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Katia Peltekian on `The British Response To The Armenian Massacres o

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  • Katia Peltekian on `The British Response To The Armenian Massacres o

    KATIA PELTEKIAN ON `THE BRITISH RESPONSE TO THE ARMENIAN MASSACRES OF 1914-1923'

    Yerepouni News
    Jan 25 2014

    JANUARY 24, 2014


    On the occasion of the publication of her encyclopedic work `The
    Times of the Armenian Genocide: Reports in the British Press', author
    Katia Peltekian, gave an engaging lecture on `The British Response to
    the Armenian Massacres of 1914-1923', on Thursday, January 23, 2014,
    at the Cultural Hour of Haigazian University.

    In her welcoming address, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences,
    Dr. Arda Ekmekji, acknowledged the documentations carried out by
    expatriate diplomats, namely from the United States and Great Britain,
    who reported to their governments the atrocities taking place during
    the genocide. Ekmekji also appreciated the painful task carried out by
    Ms. Peltekian in collecting all the information related to the
    Armenian Genocide in the British press, and compiling it in her new
    book.

    Peltekian, who has been engaged in teaching English in numerous
    universities since 1987, began her lecture by stating that many
    Armenian History and Genocide scholars give much attention to the
    American response to the massacres perpetrated by the Turks, rather
    than to the British reaction, although Britain had been politically,
    socially and commercially present in the Ottoman Empire for more than
    a century. In her presentation, Peltekian highlighted both the
    official and public response to the massacres & deportations of the
    Armenians as well as the Armenian Question during the peace
    negotiations.

    The first part of the lecture demonstrated a few samples of the
    British parliamentary discussions and debates in the House of Lords
    and the House of Commons. Although Britain was involved in the war
    from the very beginning, and endured destruction and many casualties,
    the official circle still found time to show its support to the
    Armenian people in their dire situation. Peltekian presented some of
    the proceedings of meetings in the Houses of Parliament during which
    reports on the ongoing massacres were confirmed by the Foreign office,
    and on a number of occasions, the British government avowed that the
    Armenians would never be left under Turkish rule. But despite all
    those promises, Britain at the end submitted to the Turkish demands
    and abandoned Armenia.

    The second part of the lecture demonstrated the British public's
    reaction to the appalling situation that the Armenians lived in.
    Peltekian referred to letters and announcements by a number of funds
    and organizations that were established to help the Armenian
    survivors, refugees and orphans, such as the Friends of Armenia, the
    Canterbury Mission, the Women's Armenian Relief Fund, the Manchester
    Relief Fund, and the Armenian Refugee Fund, which was established by
    the Lord Mayor of London. Finally, Peltekian also demonstrated a
    number of announcements placed in the newspapers calling for donations
    to help the Armenian refugees and survivors.

    At the end of her lecture, Peltekian answered questions by the audience.


    http://www.yerepouni-news.com/archives/65193

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