory of the
"genocide". Less
courageous American
congressman who do
not want to offend
their Turkish allies
have placed
plaques stating
merely that they
"planted this tree".
The pro-American
Lebanese Prime
Minister Rafiq
Hariri left his own
memorial less than a
year before he was
assassinated in
2005. "Tree of
Peace," it says.
Which rather misses
the point.
And yet it is the
work of archivists
that will continue
to establish the
truth. In Yerevan
you can now buy
excellent witness
testimonies of the
genocide by
Westerners who were
present during the
Armenian Holocaust.
One of them is by
Tacy Atkinson, an
American missionary
who witnessed the
deportation of her
Armenian friends
from the town of
Kharput. On 16 July
1915, she recorded
in her secret diary
how "a boy has
arrived in Mezreh in
a bad state
nervously. As I
understand it he was
with a crowd of
women and children
from some village...
who joined our
prisoners who went
out June 23... The
boy says that in the
gorge this side of
Bakir Maden the men
and women were all
shot and the leading
men had their heads
cut off
afterwards... He
escaped... and came
here. His own mother
was stripped and
robbed and then
shot... He says the
valley smells so
awful that one can
hardly pass by now."
For fear the Turkish
authorities might
discover her
diaries, Atkinson
sometimes omitted
events. In 1924
when her diary,
enclosed in a sealed
trunk, at last
returned to the
United States, she
wrote about a trip
made to Kharput by
her fellow
missionaries. "The
story of this trip I
did not dare write,"
she scribbled in the
margin. "They saw
about 10,000
bodies."
Anatomy of a
massacre: How the
genocide unfolded
By Simon
Usborne
An estimated 1.5
million Armenians
died between 1915
and 1917, either at
the hands of Turkish
forces or of
starvation. Exact
figures are unknown,
but each larger blob
at the site of a
concentration camp
or massacre
potentially
represents the
deaths of hundreds
of thousands of
people.
The trail of
extermination, and
dispute about
exactly what
happened, stretches
back more than 90
years to the opening
months of the First
World War, when some
of the Armenian
minority in the east
of the beleaguered
Ottoman Empire
enraged the ruling
Young Turks
coalition by siding
with Russia.
On 24 April 1915,
Turkish troops
rounded up and
killed hundreds of
Armenian
intellectuals. Weeks
later, three million
Armenians were
marched from their
homes the majority
towards Syria and
modern-day Iraq
via an estimated 25
concentration camps.
In 1915, The New
York Times reported
that "the roads and
the Euphrates are
strewn with corpses
of exiles... It is a
plan to exterminate
the whole Armenian
people." Winston
Churchill would
later call the
forced exodus an
"administrative
holocaust".
Yet Turkey, while
acknowledging that
many Armenians died,
disputes the 1.5
million toll and
insists that the
acts of 1915-17 did
not constitute what
is now termed
genocide defined
by the UN as a
state-sponsored
attempt to "destroy,
in whole or in part,
a national, ethnic,
racial or religious
group". Instead,
Ankara claims the
deaths were part of
the wider war, and
that massacres were
committed by both
sides.
Several countries
have formally
recognised genocide
against the
Armenians (and, in
the case of France,
outlawed its
denial), but it
remains illegal in
Turkey to call for
recognition. As
recently as last
year, the Turkish
foreign ministry
dismissed genocide
allegations as
"unfounded".
One authority on
extermination who
did recognise the
Armenian genocide
was Adolf Hitler. In
a 1939 speech, in
which he ordered the
killing,
"mercilessly and
without compassion",
of Polish men, women
and children, he
concluded: "Who,
after all, speaks
today of the
annihilation of the
Armenians?"