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Judith Crispin. Anzac Day, The Armenian Genocide And Destruction Of

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  • Judith Crispin. Anzac Day, The Armenian Genocide And Destruction Of

    JUDITH CRISPIN. ANZAC DAY, THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AND DESTRUCTION OF CULTURAL HERITAGE IN THE CAUCASUS.

    John Menadue
    April 19 2015

    Posted on 20/04/2015 by John Menadue

    "Generally speaking, genocide does not necessarily mean the immediate
    destruction of a nation, except when accomplished by mass killings
    of all members of a nation. It is intended rather to signify a
    coordinated plan of different actions aiming at the destruction of
    essential foundations of the life of national groups, with the aim of
    annihilating the groups themselves. The objectives of such a plan would
    be disintegration of the political and social institutions, of culture,
    language, national feelings, religion, and the economic existence of
    national groups, and the destruction of the personal security, liberty,
    health, dignity, and even the lives of the individuals belonging to
    such groups. Genocide is directed against the national group as an
    entity, and the actions involved are directed against individuals, not
    in their individual capacity, but as members of the national group."

    Raphael Lemkin, Axis Rule in Occupied Europe: Laws of Occupation -
    Analysis of Government - Proposals for Redress (1944)

    As we prepare to commemorate one hundred years since Australian forces
    landed at Anzac Cove, we might spare a thought for the victims of
    the Armenian genocide.

    Causal connections between the April 25 Gallipoli landings and
    the order by the Ottoman Minister of the Interior on April 24 to
    round up and execute Armenian intellectuals, do not feature in our
    Government-curated Anzac narrative. To our shame, Australia is not
    among the twenty-two nations that formally recognise Turkey's massacre
    of 1.5 million Armenians as genocide.

    One may wonder why it should matter if Australia continues to exclude
    the Armenian Genocide from its national story. But there are three
    good reasons to bring this particular genocide into public discourse
    and our Anzac commemorations.

    Firstly, genocides are not simply crimes against a specific people,
    they are crimes against all humanity, and participating in their denial
    shames us as a nation. Common decency compels us to stand beside
    the Armenians on April 24 to denounce their historical genocide,
    as, indeed, we should denounce all genocides. This is my first and
    most important reason for urging Australia to recognise the Armenian
    Genocide.

    But it is also worth noting that by continuing to deny the 1915
    genocide, we miss out on an opportunity to honour Australia's
    extraordinary humanitarian response to that event. Captured Australian
    servicemen held by the Ottomans in Turkey were unwilling eyewitnesses
    to the Armenian, Greek and Assyrian genocides. They essentially blew
    the whistle on Ottoman atrocities in the region.

    Captain Thomas Walter White of the Australian Flying Corps, for
    example, reported mass Armenian graves in northern Mesopotamia and
    western Turkey. In the Jordan valley, Australian soldiers rescued
    Armenian refugees and a famously recounted story tells of Colonel
    Arthur Mills carrying a sleeping four-year-old Armenian girl to safety
    on his camel.

    During the war, atrocities against Armenians were reported by
    Australian newspapers. Returning Australian soldiers, many of whom
    had assisted Armenian refugees in Turkey, joined the civilian Armenian
    relief fund. This grassroots movement raised millions in relief funds
    for the Armenian cause, and remains the largest humanitarian effort
    in Australian history.

    It seems ludicrous that our Anzac commemorations focus on Britain's
    failed Gallipoli campaign, which took almost 9000 Australian lives,
    but do not acknowledge the extraordinary humanitarian efforts toward
    the Armenians by allied soldiers and civilian Australians.

    Another compelling reason to talk about the Armenian Genocide is to
    challenge the assumption that all of this occurred in the past and
    has no connection to current events. Ripples from the 1915 genocide
    can be clearly observed in Jihardi attacks on ancient Assyrian/Persian
    culture that we are reading about right now.

    It must be emphasised that Lemkin's definition of genocide signifies
    "a coordinated plan of different actions aiming at the destruction
    of essential foundations of the life of national groups, with the aim
    of annihilating the groups themselves." This coordinated plan, which
    Lemkin suggests might include "disintegration of the political and
    social institutions, of culture, language, national feelings, religion"
    extends beyond the mass murder of an ethnic group in its intentions.

    Genocide seeks to wipe out all traces of a people--physically,
    culturally and historically. The current destruction of cultural
    monuments across the middle and near east has its very roots in the
    1915 Armenian Genocide. When we watch ISIS destroy Assyrian monuments
    on You Tube, we are seeing something that was set in motion a hundred
    years ago--something that might not have occurred if the international
    world had held Turkey to account over the genocide.

    Why, then, has Australia become an active participant in an effort
    to conceal the Armenian Genocide? Particularly given that Australia's
    humanitarian efforts, and the rescue of Armenians by our soldiers in
    Ottoman Turkey remain unacknowledged as a direct result. The answer
    appears to be that Australia has buckled beneath the pressure of
    conjoined denialist efforts by Azerbaijan and Turkey--denial of both
    the 1915 Armenian Genocide and the ongoing cultural genocides in their
    countries. Only by bringing these events into the light of day will
    Australia regain its own dignified and honest history.

    On the evening of April 24, 1915, sometimes called "Red Sunday",
    Ottoman officials arrested 250 Armenian intellectuals in Constantinople
    before deporting and murdering them. The order, given by Minister
    of the Interior Talaat Pasha the day before the Allies landed at
    Gallipoli, marked the start of the Armenian Genocide.

    This murderous campaign was part of a wider extermination program
    targeting Armenians, Assyrians and Greeks who were seen as obstacles
    to Turkey's unification with Turkic tribes in Azerbaijan and the
    creation of a grand Pan Turkish region.

    The 1915 massacres merged seamlessly into later Turkish-Azerbaijani
    efforts to eliminate Armenian culture in Nakhichevan, in the early
    2000s, and current attacks on Assyrian culture in Iraq by ISIS and
    their affiliates. The Ottomans went on to massacre between 1 and 1.5
    million people in a government organised and systematic genocide.

    Often described by Historians as the precursor to the Jewish Holocaust,
    the Armenian Genocide was chillingly similar in detail to events
    engineered twenty-five years later by the Third Reich.

    Armenians were murdered in concentration camps. They were gassed or
    sent on death marches into the Syrian Desert. Approximately 80,000
    Armenians were set alight in haylofts and stables across the MuÅ~_
    plain. Thousands of others were taken into the Black Sea or the
    Euphrates and drowned. So many Armenian corpses were left in the
    Euphrates, in fact, that the course of the river was temporarily
    changed. The New York Times described hundreds of Armenians in crammed
    cattle trains or driven along Syrian roads "strewn with corpses".

    Like their Third Reich successors, the Ottoman Empire conducted
    medical experiments on their Armenian prisoners, injecting them with
    Typhoid infected blood and overdoses of morphine. Armenian businesses,
    farms, houses and private property were confiscated and financial
    institutions were ordered to turn over all Armenian assets to the
    Ottoman government.

    The 1919 trials and court-martials of Ottoman officials firmly
    condemned Turkish atrocities against Armenians--and, in 1921,
    assassin Soghomon Tehlirian hunted down and executed former Turkish
    Grand Vizier Talaat Pasha in Berlin. The trial of Soghomon Tehlirian,
    which revealed an undercover operation to kill the architects of the
    Armenian Genocide, horrified international lawyer Raphael Lemkin. He
    went on, in 1943, to coin the word "genocide" to describe the Ottoman
    massacre of Armenians.

    Since the 1920s Turkey has undertaken a systematic and highly funded
    campaign to oppose international acknowledgement of the Armenian
    genocide.

    But what has this got to do with cultural destruction? The beginnings
    of Armenian culture can be traced to Nakhichevan's founding,
    in modern day Azerbaijan, during 3669BC. According to tradition
    Nakhichevan, whose name derives from the Armenian "Nakhnakan Ichevan"
    (Õ~FÕ¡Õ­Õ¶Õ¡Õ¯Õ¡Õ¶ Ô"Õ"O~GÕ¡Õ¶), meaning, "first landing place",
    was established by Noah after the Biblical deluge.

    It was in this land, shadowed by holy Mt Ararat, that the theologian
    Mesrob Mashtots first created the Armenian Alphabet and founded the
    earliest Armenian schools.

    In 1605 the population of Julfa, an important Armenian centre in
    Nakhichevan, were forcibly relocated to Persia by Shah Abbas. The
    town of Julfa was destroyed to prevent the Armenians returning but,
    recognising the importance of its historic cemetery, Shah Abbas
    ordered his soldiers to leave it untouched.

    Julfa cemetery, which graced the banks of the river Arax, once
    held 10,000 ornate Armenian khachkars (cross-stones) from the 15th
    and 16th century, inscribed with Christian crosses, suns, flowers
    and climbing plants. Alongside these khachkars stood tombstones
    from the late 6th century and undated pagan gravemarkers from even
    earlier. This extraordinary cemetery, spread over three hills on
    Nakhichevan's border with Iran, was home to the largest collection
    of East Christian cultural monuments on earth.

    In 1920 Nakhichevan was declared part of Azerbaijan, a decision
    reinforced by the Treaty of Kars. This Treaty created a new border
    between Turkey and Armenia--ceding Armenia's holy mountain Ararat to
    Turkey as well as important cities and the ancient ruins of Ani.

    The last remaining 2,000 Armenians were deported from Nakhichevan in
    1989. Official Azerbaijani historical records now state that Armenians
    did not live in the South Caucasus before the 19th century.

    A premeditated campaign to erase all traces of early Armenian culture
    in Nakhichevan has been undertaken by the Azerbaijan Government. Of
    around 280 named Armenian churches in Nakhichevan, few remain
    standing today.

    In 2005, in direct violation of the 1948 UN Convention on Cultural
    Heritage, Azerbaijani authorities demolished Julfa cemetery's
    priceless khachkars with bulldozers, loaded the crushed fragments
    onto trucks and emptied them into the river Arax. Video footage
    and photographs taken from the Iranian bank of the river captured
    almost 100 Azerbaijani servicemen destroying Julfa's khachkars with
    sledgehammers and other tools.

    Demands by The European Parliament in 2006 that "Azerbaijan allow
    missions, such as experts working with ICOMOS who are dedicated to
    surveying and protecting archaeological heritage, in particular
    Armenian heritage, onto its territory, and that it also allow a
    European Parliament delegation to visit the archaeological site at
    Julfa", were refused.

    Shortly thereafter, Nakhichevan authorities constructed a military
    shooting range on the very ground where thousands of human remains lie,
    still unmarked.

    Despite compelling evidence in photographs, video and satellite images,
    Azerbaijan has consistently denied the destruction of Julfa cemetery.

    What we are witnessing now, in Australia's refusal to recognise the
    Armenian Genocide, is the result of a combined denialist campaign by
    two politically and militarily allied countries, capable of exerting
    huge pressure on the international community through Turkey's NATO
    role and Azerbaijan's control of oil.

    This combined effort has effectively silenced discourse around the
    conjoined events of the 1915 genocide and the ongoing destruction of
    Christian monuments in Azerbaijan, Turkey and elsewhere. In achieving
    this goal, Azerbaijan and Turkey have concealed important historical
    contexts for understanding recent attacks on Assyrian culture by ISIS
    and their affiliates.

    Turkey and Azerbaijan's deliberate efforts to blind international
    politics to past and present crimes against humanity has been
    tolerated by Australia, ostensibly, for the sake of Anzac Cove photo
    opportunities in 2015.

    Turkey's exclusion of NSW MPs from the 2015 Anzac Cove ceremony because
    of bipartisan support for a Parliamentary motion to recognise the
    Armenian Genocide, demonstrates a clear intention to use Anzac day to
    blackmail Australia into supporting Turkish denialism. Treasurer Joe
    Hockey, of Armenian heritage, called for Federal Parliament to formally
    recognise the Armenian Genocide while in opposition, yet refuses to
    jeopardise his dealings with Turkey now that he is in Government.

    But the international tide is turning. In response to Pope Francis's
    recent statement that the 1915 massacres in Armenia constituted
    the "the first genocide of the 20th century," Turkey recalled its
    ambassador to the Holy See. Following The European Parliament's
    resolution to adopt the same term, genocide, in relation to Armenian
    history, Turkish President Erdogan stated, "It is out of the question
    for there to be a stain, a shadow called 'genocide' on Turkey."

    Many eminent Turkish academics presently advocate for genocide
    recognition, motivated by the same desire for historical truth
    that should be inspiring Australia's own stance on the issue. Only
    by acknowledging this genocide can Turkey honour its past national
    heroes, the Oscar Schindler's of the Ottoman Empire--men like Mehmet
    Celal Bey and others who saved thousands of Armenians from persecution.

    Genocide includes massacres, but is not limited to massacres. Any
    systematised and organised attempt to erase a people should be
    considered an act of genocide.

    When a force, such as the Ottoman-Turks and their Azerbaijani allies,
    seeks to destroy all traces of a people through mass murder, through
    destroying their cultural monuments and through an extensive and
    well-funded rewriting of history--there can be no doubt that we are
    speaking of Genocide. Australia's role in the Armenian Genocide was
    humanitarian, admirable and praise-worthy. We should never forget
    that--but we should never have allowed our legacy to be tainted by
    Turkey's efforts to suppress historical truth.

    Perhaps this Anzac Day we will remember that our greatest victory at
    Gallipoli was not at Anzac Cove. What brought lasting honour to our
    nation is symbolised in the image of a four-year-old Armenian girl
    carried in the arms of an Australian camel-mounted soldier, to safety.

    Dr Judith Crispin is the Director of Manning Clark House in Canberra.

    A practising artist, composer and writer, Judith is an honorary fellow
    of th Australian Catholic University and part of an international
    research team working on the digital repatriation of ancient Armenian
    culture.

    http://johnmenadue.com/blog/?p=3581




    From: A. Papazian
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