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Remembering The Assyrian Genocide: An Interview With Sabri Atman

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  • Remembering The Assyrian Genocide: An Interview With Sabri Atman

    REMEMBERING THE ASSYRIAN GENOCIDE: AN INTERVIEW WITH SABRI ATMAN

    By Varak Ketsemanian // January 8, 2014 in Featured, Headline, Interviews

    BOSTON, Mass. (A.W.) -Exploiting an opportune moment during World
    War I, the Ottoman government carried out its intent to eliminate the
    empire's Christian elements. Although a vast amount of scholarship has
    been conducted on the annihilation of the Armenians, one aspect of the
    genocide remains obscure-the extermination of the Assyrians. In the
    interview below, Sabri Atman, the founder and director of the Assyrian
    Genocide and Research Center (Seyfo Center), brings to light some of
    the various characteristics of the Assyrian Genocide (or Seyfo).

    Sabri Atman

    Atman is one of the most well-known lecturers on the Assyrian
    Genocide. He was born in Nsibin (Tur Abdin) in southeast Turkey, moved
    to Austria due to political reasons, and to Sweden five years later.

    He has studied economics at the University of Gothenburg and
    has a master's degree on human rights and genocide studies from
    Kingston University in London, Siena University in Italy, and Warsaw
    University in Poland. Atman continues to contribute immensely to
    worldwide awareness of the Assyrian Genocide. He is currently a
    doctoral student in genocide studies at Clark University in Worcester,
    Mass. His dissertation is on the Assyrian Genocide and the involvement
    of the Kurds.

    Varak Kestsemanian-What is the primary sequence of events that
    constitute the Assyrian Genocide?

    Sabri Atman-We Assyrians call the genocide of 1915 Seyfo, meaning "the
    sword." The reason we called it the sword was that the perpetrators
    were using Seyfo as a weapon for the killings. Seyfo is a term that
    seeks to highlight the Assyrian share of the genocide, perpetrated
    against the Armenians and Greeks as well, during the First World War.

    The genocide that wiped out more than half the population of the
    Assyrians took place mainly in southeastern Turkey, but also in the
    northwestern town of Urmiya in Iran.

    The Assyrians initially put the number of their victims at 250,000
    people in both the Turkish territories and Urmiya, Iran. But, the
    Assyrian delegation to the Lausanne peace talks of 1923 presented the
    number of victims as 275,000, since they had collected more information
    on the numbers of those who perished. But, according to some scholars,
    up to 400,000 civilian Assyrians perished in the systematic killings,
    which were ordered and carried out by the Ottoman state, with the
    collaboration of its Kurdish subjects and with troops and divisions
    of the regular Ottoman military and police forces combined.

    The 1915 genocide did not target only the Armenians but also the
    Greeks, Assyrians, and the Ezidis. The strategy that the perpetrators
    had in mind was ethnically annihilating all non-Muslim citizens living
    under the Ottoman occupation, with the objective of homogenizing
    Turkey in accordance with their goal to create a nation of "One
    Religion." Indeed, their motto was "One Nation, One Religion." To
    achieve their goal, jihad (or holy war) was declared on Nov. 14,
    1914 in all of the Ottoman mosques. Jihad was declared against all
    Christian subjects living within the Ottoman territories without
    having a particular victim. The main plot was to get rid of all the
    Christian minorities of Turkey.

    The execution of their primary plan to create one Muslim-Turkish
    nation started with attempts to assimilate the non-Turkish Muslim
    populations like the Kurds and other immigrants from the Balkans.

    These Muslim groups were relocated to such cities as Ankara, Adana,
    and Konya, and spread among the Turkish majority. The next step
    was the removal of the non-Muslim groups from Turkey. Two million
    Christian (mainly Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks) were massacred,
    starved to death and deported as a result of that policy.

    V.K.-How does the Assyrian Genocide differ from the massacres
    perpetrated against the Greeks and Armenians?

    S.A.-The witnesses I've interviewed all have wanted to clarify that
    neither the architects nor the perpetuators [of the genocide] made
    any distinction between any ethnic Christians. They were claiming that
    "An onion is an onion, whether it's red or white. All must be chopped!"

    This was a direct reference to the planned and calculated slaughter
    of the Assyrian, Armenian, and Greek Christians.

    While a large number of Armenians died during the deportation, many
    Assyrians were killed in their villages and towns.

    V.K.-What are the primary sources that make up the research material
    for your dissertation?

    S.A.-The primary sources for my research are the oral testimonies of
    the events, which I've collected over the past decade. These sources
    include unpublished interviews-that I and many other people conducted
    with survivors of the genocide-which we will transcribe, translate,
    and put into both historical and socio-political context.

    Most of the sources addressing and documenting the Assyrian Genocide
    are scattered and written in languages that are not easily accessible
    to genocide scholars. These sources are either written in Assyrian,
    Arabic, or Turkish.

    Furthermore, oral history and testimonies are entirely ignored
    by academia since most scholars concerned with the 1915 genocide
    have little knowledge of the Assyrian language. However, these
    oral testimonies of genocide survivors are central and immensely
    important, as they can shed light on many opaque aspects of the
    Assyrian Genocide. These oral testimonies represent an extensive pool
    of information ready to be subjected to academic scrutiny.

    Although the written sources are of paramount importance, they have
    not yet been translated to modern European languages, rendering them
    inaccessible to most genocide studies scholars. To mention a few,
    they include Isaac Armalto's eye-witness account that he published in
    Arabic in 1919 in Lebanon; and Mar Israel Audo's documentation of the
    tragedies, which is available in an unpublished manuscript in Assyrian.

    Many of our oral history documentations gathered at the Seyfo
    Center are first-hand testimonies of eye-witness accounts. I had the
    opportunity to interview and record many survivors, and they not only
    provided me with valuable information then, but their testimonies
    continue to provide me with an endless moral boost in what I do.

    Today, we have been able to extract much information regarding the
    1915 massacres from eye-witness accounts who reported back to their
    respective embassies. The following are some examples:

    -American Ambassador Henry Morgenthau, Jr. in Constantinople gave
    reports about his contacts with the government of the Young Turks.

    -A document was published already in 1916 entitled "The Treatment of
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, 1915-1916" by James Bryce, a British
    expert in political science, and Arnold Toynbee, a historian. Over
    100 pages of this document are about the Assyrians.

    -Johannes Lepsius, a German missionary who lived in Anatolia, informed
    the authorities in Berlin about what was happening at the time. The
    documentation was published in 1919 in Potsdam.

    -Prof. David Gaunt together with Dr. Racho Donef published the book
    Massacres, Resistance, Protectors in 2006 and covers the fate of all
    the Christian groups of eastern Anatolia during World War I.

    V.K.-What is the primary function of the Seyfo Center? How does it
    contribute to genocide scholarship?

    S.A.-The Seyfo Center has a big pool of sources and provides
    research assistance to scholars, writers, journalists, filmmakers,
    and government agencies. We also document the Assyrian Genocide by
    collecting oral histories and publishing written evidence; presenting
    the Assyrian Genocide in parliaments and government bodies; educating
    non-Assyrians in political and academic forums; participating in
    activism on behalf of [recognition of] the Assyrian Genocide; and
    publishing books, reports, brochures, and other media. We lobby
    [for recognition].

    I am very glad to say that we have made great strides in the last
    ten years regarding the Assyrian Genocide. First of all, the word
    Seyfonow is more known on both the national and international
    levels. For example:

    -On May 13, 2009, a press conference took place in the Swedish
    Parliament. A Kurdish intellectual called Berzan Boti apologized for
    the genocide of 1915 and, as an act of restitution, handed back his
    property to its rightful owners, Assyrians. The deeds of his property
    were then transferred to the Seyfo Center.

    -On March 10, 2010, the Swedish Parliament recognized the Assyrian
    Genocide.

    -Thanks to the Assyrian Universal Alliance (AUA) and the efforts by
    the Assyrians in Australia, a monument was erected on Aug. 7, 2010,
    for the Assyrian victims during World War I and the Simele Massacre.

    -On May 1, 2013, the Australian Parliament of New South Wales (NSW)
    recognized the Assyrian and the Greek Genocide.

    -On April 25, 2012, the Assyrian Genocide Monument was unveiled in
    capital city of Armenia, in Yerevan.

    -On April 27, 2013, the third Assyrian genocide monument was unveiled
    in France.

    I am sure that in the very near future, we will have more monuments
    erected around the world, and the number of countries who recognize
    the Assyrian Genocide will have increased dramatically.

    V.K.-What are the primary demands of the Assyrian people from the
    Turkish government?

    S.A.-First of all, we want the Republic of Turkey to stop the lies
    they have been practicing now for 98 years and recognize the Assyrian,
    Armenian, and Greek genocides.

    Denial is a form of continuation of the genocide. It is to be killed
    twice. Failure to recognize the genocide has led to even more genocides
    against Assyrians in their homeland.

    We Assyrians also don't understand the fact that the Republic of
    Armenia has not recognized the Assyrian Genocide yet. Today, I am
    very happy that so far about 26 countries have officially recognized
    the 1915 Armenian Genocide.

    March 10, 2010 and May 1, 2013 are historical days especially for us as
    Assyrians and Greeks. The Swedish and Australian Parliaments passed a
    resolution and recognized the Assyrian and Greek Genocides in addition
    to the Armenian Genocide. I hope other countries will follow suit.

    Our Armenian friends living in Armenia and around the world have to
    help us and add the Assyrian and Greek Genocides on the international
    agenda.

    Remember: Assyrians and Greeks were subjected to the genocide in
    Turkey, too. We also demand that today the whole world officially
    recognize this fact. Of course, the Republic of Armenia, for many
    reasons should be one of the first countries in the world to recognize
    the Assyrian Genocide!

    We are would very much like to have a strategy based on friendship
    between Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks. We, who were subjected to
    the same genocide, should finds ways and means of an internal dialogue
    and then speak with one voice.

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2014/01/08/remembering-the-assyrian-genocide-an-interview-with-sabri-atman/

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