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    Syrian-Armenian Memory and the Refugee Issue in Syria under the French
    Mandate (1921-46)

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/07/05/syrian-armenian-memory-and-the-refugee-issue-in-syria-under-the-french-mandate-1921-46/

    Posted by Seda Altug on
    July 5, 2012 in

    The Armenian Weekly Magazine
    April 2012

    An overwhelming majority of today's Syrian-Armenians are the descendants
    of Ottoman-Armenians who survived the 1915 Armenian Genocide. The
    120,000-150,000 deportees in Ottoman Syria, who had hoped to return to
    their homeland as soon as World War I was over, returned to Cilicia, which,
    by the time of the Mudros Armistice (Oct. 30, 1918), had come under French
    occupation. All hope of rebuilding their communities, however, vanished
    with the Turkish National Liberation War (1919-21) and the ceding of
    Cilicia to the Turkish Republic following the formalization of the
    Turco-Syrian border in the Ankara agreement on Oct. 21, 1921.
    [image: Near east relief 300x173 Syrian Armenian Memory and the Refugee
    Issue in Syria under the French Mandate
    (1921-46)]

    Armenian refugees in Syria (Near East Relief)

    During these years, the killing, intimidation, abduction, and
    stigmatization of Armenians in Cilician cities-such as Adana, Mersin,
    Tarsus, as well as in cities like Urfa, Kharpert, Malatya, Diyarbekir, and
    Arabkir-continued, culminating in a second Armenian exodus towards French
    Syria and Lebanon. Between 1921-23, 80,000 new refugees arrived in Syria
    and Lebanon by land or by sea. Richard Hovannisian estimates that by the
    end of 1925, approximately 100,000 refugees were living in Syria; 50,000 in
    Lebanon; 10,000 in Palestine and Jordan; 40,000 in Egypt; 25,000 in Iraq;
    and 50,000 in Iran.1

    The third wave of expulsion towards French Syria, in particular
    north-eastern Syria, in Jazira, took place following Turkey's military
    suppression of the Kurdish Sheikh Saïd Revolt in 1925. According to figures
    compiled by the League of Nations, between 8,000 and 10,000
    Kurdo-Armenians, as named by the French sources, from the rural parts of
    Diyarbekir, Mardin, Shirnak, Siirt, Bitlis, and Cizre, joined the Armenian
    deportees who had arrived in Syria earlier, in 1915-16 and 1921=80`23.2

    The history of the post-genocide world in Syria has not yet been critically
    assessed. Very few scholarly works have incorporated the social and
    political history of the Armenian refugees into the general history of
    Syria. It seems that the politics of fear is also quite pervasive among
    researchers. Accordingly, the scholarly field inevitably silences and
    marginalizes controversial historical phenomena from scholarly scrutiny,
    such as the issue of sectarianism or the refugee issue. This piece will
    shed some light on the Armenian refugee experiences upon their arrival to
    their new residence in French Syria.

    In the Syrian-Armenian memory, 1915 is seen as a decisive event, a violent
    ending, but also as a new beginning, and a new period of struggle in a
    hostile and foreign setting. The violence of the genocide-while it
    took different forms in social, class, cultural, and geographic
    terms-constitutes the foundation of all the historical narratives of that
    time. And they all begin with the violence the survivors were exposed to in
    their home towns or on the deportation routes to Syria, namely an entire
    life was left behind and would never be returned; Its fields, trees,
    rivers, and climate are remembered with extreme grief, and the new refuge
    is never really accepted as a substitute.

    The French mandate (1921-46) rule in Syria and the colonial agency are
    obscured, or rather assimilated, into a survival narrative where the main
    provider is depicted as the `Syrians' if not the `community' itself. The
    new life in French Syria indicates a positive change from bad to good,
    namely from insecurity, fear, instability, and oppression to security,
    stability, and tolerance. Generosity and respect on the part of the Syrian
    Arabs are presented as the underlying factors in this safety and security.
    No mention is made of the distress felt by the local Syrians due to the
    refugee flow to French Syria; nor of the dominant French colonial
    perspective on the Christian refugees and the fragile bargaining between
    the two; nor of the tacit agreement between the Arab nationalists and later
    the Armenian leadership of the early 1930's.

    Obscuring the colonial period as well as the current state of things in
    Syria while underscoring the 1915 memories is not a mere coincidence.
    Neglect of the post-genocide Armenian experience in Syria is apparently
    related to the repressive conditions that have existed there since
    independence (1946). Equally important, the genocide is actually the main
    event underlying the uprooting and deportations of the majority of
    Armenians to Ottoman/French Syria between 1915 and the late 1930's. Being
    the `unacknowledged' victims of the Turkish nationalist venture, and given
    the lack of space for the Syrian-Armenians' narratives to be recognized in
    Turkey, the Syrian-Armenian memory can be considered, as de Certeau reminds
    us, as `unrecognized reminders of a historical and still ongoing
    repression.'3 In other words, the omnipresence of the memory of 1915 is
    also a response to the current denialism on the part of the Turkish state
    and a segment of Turkish society. Moreover, the genocide is the main event
    underlying the deracination, uprooting, and deportations of the majority of
    Armenians to Ottoman/French Syria between 1915 and the late 1930's.



    THE REFUGEE ISSUE IN FRENCH SYRIA

    There is almost no integrated history of the controversial encounters
    between the newcomer refugees and the local population during the early
    days of French colonial rule in Syria.4 Nora Arissian's piece The Echoes
    of the Armenian Genocide in the Syrian Press may be considered the first
    attempt to write the history of the Armenian Genocide as seen through the
    eyes of the Syrian Arab nationalists.5 Together with her study of the
    memoirs of Syrian intellectuals on the genocide (both have been banned in
    Syria), her work paved the way for further research on the topic.6 Despite
    being under-researched, the refugee issue was one of the most controversial
    issues in post-World War I Levant, posing serious concerns not only for the
    governing colonial powers and the home state, but also for the displaced
    and host populations.7

    Concerned with the economic, social, and political costs of settling
    refugees in inner Syria or the Turco-Syrian frontier zone, the French
    authorities had to deal with the refugee issue without causing a deep
    crisis of legitimacy, both in the eyes of the Muslim majority and the local
    as well as refugee Christians in Syria. Justifying their presence in Syria
    and Lebanon as `the protectors of Christians,' the mandate authorities
    aimed to avoid increasing anxiety among the Syrian Arab nationalists. The
    French archives are full of reports drafted in the 1920's about the refugee
    populations-especially Armenians and Kurds from Turkey, and Assyrians from
    British Iraq-and various settlement projects concerning these groups. These
    documents demonstrate that the French mandatory state did not adopt a
    comprehensive refugee policy, but embraced a pragmatic approach that took
    into account particular political, economic, diplomatic, and social
    concerns.

    In the meantime, the Turkish state was fearful of an `enclave of
    undesirables'-in particular, Armenians and Kurdish political
    refugees-forming outside of its control, just south of its border in Jazira.
    8 The correspondence between Ankara and the French High Commissariat
    showcase Turkey's complaints over `malicious elements' in the form of
    Armenians in the frontier zone and of rebellious Kurdish tribes residing in
    Jazira.9 The settlement of the Armenians along the Turkish-Syrian border,
    their recruitment into the French administration and army, and the
    trans-border incursions by the Kurds into Turkey form the sine qua non topic
    of the intelligence reports, telegrams, and correspondences from 1925=80`27.
    The French are criticized for providing protection to the Kurdish rebels
    and allowing the settlement of Armenians in areas near the border.

    The French central authorities were well aware of the need to regulate the
    refugee flow. The High Commissariat in Beirut had, after 1925, become more
    responsive to the demands from the Turkish Foreign Ministry. In a report
    drafted after the Sheikh Saïd Revolt, entitled `Du passage en Syrie des
    populations Kurdes ou Chrétiens ou de déserteurs Turcs,' High Commissar
    Maurice Sarrail openly proposed to Paris to `organize the regulations
    pertaining to accepting refugees in Syria.'10 Despite the pragmatic
    approach adopted by the French central authorities, certain local officers
    still held their ground and took initiative in the settlement of the
    refugees, in particular Kurdish refugees from Turkey. In a letter dated
    Jan. 27, 1925, a local French officer described the Turkish allegations of
    Armenian colonization on the border as mistaken and exaggerated:

    `Since the beginning of the armistice, the biggest problem that the
    mandatory power is trying to resolve is the refugee problem. We have
    received 96,450 refugees since then and they are all impoverished people.
    France has made great economic sacrifices for them. Just for the sake of
    relieving pressure on the north of Syria, we have settled two-thirds of
    these poor people in inner Syria. The rest reside in Aleppo and in the
    Sanjak of Alexandretta, and their settlements were realized calmly and in
    deference to the Muslim population.'11

    Among the Syrian Arab nationalists, too, the `refugee problem' was a hotly
    debated issue. Until the mid-1920's, it was as much a political issue as it
    was a social and economic problem, especially as the settlement of refugee
    groups-in particular the Armenians, in inner Syrian cities-began to be felt
    more acutely.12 Relief, food programs, and settlement arrangements were
    offered to Armenian refugees by several missionary organizations, as well
    as by the French mandatory authorities. The refugee issue, along with the
    French surrender of some Syrian land to Turkey, formed the major criticism
    expressed by the Syrian-Arab nationalist elites towards the Ankara
    Agreement formalizing the Turco-Syrian border.

    The arrival and settlement of the refugees either in inner Syrian towns or
    in the remote corners of French Syria were directly linked to colonial
    `divide and rule' politics. The flow of refugees into the Syrian space,
    which continued through the 1920's without any expression of consent by the
    local Syrians, evoked a `lack of agency' because of a =80=9Csovereignty deficit'
    in the Syrian national self. Arguing that Syria had turned into a `whore,'
    as refugees could freely enter the country, several articles in the
    nationalist press demanded the regulation of the border without regard to
    the ethnicity and religion of the refugee group.

    The French strategy of reinforcing and expanding the political space
    reserved for the Armenians in the new confessional system in French Syria
    worsened the situation. In Aleppo, which had the biggest immigrant
    population, the social and economic discomfort was translated into clashes
    between the communities.13 Christians made up 35 percent of Aleppo's
    population, and the French embarked on manipulative efforts to `counter'
    Arab nationalist political activity by playing the `Christian card': The
    Armenian refugees were granted Syrian citizenship and acknowledged as one
    of the official sects among 14 in September 1924, after the signing of the
    Treaty of Lausanne on July 24, 1923.14

    Anti-Armenian sentiments became especially apparent following the 1926
    elections, when the High Commissioner reshuffled the existing
    representative council in order to counter the nationalist vote.15 As a
    result of this French manipulation of the population figures, Armenians
    were accorded two representatives in the 1926 elections, despite the fact
    that their population was not sufficient even for one. In 1928-when the
    French authorities were trying to assure as large a Christian vote as
    possible to counter the political power of the National Bloc16-French High
    Commissioner Henri Ponsot affirmed that Armenian refugees residing in Syria
    had the right to vote in the Constitutional Assembly election.

    The refugee issue manifested itself violently in the immediate aftermath of
    the first mass anti-French uprising-the Great Revolt in 1925=80'where a
    battalion of Armenian-French soldiers fought Syrian anti-French rebels. The
    subsequent angry attack on the Armenian Quarter in Damascus and the killing
    of 30 Armenians was justified by referring to the latter's =80=9Cproven
    unfaithfulness' and the claim that Armenians `have been fighting against
    those in whose land they are camping.'17 The French were blamed for the
    Armenian colonization in Syria and the mobilization of Armenians against
    Syrians.

    The last and biggest wave of refugees-mostly Armenians, Kurds, and Syriacs
    from the Kurdish provinces of Turkey in the late 1920's, and of Assyrians
    from Iraq to Syrian Jazira in 1933-caused extreme alarm and anxiety among
    the Arab nationalists. Their unease was expressed in a new framework:
    `harmful strangers vs. outraged Syrians.' A joint declaration by the main
    Armenian political parties (Hnchak and Dashnak) published in an
    Arabic-language article in the journal Le Liban on May 15, 1930 reassured
    the Arab nationalists that there would be no attempt in founding an
    Armenian state in Syria.18 `We only have one homeland; that is Armenia,'
    the statement read. `In this hospitable country, our unique effort is to
    provide the needs of our families and assure the education of our children.
    We would like to see that the cordial relations between the Arabs and the
    Armenians are maintained and the misunderstandings that give rise to
    suspicions are stemmed.'19



    GOOD REFUGEE VS. BAD REFUGEE

    The refugee issue reappeared in a different context following the
    Franco-Syrian Treaty in 1936, which promised independence to Syria within
    the next five years, and foresaw the incorporation of the autonomously
    administered regions into a united Syria. These regions included the Sanjak
    of Alexandretta, the Sanjak of Alawites, and the Sanjak of Druze and Jazira
    (north-eastern Syria). The treaty was never ratified, but the fierce
    controversy over two fundamental articles in the treaty-that of the
    protection of minorities and the unity of Syria-has had longlasting
    implications concerning Syrian Christians, in general, and Armenians, in
    particular. These controversies involved two opposing political movements
    in French Syria, the Unionists and the Autonomists. The reference point for
    the Unionists was the Arab nationalists, who were aspiring for full
    independence in a united Syria, while that of the Autonomists was the
    Francophile Syrians, who asked for an additional article in the
    constitution on the protection of minorities, as well as the continuation
    of the status of the autonomously administered regions under the French
    mandate.

    The notion of minority was contested by the rival Autonomists and Unionists
    to advance their political claims. While the Autonomists promoted an
    ethno-religious-based definition of minority-ness and asked for special
    protection against the majority, namely the Sunni Arabs, the latter avoided
    confronting the minority question. Rather, they opted for the strategy of
    incorporating ethno-religious belonging into Syrian Arab national identity.
    The Unionist majority expected the non-Muslim and non-Arab Syrians to
    obscure and de-politicize their ethno-religious differences. The
    nationalist slogan `Religion is for God and the nation is for all' evoked
    such an idea.

    The most explicit sign of the Syrian Christians' pragmatic consent to an
    apolitical and inclusivist definition of Syrian national belonging came
    after two bloody incidents in mid- 1936 and 1937: the Sunday market
    incident in Aleppo and the Amouda incidents in Jazira. After each incident,
    the nationalist Christian leaders intervened to calm the Christian
    community and reassure the Muslim majority. The Armenian Orthodox
    patriarch, Ardavazd Surmeyan, may be considered one of the first-comers to
    the rapprochement scene following the Sunday market incident on Oct. 12,
    1936. In his visit to the Armenian refugee camp in the north of Aleppo, he
    said:

    `I came here with the nationalist leaders to invite you to be calm and to
    return to your work. We have every interest in having cordial relations
    with the Muslims. The incidents of last Sunday's market had their origin in
    the `White Badge' who are bought and paid for by certain traitors; they
    create discord between the elements of the country in order to obtain their
    goal. I ask therefore all Armenians to have no relations with the `White
    Badge' and to even prevent these people from circulating around [the
    tent-city].'20

    While the Armenian political parties (Dashnak, Ramgavar, and Hnchak) were
    aiming to maintain amicable relationships with both the French and Arab
    nationalists, they began to take a more pragmatic approach in the
    mid-1930's towards greater cooperation with the Arab nationalists in Syria,
    particularly after 1936.21 The Armenian communists in the Syrian Communist
    Party had always sided with the Arab nationalists' struggle for full
    independence.

    The interaction between the notions of political dissidence and
    minority-refugee status in the Syrian Arab nationalist imagery is related
    particularly to the Autonomy Movement in Syrian Jazira. The Autonomist
    faction in Jazira asked for a special minority status for the Jaziran
    population, which was made up of mostly Christian and Kurdish refugees from
    Turkey, and aspired for the continuation of autonomous rule in the region
    under the French mandate. While the Autonomists depicted the Jazirans under
    the rubric of minority on the basis of being non-Arab and non-Muslim
    refugees from Turkey, a significant portion of the Arab nationalists
    attempted to counter the Autonomists' formulation between the status of
    refugee and minority. Prime Minister Sadallah Jabiri said in a speech that
    the `ex-refugees of the 1920's have integrated and become like us, thus
    they should not be asking for special treatment.' The Arab nationalists
    labeled the leaders of the Autonomy Movement in Jazira as `refugees who
    deny favor' in upbraiding rhetoric.22 Eventually the notion of refugee came
    to stand only for the `minority' and represented the =80=9Cinterest- seeker
    dissident rebel.' As minority-ness conjured up the image of political
    dissidents, the majority among the ex-refugees soon conjured up the image
    of `simple people who are only interested in their daily bread, but
    nothing else.'23 In a way, the Syrian-Armenians entered the post-colonial
    era after they were stripped of transformative political agency.

    Until the 1940's, French Syria was still a refuge for thousands of
    `undesirables' for whom Turkish nationalism had left without a home.24 The
    bargain between the colonial power and the Armenian refugees contributed to
    some extent to the social and economic betterment of the Armenians, while
    the bargain with the local Arab nationalists helped to calm the ever-lost
    feeling of security and stability-but only through a patrimonial
    relationship and at the expense of free political agency. Nevertheless,
    memories of the horrors of 1915 were evoked during several instances:
    during the Muslim Brotherhood uprising in Hama in 1981, the Kurdish
    resistance in Qamishli in 2003, and likely during current days of
    anti-regime uprising in Syria. Memories of 1915 and the oppressive regime
    generate a politically conformist discourse among the Syrian-Armenian
    establishment and the community at large. The spell of the past will start
    to crumble, however, when the 1915 violence is acknowledged and, as Walter
    Benjamin said, when `the causes of what happened then have been eliminated.'
    25

    ENDNOTES

    1. Richard Hovannisian, `The Ebb and Flow of the Armenian Minority in the
    Arab Middle East,' Middle East Journal, xxvii, winter 1974. For different
    estimates, see Thomas H. Greenshields, The Settlement of Armenian Refugees
    in Syria and Lebanon, 1915-1939, unpublished Ph.D. dissertation,
    University of Durham, 1978.

    2. For an elaborate discussion of the last wave of deportations, see Vahé
    Tachjian, La France en Cilicie et en Haute Mésopotamie (Paris:
    Karthala, 2004), pp. 301-317.

    3. Michel de Certeau, Heterelogies (Minnesota: University of Minnesota
    Press, 1986), p. 4.

    4. Several works on Syria mention the bad conditions and treatment the
    refugees endured prior to their arrival, but only in passing. Among the few
    critical works on the refugees are: Keith Watenpaugh `Towards a New
    Category of Colonial Theory: Colonial Cooperation and the Survivors'
    Bargain-The Case of the Post-Genocide Armenian Community of Syria under
    French Mandate,' in Peter Sluglett and Nadine Méouchy (eds.) The British
    and French Mandates in Comparative Perspective (Leiden: Brill, 2004),
    pp. 597-622; Keith Watenpaugh, ``A pious wish devoid of all
    practicability:' Interwar Humanitarianism, The League of Nations and the
    Rescue of Trafficked Women and Children in the Eastern Mediterranean,
    1920-1927,' American Historical Review, 115:4 (October 2010); for Jazira,
    see Seda AltuË=98g, `Sectarianism in the Syrian Jazira: Community, land and
    violence in the memories of World War I and the French mandate
    (1915-1939),' unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, June 2011, Utrecht; Seda
    Altug, `Armenian Genocide, Sheikh Said Revolt, and Armenians in Syrian
    Jazira,'
    www.armenianweekly.com/wp-content/files/Armenian_Weekly_April_2010.pdf;
    Ellen Marie Lust-Okar, `Failure of Collaboration: Armenian Refugees in
    Syria,' Middle Eastern Studies, 32, 1(1996), pp. 53-68.

    5. Nora Arissian, Asda' al-ibada al-armaniyya fi al-Sahafa al-Suriyya
    1877-1930 (Beirut: Zakira Press, 2004).

    6. Nora Arissian, Ghawa'il al-arman fi al-fikr al-suri (Beirut, Dar
    al-furat, 2002).

    7. John Hope Simpson, Refugees: Preliminary Report of a Survey (London:
    Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1938).

    8. See Seda Altug and Benjamin White, `Frontières et pouvoir
    d'Ã=89tat: la
    frontière turco-syrienne dans les années 1920 et 1930,' Vingtième Siècle,
    September 2009.

    9. Altug, `Türkiye Suriye ile Sınırını Temizlerken, 1, 2, 3,' Agos, 9,
    14, 27. March 2007.

    10. CADN, Fonds Beyrouth, Cabinet Politique, Box 572, Service des
    Renseignements, Service Central, no. 868/K.S., March 5, 1925, Beirut.

    11. MAE, Série Syrie-Liban, vol. 177, Relation Turquie-Française.

    12. Thomas Greenshields, `The Settlement of Armenian Refugees in Syria and
    Lebanon, 1915-1939,' Ph.D. dissertation, University of Durham, 1978, p. 60.

    13. Pierre La Mazière, Partant pour la Syrie (Paris: Libraire Baudiniere,
    1926), pp. 200-203.

    14. Until the signing of the Treaty of Lausanne, the peoples residing in
    the territories controlled by the French, including the Armenians, had
    maintained the legal status of Ottoman citizens. Nicola Migliorino,
    (Re)constructing
    Armenia in Lebanon and Syria: Ethno-cultural Diversity and the State in
    the Aftermath of a Refugee Crisis (New York, Oxford: Berghahn Books,
    2008), pp. 52-55. Uri Davis, `Citizenship Legislation in the Syrian Arab
    Republic,' Arab Studies Quarterly, 1, 1996, pp. 1-15.

    15. Stephen Hemsley Longrigg, Syria and Lebanon under the French
    Mandate (London:
    Oxford University Press, 1958), pp. 171-172.

    16. Stephen Longrigg, Syria, p. 181.

    17. al-Cha'b, `al-arman wa qadiyyat askanuhum fi suriyya,' Dec. 21,
    1926.

    18. Taken from CADN, Cabinet Politique, Box 576, Service
    Politiques, Bureau
    d'études, `L'Arménie et les Arméniens, ' rédacteur: cdt. Terrrier.

    19. ibid.

    20. CADN-MAE, Fonds Beyrouth, Cabinet Politique, 392, Sûreté
    Générale (Aleppo),
    no. 3829, Oct. 16, 1936; taken from Keith Watenpaugh, Being Modern in
    the Middle East, p. 271.

    21. Miglioriono, (Re)constructing Armenia in Lebanon and Syria, pp. 58=80`62.

    22. al-qabs, Feb. 5, 1938, `wataniyya al-fiqra wa masharia' alsahra.'

    23. Several newspaper articles from the Arab nationalist press construct
    the `nationalist majority' in Jazira as such.

    24. Watenpaugh, pp. 597-622.

    25. Theodor Adorno, `The Meaning of Working Through the Past,' in Critical
    Models: Interventions and Catchwords (New York: Columbia University Press,
    2005), p. 103.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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