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How My Family Survived The Caliphate

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  • How My Family Survived The Caliphate

    HOW MY FAMILY SURVIVED THE CALIPHATE

    World News Daily WND
    Sept 23 2014

    David Kupelian tells harrowing story of Christians, jihadists and
    genocide

    David Kupelian

    Two things compel me to share the following personal family story
    about what happens to Christians living under an Islamic caliphate.

    First, I was watching my friend Sean Hannity's recent Fox News special
    on the Islamic State, during which many in his "audience of experts"
    had good and insightful things to say. But toward the end, noted Islam
    scholar Andrew Bostom made the following statement. Taking his cue
    from another guest's reference to the precedent for today's "Islamic
    State" caliphate set by the original seventh-century caliphate of
    Muhammad and his successors, Bostom noted:

    We have a much more recent precedent - and it's an ugly precedent. In
    1915 - it makes IS look like amateurs - at the collapse of the Ottoman
    caliphate, a very bona fide caliphate, slaughtered a million Armenians
    in a jihad, slaughtered another 250,000 Syriac Orthodox Christians
    and Assyrians, with the same level of brutality - beheadings,
    eviscerations, humiliations, creation of harams, sexual slavery. This
    is part of a relatively recent history. We're only coming up on the
    100th anniversary next year of the Armenian Genocide. That's the
    precedent that we should be worried about, not the 7th century.

    Andrew's comments plunged me into memories of all the stories I heard
    growing up, told by family members who had survived the Armenian
    Genocide.

    Second, though little discussed in the West, Middle East news
    agencies are now reporting that ISIS just destroyed the Armenian
    Genocide Memorial Church in Der Zor, Syria, which housed the remains
    of Armenian Genocide victims. Der Zor, where hundreds of thousands
    of Armenians miserably perished a century ago, is referred to by many
    as the Auschwitz of the Armenian Genocide.

    Now let me get to my story, which I think is extremely relevant at
    this particular time.

    My dad, when he was only three years old, was basically sentenced to
    death. The Turkish government during the chaotic, waning days of the
    Ottoman caliphate was engaged in a deliberate campaign to force him,
    his baby sister and his mother, along with hundreds of thousands of
    other Armenians, into the Syrian Der Zor desert, where they would die
    of starvation, disease or worse - torture and death at the hands of
    brutal soldiers or roving bandits.

    Islamic Turkey's gruesome, premeditated genocide of the Christian
    Armenian population in that country had been ongoing for decades,
    with up to 300,000 Armenians massacred during the mid-1890s under
    the caliph, Sultan Abdul Hamid II.

    But now it was 1915, considered the peak of the Armenian Genocide,
    and my dad, then just a toddler, was caught in the middle of it,
    along with his mother and sister. Those not butchered outright -
    the men were often killed immediately - were driven into the Der Zor
    desert, east of Aleppo, to perish. My father's father, a doctor,
    had been pressed into the Turkish army against his will to head a
    medical regiment, to tend to the Turkish soldiers' injuries.

    "One of my earliest recollections, I was not quite three years old
    at the time," my dad told me shortly before he died in 1988, was that
    "the wagon we were in had tipped over, my hand was broken and bloody,
    and mother was looking for my infant sister, who had rolled away. The
    next thing I remember after that, mother was on a horse, holding my
    baby sister, and had me sitting behind her, saying, 'Hold on tight,
    or the Turks will get you!'"

    The three of them rode off on horseback, ending up in Aleppo, one of
    the gateways to the desert deportation and certain death. Once there,
    my grandmother, Mary, always a daring and resourceful woman, realized
    what she needed to do.

    After asking around to find out who was in charge, she bluffed her way
    into getting an audience with Aleppo's governor-general. Since her
    Armenian husband was in the service of the Turkish army - albeit by
    force - she played her one and only card, brazenly telling the governor
    general, "I demand my rights as the wife of a Turkish army officer!"

    "What are those rights?"

    "I want commissary privileges and two orderlies," she answered.

    "Granted."

    In this way, by masquerading as a Turkish officer's wife, Mary bluffed
    her way out of certain death, saving not only her own life and those of
    her son and daughter, but also the lives of her husband's two brothers,
    whom she immediately deputized as orderlies. The group then succeeded
    in sneaking several other family members out of harm's way, and my
    grandmother kept them all from starving by obtaining food from the
    commissary. Thus was my family spared, although little Adolphina,
    my father's infant sister, was unable to survive the harshness of
    those times and died shortly thereafter.

    As for my grandfather, Simeon Kupelian, after a bloody battle between
    the Turks and the British, he and the other doctors, all Armenians,
    tended to the Turkish wounded as best they could - that was their job.

    Immediately after this, a squadron of Turkish gunmen came and killed
    them all, including my grandfather. Such is the logic of demons.

    On returning to their beautiful home in Marash in southern Turkey a
    couple of years later, Mary and son, Vahey, who was then about six
    years old, found it had been ransacked. Their fine tapestries had
    been pulled off the walls, ripped and urinated on. Everything that
    could be carried out had been stolen, and everything else had been
    deliberately broken. Everything. Every pane of glass in the French
    doors was broken, even handles on drawers were destroyed.

    Ultimately, the hardships and ever-increasing dangers of their life
    led my dad and grandmom to do what millions of persecuted people
    have done over the last few hundred years. They made the long voyage
    to the one country that welcomed them and offered them freedom and
    an opportunity for a new life - the most blessed nation on earth,
    their promised land: America.

    So that's my father's side of the family.

    But on my mother's side, the sword of Muhammad was just as merciless.

    During this same era, my great-grandfather, a Protestant minister
    named Steelianos Leondiades, was traveling to the major Turkish city
    of Adana to attend a pastors' conference. Today, Incirlik Air Base,
    used by the U.S. Air Force, is just five miles east of Adana. But
    back then, under the caliph, Abdul-Hamid II, ethnic cleansing was the
    order of the day. Here's how my grandmother, Anna Paulson, daughter
    of Steelianos, told the story:

    "Some of the Turkish officers came to the conference room and told
    all these ministers - there were 70 of them, ministers and laymen
    and a few wives: 'If you embrace the Islamic religion, you will all
    be saved. If you don't, you will all be killed.'"

    My great-grandfather, acting as a spokesman for the ministers' group,
    asked the Turks for 15 minutes so they could make their decision,
    according to my grandmother's account. During that time, the ministers
    and their companions talked, read the Bible to each other and prayed.

    In the end, none of them would renounce their Christian faith and
    convert to Islam.

    "And then," Anna recalled, "they were all killed.

    "They were not even buried. They were all thrown down the ravine."

    The only reason we know any details of this particular massacre,
    she said, is that one victim survived the ordeal.

    "One man woke up; he wasn't dead," my grandmother said. "He woke up
    and got up and said, 'Brethren, brethren, is there anybody alive here?

    I'm alive, come on, let's go out together.'"

    As one published history of the "Adana Massacres" puts it:

    The annual convention of the Armenian Evangelical Union of Cilicia was
    to take place during the week of April 11, 1909, in Adana. Pastors
    and delegates from various churches set out for Adana on April 12,
    not knowing that they and their many friends were to be martyred. On
    the dawn of April 13, 1909, the massacre of the Armenian Evangelical
    leadership took place.

    My great-grandfather and his fellow massacred Christians - and there
    were many, many others also butchered in Adana - were martyrs, real
    ones. But today, we most often hear the word martyr used to describe
    jihadist zombies who commit unspeakable mass atrocities against
    innocents while dementedly chanting "Allahu Akhbar, Allahu Akhbar,
    Allahu Akhbar" ("Allah is greatest") to drown out what little is left
    of their conscience.

    That's not martyrdom. It's terrorism, genocide, metastasizing madness,
    hell on earth. Welcome to life in the glorious caliphate.

    Although my father and grandmothers passed down these vivid
    recollections to us in the comfort of warm, safe suburban homes,
    worlds apart from the nightmares of their youth, their painful
    psychological scars remained ever fresh.

    Allow me to quote the U.S. ambassador to Turkey at the time, Henry
    Morgenthau, whose published memoirs exposed the horrors he witnessed
    firsthand during the 20th century's first genocide. Incredibly, he
    described how Turkish officials bragged to him about their nightly
    meetings where they would enthusiastically share the latest torture
    techniques to use on the Armenians:

    Each new method of inflicting pain was hailed as a splendid discovery,
    and the regular attendants were constantly ransacking their brains
    in the effort to devise some new torment. He told me that they even
    delved into the records of the Spanish Inquisition and other historic
    institutions of torture and adopted all the suggestions found there.

    I'll spare you the details, except to say that Morgenthau, father of
    FDR's treasury secretary of the same name, summed up the "sadistic
    orgies" of the Armenian genocide by declaring: "Whatever crimes the
    most perverted instincts of the human mind can devise, and whatever
    refinements of persecution and injustice the most debased imagination
    can conceive, became the daily misfortunes of this devoted people. I
    am confident that the whole history of the human race contains no
    such horrible episode as this."

    http://www.wnd.com/2014/09/how-my-family-survived-the-caliphate/

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