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Museum Opens Armenian Genocide Online Exhibition

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  • Museum Opens Armenian Genocide Online Exhibition

    MUSEUM OPENS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ONLINE EXHIBITION

    HULIQ
    http://www.huliq.com/1/79748/mus eum-opens-armenian-genocide-online-exhibition
    Apri l 15 2009
    SC

    How does anyone deny the existence of a systematic killings of the
    Armenians as a genocide in the early 20th century after looking these
    documents presented online by the Armenian Genocide Museum Institute
    on the occasion of Adana Massacres of 1909.

    The Adana Massacre was the second series of large-scale massacres
    of Armenians to break out in the Ottoman Empire. The atrocities
    committed in the province of Adana in April 1909 coincided with
    the counter-revolution staged by supporters of Sultan Abdul Hamid
    (Abdul-Hamid) II (1876-1909) who had been forced to restore the Ottoman
    Constitution as a result of the 1908 Young Turk Revolution led by
    the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP). A prosperous region on
    the Mediterranean coast encompassing the old principality of Cilicia,
    once an independent Armenian state between the eleventh and fourteenth
    centuries, the province of Adana had been spared the 1890s massacres.

    The disturbances were most severe in the city of Adana where a reported
    4,437 Armenian dwellings were torched, resulting in the razing of
    nearly half the town and prompting some to describe the resulting
    inferno as a "holocaust." The outbreaks spread throughout the district
    and an estimated 30,000 Armenians were reported killed. While attempts
    at resistance in Adana proved futile, and Armenians in smaller
    outlying villages were brutally slaughtered, two towns inhabited
    mostly by Armenians organized a successful defense. Hadjin (Hajen
    in Armenian) in the Cilician Mountains withstood a siege, while the
    10,000 Armenians of Dortyol (Chorkmarzban in Armenian) held off 7,000
    Turks who had surrounded their town and cut off its water supply.

    The intensity of the carnage prompted the government to open
    an investigation, but the failure to prosecute dashed Armenian
    expectations of liberal reforms by the new regime. The reactionary
    elements of the Ottoman Empire were suspected of instigating the
    massacres to discredit the CUP, but the Young Turks were also
    implicated. The Adana Massacre exposed the twin composition of the
    Young Turk Movement, which consisted of both liberal and radical
    nationalist elements. It also demonstrated the convergent interests
    of the nationalists with the reactionary and conservative elements
    of Ottoman state in their policies toward a progressive-minded
    minority. For the Young Turks, the Adana Massacre proved a rehearsal
    for gauging the depth of Turkish animosity in the Ottoman Empire toward
    Christian minorities and for testing their skills in marshaling those
    forces for political ends. Despite the restoration of a constitutional
    government, the specter of mass violence was reintroduced as a
    mechanism of state power.

    Two commissions were set up after the massacres. One of them was
    formed by the Ottoman Parliament (members of the commission were
    Hayk Papikyan, Harutyun Mostichyan, Yusuf Kemal, Fayid Bey), the
    second was formed by the Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople. The
    commissions investigated the causes and consequences of massacres and
    submitted the official reports. In those reports the Governor Jevad
    Bey, the Commander Mustafa Remzi Pasha and the local authorities
    that implemented their orders at the local levels, were mentioned
    as responsible for massacres. The investigations revealed that more
    than 30.000 Armenians fell victim to massacres. The total damage of
    the Armenians was equal to 20 million Turkish Liras. 24 churches, 16
    schools, 232 houses, 30 hotels, 2 plants, 1429 cottages, 253 farms,
    523 shops, 23 mills and many other public buildings were burnt.

    The Young Turks launched formal investigation trying to evade the
    responsibility for the massacres. However the organizers and the
    figures responsible for the massacres remained unpunished. The original
    photos included in the on line exhibition are from the recently found
    collection comprising more than 70 mostlyunpublished pictures taken
    in April and May of 1909 in Adana and it's contiguous districts.

    Adapted from: 'Adana Massacre' by Rouben Paul Adalian 'Encyclopedia
    of genocide'
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