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Armenian Genocide Commemoration Day

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  • Armenian Genocide Commemoration Day

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATION DAY

    First Things
    April 24 2013

    Wednesday, April 24, 2013, 10:22 AM

    Mark Movsesian

    Today is the 98th anniversary of the start of the Armenian Genocide,
    an ethnic cleansing campaign in the last years of the Ottoman Empire.

    Although the Genocide had many causes-political, economic, social-law
    and religion were major factors.

    As Christians, Armenians had a precarious position in Ottoman society.

    They could exist, even thrive, but only if they accepted the
    second-class status that classical Islamic law allowed them. In the
    19th Century, under pressure from European governments, the Empire had
    adopted a reform program, known as the Tanzimat, that granted legal
    equality for the first time to Armenians and other Christians.

    Conservative Muslim opinion could not accept this, and the Tanzimat
    led to a violent backlash against Christians in the 1890s,
    particularly in the Anatolian provinces, in which hundreds of
    thousands of Christians, mostly Armenians, died. A pattern of
    resistance and oppression ensued, until finally, under the cover of
    World War I, the Ottoman government decided to remove the Armenian
    population of Anatolia. Historians estimate that between 600,000 and
    1.5 million Armenians, as well as tens of thousands of Syriac
    Christians, died during the death marches into the Syrian desert.

    The story of the Genocide, and how it led to the first international
    human rights campaign in American history, is told well by Colgate
    Professor Peter Balakian in his book, The Burning Tigris. For my own
    reflections on how the failure of Ottoman reform contributed to the
    Genocide, please see here.

    http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/firstthoughts/2013/04/24/armenian-genocide-commemoration-day/

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