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From Archives Emerges A Catholic Who Aided Armenians' Plight

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  • From Archives Emerges A Catholic Who Aided Armenians' Plight

    FROM ARCHIVES EMERGES A CATHOLIC WHO AIDED ARMENIANS' PLIGHT

    Catholic Philly
    April 20 2015

    By Lou Baldwin

    Some Armenian refugees such as these did survive the genocide that left
    up to 1.5 million Christian Armenians dead. It has has been called
    the first genocide of the 20th century. (Philadelphia Archdiocesan
    Historical Research Center)

    At a time when Christians of all denominations are being attacked by
    radical Muslims in many first parts of the world, it is the centenary
    of what has been called the first genocide of the 20th century: the
    slaughter of between 1 million and 1.5 million Christian Armenians
    by Muslim Turks and Kurds in 1915, with sporadic violence against
    the remaining Armenian refugees for the next decade.

    "Men, women and children were turned out of their homes, marched
    to exhaustion and starved, beaten and burned to death by the tens
    of thousands," Archbishop Chaput wrote in his March 5 column on
    CatholicPhilly.com.

    Pope Francis, during a Mass at St. Peter's Basilica on Sunday, April
    12 to commemorate the massacre, used the term "genocide," to which
    the Turkish government strenuously objected.

    To put it in context, in 1915 Turkey's Ottoman Empire, of which Armenia
    was part, was along with Germany and Austria at war with the United
    Kingdom, France and Russia, among others. The United States was then
    neutral, although after it entered the war it opposed only Germany
    and Austria, not Turkey.

    Although the Turkish Empire was largely Muslim, most Armenians were
    Christian, members of the Armenian Apostolic Church with a history
    they believe traces back to the Apostles Bartholomew and Thaddeus.

    Armenia also bordered Russia, which was Christian, and the Turks feared
    the Armenians would rebel and fight for the Russians, and some did.

    In retaliation Turkey put in place a ruthless policy that saw most
    Armenian men in the area near Russia killed and the women and children
    sent on what was a virtual death march to other parts of the empire.

    While Turkey to this day continues to deny a genocide took place,
    eyewitnesses from that era testified otherwise.

    In a dispatch to the American ambassador in Constantinople, the
    local American Consul Leslie Davis wrote in July 1915, "It has been
    no secret that the plan was to destroy the Armenian Race as a race,
    but the methods used have been more cold-blooded and barbarous if
    not more effective than I had at first supposed."

    The massacres did not end in 1915, and for the next decade people of
    good will from around the world contributed vast sums of money for
    the relief of the large number of now-scattered Armenian refugees.

    Walter George Smith, shown in 1923, was a prominent Catholic lawyer
    in Philadelphia who raised money and awareness of the Armenians.

    (Philadelphia Archdiocesan Historical Research Center)

    Walter George Smith was a prominent Catholic Philadelphia lawyer who
    engaged in the relief efforts and visited the region from November
    1920 through February 1921.

    "In the long history of human government," Smith would later write,
    "there can scarcely be found a parallel to the tragic fate of this
    gallant people. Of Aryan race though seated for centuries in Asia,
    they have never lost their national characteristics. We of the Western
    world have been slow to realize their value to the cause of Christian
    civilization."

    At the end of the war and the capitulation of Turkey, the Treaty of
    Sevres signed by Turkey dissolved the Ottoman Empire and stipulated
    the borders of an independent Armenia were to be set by the President
    of the United States, even though the U.S. had not been at war
    with Turkey. It was even suggested the U.S. accept Armenia as a
    protectorate.

    Ultimately President Woodrow Wilson did nothing, probably because (as
    today) he was a Democratic president with a Republican Congress that
    wanted no parts of further foreign entanglements to the point that
    Congress even prevented the U.S. from joining the League of Nations.

    Nevertheless, with hundreds of thousands of Armenians in refugee
    camps around the Middle East and Eastern Europe, private citizens
    in the U.S. raised more than $100 million for Armenian relief, a sum
    that would translate into more than $1.3 billion today. Some of the
    donors were from the Armenian diaspora, many others were members of
    churches, mostly Protestant, that had missionaries in the region but
    there were Catholics also.

    Possibly the most prominent American Catholic to champion the plight
    of the Armenian Christians was Smith. He was the son of a Civil War
    general, a former president of the American Bar Association, a former
    president of the American Catholic Historical Society, a 1923 winner
    of Notre Dame University's Laetare Medal and a brother-in-law to St.

    Katharine Drexel.

    He was very active with Armenian Relief especially in the early
    1920s, and served as president of the Armenian Relief Society. The
    now Sovietized Russia occupied that section of Armenia that bordered
    with it and the rest remained under control of the new government in
    Turkey headed by Mustafa Kamal (Ataturk).

    Although secular, Turkey ignored the terms of the Sevres Agreement.

    Neither the European powers nor the United States did anything to
    enforce the peace agreement. It would not be until 1991, with the
    collapse of the Soviet Union, that the section of Armenia that was
    under its control became a free and independent republic.

    Smith, whose personal papers are held in the archives of the
    Archdiocese of Philadelphia, could not know this future and by 1924
    was pessimistic for Armenia.

    Writing in New Armenia magazine that year he described the Armenians,
    "...to their eternal glory there remains the truth that among all
    Christian peoples they stand unique or nearly so in accepting death
    rather than treason to their Christian faith. Men, women and children
    have gone through fire and water, have literally sacrificed everything
    that this world counts as good rather than trample on the Cross.

    Surely, under the Providence of God, justice will one day be done
    to them."

    http://catholicphilly.com/2015/04/news/local-news/from-archives-emerges-a-catholic-who-aided-armenians-plight/

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