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Fisk: New light on an old horror - and still there is no justice

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  • Fisk: New light on an old horror - and still there is no justice

    Robert Fisk: New light on an old horror - and still there is no justice

    Saturday, 10 September 2011

    [image: The Independent]

    [image: The Armenian Genocide Museum has published an eyewitness account of
    what happened]
    http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/fisk/robert-fisk-new-light-on-an-old-horror-ndash-and-still-there-is-no-justice-2352249.html?action=Popup

    *Alamy*

    The Armenian Genocide Museum has published an eyewitness account of what
    happened


    On Wednesday morning, 14 April 1909, British Vice Consul Major Charles
    Doughty-Wylie set off to the Turkish city of Adana after receiving a letter
    from his dragoman - his Turkish translator, a man called Trypani - saying
    that "there was a very dangerous feeling in that town, threats had been
    freely offered, there were some murders...".

    Doughty-Wylie departed by the next train, memorably adding, in his dispatch
    to the Foreign Office in London, that "so little had I expected that any
    massacre was imminent, that I took my wife with me". We can only imagine the
    good lady's reaction when "about two stations from Adana we saw a dead
    body... The nearer we got to Adana the more bodies there were, and while I
    was escorting my wife to Mr Trypani's house ... two or three more men were
    killed under the very noses of the Turkish guard...".

    Doughty-Wylie's dispatches over the next four days are a first-class account
    of the start of the modern Armenian Holocaust - not the slaughter and
    butchery and mass rape and death marches in which the Ottoman Turks killed
    a
    million and a half Armenians in 1915, but the mass murder of up to 30,000
    Armenians in southern Turkey six years earlier, a dry run - albeit a very
    bloody one - for the later genocide. "I got into uniform, went to the guard,
    and sharply recalled to the officer his duty to prevent murder,"
    Doughty-Wylie wrote. Having summoned some unwilling Ottoman soldiery to
    support him, our vice consul "paraded through the town with bugles
    blowing... We cleared the streets sometimes by charging with the bayonet and
    sometimes by firing over the heads of the crowd". Ah, those were the days!

    The letters of Doughty-Wylie, who was later to have an unconsummated affair
    with Gertrude Bell before dying at Gallipoli, are, in fact, a record of
    heroism - I am indebted to researcher Missak Kelechian for finding them in
    the British National Archives - for the vice consul rescued numerous British
    subjects and protected many hundreds of Armenian refugees. Trying to save
    their lives, the vice consul came under sniper fire from a mosque. The Turks
    blamed the Armenians for the massacres, claiming that they had armed
    themselves and planned to set up an Armenian principality on Turkish soil
    -
    killers have a habit of blaming the victims for their own deaths (see, for
    example, the Muslim victims of the Bosnian war, the Palestinian civilian
    victims of Gaza in 2008-9, etc) but Doughty-Wylie, while he acknowledged
    that an Armenian shot dead two Turks, suspected that the violence included
    "some secret preparation on the Turkish side". Of the 2,000 dead in Adana,
    1,400 were Armenians.

    The Turkish authorities supposedly hanged nine Turks for their part in the
    slaughter. So much for justice. Remarking that many of the dead had been
    thrown into rivers, the British vice consul concluded in a further dispatch
    to London that "in the villages, while no exact number can yet be given, the
    loss ... may be estimated at between 15,000 and 25,000; of these, very few,
    if any, can be Moslems (sic). In many cases women, even small children, were
    killed with the men". Exactly two weeks after Doughty-Wylie received the
    letter from his dragoman, The New York Times's journalist in Adana was
    reporting that in the city's vilayet (governorate), up to 30,000 Armenians
    had been murdered.

    And Turkey, just as it does in the case of the later one and a half million
    Armenian dead, still denies - along with Britain, the US, need we add the
    rest? - that this was genocide. I have pointed out before that even in the
    1930s, Churchill referred to the "holocaust" of Armenians. Now comes proof
    that the 1909 genocide, let alone the later 1915 massacres, were known as a
    Holocaust - correctly, with a capital H - before the First World War. For
    the Armenian Genocide Museum in Yerevan has just unearthed and published
    eyewitness Z Duckett Ferriman's book on the 1909 killings whose original
    cover bore the title The Young Turks and the Truth about the Holocaust at
    Adana in Asia Minor. The New York Times had, in fact, referred to "Another
    Armenian Holocaust" after an 1895 bloodbath, but Duckett Ferriman collected
    victims' names, dates, details of individual murders, statistics of orphans,
    widows, villages destroyed, photographs, and the identity of the militias
    -
    like the Turkish authorities in 1915 and like the Nazis, the 1909 killers
    used "special units" for killing and rape - and the mass violation of women.

    By extraordinary chance, Duckett Ferriman's book coincides with the Beirut
    publication next week of the memoirs of Hagop Arsenian, a 1915 Armenian
    Holocaust survivor whose handwritten diaries have just been translated into
    English by his granddaughter, Arda Ekmekji. What makes this work so
    remarkable is that the Arsenians were very upper middle class. On their
    death trail to northern Syria, they were able, for a short period, to travel
    by rail, first class. "They were transporting us to our graves with our own
    money," Hagop wrote. At other times, still paying for their train tickets,
    they were packed into box cars, 45 to a carriage, Nazi-style. During his
    Golgotha, Hagop stood beside a pile of Armenian corpses. "One of them in a
    suffocating voice begged the gravedigger not to pull him by the legs and
    said, 'Brother, I have not died yet. Wait till morning before you bury me.'"

    Like many Jews on the way to death in the second Holocaust of the 20th
    century, Hagop "would wonder whether we were such a terrible nation that God
    had chosen ... to manifest His anger and inflict His punishment on us...".
    There are good Turks in these stories - in 1909 as well as 1915 - but there
    are many criminals.

    And again, no justice for the Armenians. Few of the Turkish war criminals
    were hanged. One of the worst, Talaat Pasha, was assassinated in Berlin in
    1921, Bin Laden-style, shot by an Armenian revenge group called Nemesis.
    Most escaped their just deserts for ever, not even facing a Demjanjuk-like
    court in old age. All are now dead. "War will not end unless the truth is
    known," a Lebanese humanitarian agency stated four years ago. And that's all
    that's left to be fought for. Acknowledgement that these crimes were real.
    Justice is an odd creature.

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