56 YEARS HAVE PASSED SINCE MASSACRE OF ISTANBUL ARMENIANS
Panorama
Sept 7 2011
Armenia
56 years ago Turkish vandals have attacked the Christian population
living in Istanbul, they robbed them, killed and burned. Though 56
years have passed, the massacre is as fresh in our memories as if it
happened yesterday.
"Ermenihaber.am" news website writes as soon as Turkish "Ekspres"
published the story titled "Greeks blasted the house of Ataturk in
Salonik" the Muslim vandals attacked on September 6-7, 1955 against
the local non-Muslim population and their homes.
The paper used to have 20 thousand printing volume, but on that day
they published 290 thousand copies of it and spread among the people.
The vandal groupings arrived in from other cities and invaded in the
houses of Christian population killing, robbing and burning them and
their homes.
This was a demonstration of Turkish strategy to force non-Muslims
become Turkish.
Local Christian population was scared and shocked by the events.
"After those events I was forbidden to go to street alone. I was
forbidden to speak in Armenian. Everybody was trying to show they
are Turks," said editor-in-chief of "Agos" daily Bagrat Estukyan.
Panorama
Sept 7 2011
Armenia
56 years ago Turkish vandals have attacked the Christian population
living in Istanbul, they robbed them, killed and burned. Though 56
years have passed, the massacre is as fresh in our memories as if it
happened yesterday.
"Ermenihaber.am" news website writes as soon as Turkish "Ekspres"
published the story titled "Greeks blasted the house of Ataturk in
Salonik" the Muslim vandals attacked on September 6-7, 1955 against
the local non-Muslim population and their homes.
The paper used to have 20 thousand printing volume, but on that day
they published 290 thousand copies of it and spread among the people.
The vandal groupings arrived in from other cities and invaded in the
houses of Christian population killing, robbing and burning them and
their homes.
This was a demonstration of Turkish strategy to force non-Muslims
become Turkish.
Local Christian population was scared and shocked by the events.
"After those events I was forbidden to go to street alone. I was
forbidden to speak in Armenian. Everybody was trying to show they
are Turks," said editor-in-chief of "Agos" daily Bagrat Estukyan.