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DID THE TURKS ENGAGE IN MASSACRING THE ARMENIANS
AS OF 1890’s?
The so-called "Armenian
Question" is generally thought of as having begun in
the second half of the nineteenth century. One can easily
point to the Russo-Turkish war (1877 - 78) and the Congress
of Berlin (1878) which concluded the war as marking the emergence
of this question as a problem in Europe. In fact, however,
one must really go back to Russian activities in the East
starting in the 1820's to uncover its origins. Czarist Russia
at the time was beginning a major new imperial expansing force
across Central Asia, in the process overrunning major Turkish
Khanates in its push toward the borders of China and the Pacific
Ocean. At the same time, Russian imperial ambitions turned
southward as the Czars sought to gain control of Ottoman territory
to extend their landlocked empire to the Mediterranean and
the open seas. As an essential element of this ambition, Russia
sought to undermine Ottoman strength from within by stirring
the national ambitions of the Sultan's Christian subject,
in particular those with whom it shared a common Orthodox
religious heritage, the Greeks and the Slavs in the Balkans
and the Armenians. At the same time that Russian agents fanned
the fires of the Greek Revolution and stirred the beginnings
of Pan-Slavism in Serbia and Bulgaria, others moved into the
Caucasus and worked to secure Russian influence over the Catholicos
of the Armenian Gregorian church of Echmiadzin, to which most
Ottoman Gregorians had strong emotional attachments. The Russians
used the Catholicos' jealousy of the Istanbul Patriarch to
gain his support to such an extent that Catholicos Nerses
Aratarakes himself led a force of 60,000 Armenians in support
of the Russian army that fought Iran in the Caucasus in 1827
—1828 and, in the process capturing most of Iran's Caucasus
possessions, including those areas where the Armenians lived.
This new Russian presence along the borders of eastern Anatolia,
combined with the support of the Catholicos, enabled them
to extend their influence among Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.
Russian pressure in Istanbul finally got the Patriarch to
add the Catholicos' name to his daily prayers starting in
1844, furthering the latter's ability to influence Ottoman
Armenians in Russia's favor in the years that followed. Most
Ottoman Armenians were still too content with their lot in
the Sultan's dominions to be seriously influenced by this
Russian propaganda. The lands abandoned by those who immigrated
to Russia were turned over to Muslim refugees flooding into
the Empire running away from persecution in Russia and Eastern
Europe. This led to serious land disputes when many of the
Armenian emigrants, or their descendants, unhappy with life
in Russia, sought to return to the Ottoman Empire in the 1880's
and 1890's.
The Russians were not the
only foreign power seeking to protect-the Ottoman Christians.
England and France sponsored missionary activities that converted
many Armenians to Protestantism and Catholicism respectively,
leading to the creation of the Armenian Catholic Church in
Istanbul in l830 and the Protestant Church in 1847. However
these developments were not directly related to the development
of the "Armenian Question", except perhaps as indications
of the rising discontent within the Gregorian church which
the Russians were seeking to take advantage of in their own
way.
On the other hand, the Reform
Proclamation of 1856 was of major importance. While not abolishing
the separate congressions and churches and the institutions
that they supported, the Ottoman government now provided equal
rights for all subjects regardless of their religion, in the
process seeking to eliminate all special privileges and distinctions
based on religion, and requiring the communities to reconstitute
their internal regulations in order to achieve these goals.
Insofar as the Armenians were concerned, the result was the
Armenian Community Regulation, drawn up by the Patriarchate
and put into force by the Ottoman government on 29 March 1862.
Of particular importance the new regulation placed the Armenian
comunnity under the government of a council of 140 members,
including only 20 churchmen from the Istanbul Patriarchate,
while 80 secular representatives were to be chosen from the
Istanbul community and 40 members from the provinces. The
Reform Proclamation of 1856 led England and France to be more
interested in Armenians which in return intensified the interests
of Russia in the same ethnic group. Their concern was based
on their own imperialist interests rather than their affection
for Armenians. Russia now sought to gain Armenian support
for undermining and destroying the Ottoman state by promising
to create a "Greater Armenia" in eastern Anatolia,
which would cover substantially more territory between the
Black Sea and the Mediterranean than the Armenians ever had
ruled or even occupied at any time in their history.
It was against this background
that the Ottoman-Russian war (1877 - 78) awakened Armenian
dreams for independence with Russian help and under Russian
guidance. Toward the end of the war, the Armenian Patriarch
of Istanbul, Nerses Varjabedian, got in touch with the Russian
Czar with the help of the Catholicos of Echmiadzin, asking
Russia not to return to the Ottomans the east Anatolian lands
occupied by Russian forces. Immediately after the war, the
Patriarch went to the Russian camp, which by then was at San
Stephano, immediately outside Istanbul, and in an interview
with the Russian Commander, Grand Duke Nicholas, asked that
all of Eastern Anatolia be annexed to Russia and established
as an autonomous Armenian state, very much like the regime
then being established for Bulgaria, but that if this was
not possible, and the lands in question had to be returned
to the Ottomans, at least Russian forces should not be withdrawn
until changes favoring the Armenians were introduced into
the governmental and administrative organization and regulations
of these provinces. The Russians agreed to the latter proposal,
which was incorporated as Article 16 of the 'Treaty of San
Stephano. Even as the negotiations were going on at San Stephano,
moreover, the Armenian officers in the Russian army worked
frantically to stir discontent among the Ottoman Armenians,
urging them to work to gain "the same sort of independence
for themselves as that secured by the Christians of the Balkans."
This appeal gained considerable influence among the Armenians
of Eastern Anatolia long after the Russian forces were withdrawn.
The Treaty of San Stephano
did not, however, constitute the final settlement of the Russo-Turkish
war. Britain rightly feared that its provisions for a Greater
Armenia in the East would inevitably not only establish Russian
hegemony in those areas but also, and even more dangerous,
in the Ottoman Empire, and through "Greater Armenia"
to the Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean, where they could easily
threaten the British possessions in India. In return for an
Ottoman agreement for British occupation of Cyprus, therefore,
to enable it to counter any Russian threats in Eastern Anatolia,
Britain agreed to use its influence in Europe to upset the
provisions of San Stephano, arranging the Congress of Berlin
to this end. As a result of its deliberations, Russia was
compelled to evacuate all of Eastern Anatolia with the exception
of the districts of Kars, Ardahan and Batum, with the Ottomans
agreeing to institute "reforms" in the eastern provinces
where Armenians lived under the guarantee of the five signatory
European powers. From this time onward, England in particular
came to consider the "Armenian Question" as its
own particular problem, and to regularly intervene to secure
its solution according to its own ideas.
A committee sent by the Armenian
Patriarchate of Istanbul attended the Congress of Berlin,
but it was so unhappy at the final treaty and the Powers'
failure to accept its demands that it returned to Istanbul
with the feeling that "nothing will be achieved except
by means of struggle and revolution." Russia also emerged
from the Congress without having achieved its major objectives,
and with both Greece, and Bulgaria being left under British
influence. It therefore renewed with increased vigor its effort
to secure control of Eastern Anatolia, again seeking to use
the Armenians as a major instrument of its policy. Now, however,
it was resisted in this effort by the British, who also sought
to influence and use the Armenians by stirring their national
ambitions, though in this respect, in the words of the French
writer Rene Pinon, who is in fact known with his pro-Armenian
views, "Armenia in British hands would become a police
station against Russian expansion." Whether under Russian
or British influence, however, the Armenians became pawns
to advance imperial ambitions at Ottoman expense.
It was British Prime Minister
Benjamin Disraeli and the Tories who defended Ottoman integrity
against Russian expansion at the Congress of Berlin. But with
the assumption of power by William E. Gladstone and the Liberals
in I880, British policy toward the Ottomans changed drastically
to one which sought to protect British interests by breaking
up the Ottoman Empire and creating friendly small states under
British influence in its place, one of which was to be Armenia.
In pursuit of this policy, the British press now was encouraged
to refer to eastern Anatolia as "Armenia"; British
consulates were opened in every corner of the area to provide
opportunities for contact with the local Christian population;
the numbers of Protestant missionaries sent to the East was
substantially increased; and in London an Anglo-Armenian Friendship
Committee was created to influence public opinion in support
of this new endeavour. The way how Russia and Great Britain
used Armenians as a tool for their own ambitions has been
adequately documented by numerous Armenian and other foreign
sources. Thus, the French Ambassador in Istanbul Paul Cambon
reported to the Quai d'Orsay in 1894 that "Gladstone
is organizing the dissatisfied Armenians, putting them under
discipline and promising them assistance, settling many of
them in London with the inspiration of the propaganda committee."
Edgar Granville commended that "There was no Armenian
movement in Ottoman territory before the Russians stirred
them up. Innocent people are going to be hurt because of this
dream of a Greater Armenia under the protection of the Czar,"
and "the Armenian movements intend to attach Eastern
Anatolia to Russia." The Armenian writer Kaprielian declared
proudly in his book "The Armenian Crisis and Rebirth
that "the revolutionary promises and inspirations were
owed to Russia." The Tashnak newspaper Hairenik in its
issue of 28 June 1918 stated that "The awakening of a
revolutionary spirit among the Armenians in Turkey was the
result of Russian stimulation." The Armenian Patriarch
Horen Ashikian wrote in his History of Armenia "The protestant
missionaries distributed in large numbers to various places
in Turkey made propaganda in favor of England and stirred
the Armenians to desire autonomy under British protection.
The schools that they established were the nurseries of their
secret plans." And the Armenian religious leader Hrant
Vartabed wrote that "'The establishment of protestant
communities in Ottoman territory and their protection by England
and the United States shows that they did not shrink from
exploiting even the most sacred feelings of the West, religious
feelings, in seeking civilization", going on to state
that the Catholicos of Echmiadzin Kevork V was a tool of Czarist
Russia and that he betrayed the Armenians of Anatolia.
In pursuit of these policies,
starting in 1880 a number of Armenian revolutionary societies
were established in Eastern Anatolia, like the Black Cross
and Armenian societies in Van and the National Guards in Erzurum.
However these societies had little influence, since the Armenians
in the Ottoman Empire still lived in peace and prosperity
and had no real complaints against Ottoman administration.
With the passage of time, therefore, these and other such
Armenian societies within the Empire fell into inactivity
and largely ceased operations. The Armenian nationalists therefore
moved to center their organizations outside Ottoman territory,
establishing the Hunchak Committee at Geneva in 1887 and the
Tashnak Committee at Tiflis in 1890, both of which declared
to be their basic goal the "liberation" from Ottoman
rule of the territories of Eastern Anatolia and the Ottoman
Armenians.
According to Louise Nalbandian,
a leading Armenian researcher into Armenian propaganda, the
Hunchak program stated that:
"Agitation and terror
were needed to "elevate the spirit" of the people.
The people were also to be incited against their enemies and
were to "profit" from retaliatory actions of these
same enemies. Terror was to be used as a method of protecting
the people and winning their confidence in the Hunchak program.
The party aimed at terrorizing the Ottoman government, thus
contributing toward lowering the prestige of that regime and
working toward its complete disintegration. The government
itself was not to be the only focus of terroristic tactics.
The Hunchaks wanted to annihilate the most dangerous of the
Armenian and Turkish individuals who were then working for
the government as well as to destroy all spies and informers.
To assist them in carrying out all of these terroristic acts,
the party was to organize an exclusive branch specifically
devoted to performing acts of terrorism. The most opportune
time to institute the general rebellion for carrying out immediate
objectives was when Turkey was engaged in war. "
K. S. Papazian wrote of the
Tashnak Society:
"The purpose of the A.
R. Federation (Tashnak) is to-achieve political and economic
freedom in Turkish Armenia, by means of rebellion ... terrorism
has, from the first, been adopted by the Tashnak Committee
of the Caucasus, as a policy or a method for achieving its
ends. Under the heading "means" in their program
adopted in 1892, we read as follows: The Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (Tashnak), in order to achieve its purpose through
rebellion, organizes revolutionary groups. Method no. 8 is
as follows: To wage fight, and to subject to terrorism the
Government officials, the traitors, ... Method no.11 is: To
subject the government institutions to destruction and pillage.
"
One of the Tashnak founders
and ideologues, Dr. Jean Loris-Melikoff wrote that:
"The truth is that the
party (Tashnak Committee) was ruled by an oligarchy, for whom
the particular interests of the party came before the interests
of the people and nation.. They (the Tashnaks) made collections
among the bourgeois and the great merchants. A t the end,
when these means were exhausted, they resorted to terrorism,
after the teachings of the Russian revolutionaries that the
end justifies the means. "
The same policy was described
by .the Tashnak ideologue Varandian, in History of the Tashnakzoutune
(Paris, 1932).
Thus as Armenian writers themselves
have freely admitted, the goal of their revolutionary societies
was to stir revolution, and their method was terror. They
lost no time in putting their programs into operation, stirring
a number of revolt efforts within a short time, with the Hunches
taking the lead at first, and then the Tashnaks following,
planning and organizing their efforts outside the Ottoman
Empire before carrying them out within the boundaries of the
Sultan's land.
The first revolt came in Erzurum
in 1890. It was followed by the Kumkapi riots in Istanbul
the same year, and then risings in Kayseri, Yozgat, Corum
and Merzifon in 1892 - 1893, in Sasun in 1894, the Zeytun
revolt and the Armenian raid on the Sublime Porte in 1895,
the Van revolt and occupation of the Ottoman Bank in Istanbul
in 1896, the Second Sasun revolt in 1903, the attempted assassination
of Sultan Abdulhamid II in 1905, and the Adana revolt in 1909.
All these revolts and riots were presented by the Armenian
revolutionary societies in Europe and America as the killing
of Armenians by Turks, and with this sort of propaganda message
they stirred considerable emotion among Christian peoples.
The missionaries and consular representatives sent by the
Powers to Anatolia played major roles in spreading this propaganda
in the western press, thus carrying out the aims of the western
powers to turn public opinion against Muslims and Turks to
gain the necessary support to break up the Ottoman Empire.
There were many honest western
diplomatic and consular representatives who reported what
actually was happening, that it was the Armenian revolutionary
societies that were doing the revolting and slaughtering and
massacring to secure European intervention in their behalf.
In 1876, the British Ambassador
in Istanbul reported that the Armenian Patriarch had said
to him:
"If revolution is necessary
to attract the attention and intervention of Europe, it would
not be hard to do so. "
On 28 March 1894 the British
Ambassador in Istanbul, Curie reported to the Foreign Office:
"The aim of the Armenian
revolutionaries is to stir disturbances, in order to get the
Ottomans to react to violence, and thus get the foreign Powers
to intervene. "
On 28 January 1895 the British
Consul in Erzurum, Graves reported to the British Ambassador
in Istanbul:
"The aims of the revolutionary
committees are to stir up general discontent and to get the
Turkish government and people to react with violence, thus
attracting the attention of the foreign powers to the imagined
sufferings of the Armenian people, and getting them to act
to correct the situation. "
Graves response to New York
Herald reporter Sydney Whitman’s question:
"If no Armenian revolutionary
had come to this country, if they had not stirred Armenian
revolution, would these clashes have occurred ", was
"Of course not. I doubt if a single Armenian would have
been killed. "
The British Vice-Consul Williams
wrote from Van on 4 March 1896:
"The Tashnaks and Hunchaks
have terrorized their own countrymen, they have stirred up
the Muslim people with their thefts and insanities, and have
paralyzed all efforts made to carry out reforms; all the events
that have taken place in Anatolia are the responsibility of
the crimes committed by the Armenian revolutionary committees.
"
British Consul General in
Adana Doughty Wily wrote in 1909 "The Armenians are working
to secure foreign intervention." Russian Consul General
in Bitlis and Van; General Mayewski, reported in 1912:
"In 1895 and 1896 the
Armenian revolutionary committees created such suspicion between
the Armenians and the native population that it became impossible
to implement any sort of reform in these districts. The Armenian
priests paid no attention to religious education, but instead
concentrated on spreading nationalist ideas, which were affixed
to the walls of monasteries, and in place of performing their
religious duties they concentrated on stirring Christian enmity
against Muslims. The revolts that took place in many provinces
of Turkey during 1895 and 1896 were caused neither by any
great poverty among the Armenian villages nor because of Muslim
attacks against them. In fact these villagers were considerably
richer and more prosperous than their neighbors. Rather, the
Armenian revolts came from three causes:
1. Their increasing maturity
in political subjects;
2.The spread of ideas of nationality,
liberation, and independence within the Armenian community;
3.Support of these ideas by
the western governments, and their encouragement through the
efforts of the Armenian priests. "
In another report in December
1912, Mayewski wrote that:
"The Tashnak revolutionary
society is working to stir up a situation in which Muslims
and Armenians will attack each other, and thus pave the way
for Russian intervention. "
Finally, the Tashnak ideologue
Varandian admits that the society "wanted to assure European
intervention," while Papazian stated that "the aims
of their revolts was to assure that the European powers would
interfere Ottoman internal affairs." At each of their
armed revolts the Armenian terrorist committees have always
propagated that European intervention would immediately follow.
Even some of the committee members believed in this propaganda.
In fact, during the occupation of the Ottoman Bank in Istanbul
the Armenian terrorist Armen Aknomi committed suicide after
having waited in desperation the arrival of the British fleet.
It can be seen thus that the basis for the Armenian revolts
was not poverty, nor was it oppression or the desire for reform;
rather, it was simply the result of a joint effort on the
part of the Armenian revolutionary committees and the Armenian
church, in conjunction with the Western Powers and Russia,
to provide the basis to break up the Ottoman Empire.
In reaction to these revolts,
the Ottomans did what other states did in such circumstances,
sending armed forces against the rebels to restore order,
and for the most part succeeding quickly since very few of
the Armenian populace supported or helped the rebels or the
revolutionary societies. However for the press and public
of Europe, stirred by tales spread by the missionaries and
the revolutionary societies themselves, every Ottoman restoration
of order was automatically considered as a "massacre"
of Christians, while the thousands of slaughtered Muslims
being ignored and Christian claims against Muslims automatically
accepted. In many cases, the European states not only intervened
to prevent the Ottomans from restoring order, but also secured
the release of many captured terrorists, including those involved
in the Zeytun revolt, the occupation of the Ottoman Bank,
and the attempted assassination of Sultan Abdulhamid. While
most of these were expelled from the Ottoman Empire, it did
not take long for them to secure forged passports and other
documents and to return to Ottoman territory to resume their
terroristic activities, with the cooperation of their European
sponsors. Whatever were the claims of the Armenian revolutionary
societies and whatever the ambitions of the imperial powers
of Europe, there was one major fact which they simply could
not ignore. The Armenians comprised a very small minority
of the population in the territories being claimed in their
name, namely the six eastern districts claimed as "historic
Armenia" (Erzurum, Bitlis, Van, Elaziz, Diyarbakir and
Sivas), the two provinces claimed to comprise "Armenian
Cilicia" (Aleppo and Adana) and finally Trabzon which
was later claimed to have an outlet to the Black Sea coast.
Event the French Yellow Book, which among western sources,
which made the largest Armenian population claims, still showed
them in a sizeable minority:
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Total Population
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Total Armenians Population
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Percent of
Gregorian
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Erzurum
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645,702
|
134,967
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20.90
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Bitlis
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398,625
|
131,390
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32.96
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Van
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430,000
|
80,798
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18.79
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Elaziz
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578,814
|
69,718
|
12.04
|
|
Diyarbakir
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471,462
|
79,129
|
16.78
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Sivas
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1,086,015
|
170,433
|
15.68
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Adana
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403,539
|
97,450
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24.14
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Aleppo
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995,758
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37,999
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3.81
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Trabzon
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1,047,700
|
47,200
|
4.50
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Thus even by these extreme
claims, the Armenians still constituted no more than one third
of the provinces' population. According to the Encyclopedia
Britannica of 1910, the Armenians were only 15 percent of
the area's population as a whole, making it very unlikely
that they could in fact achieve independence in any part of
the Ottoman Empire without the massive foreign assistance
that would have been required to push out the Turkish majorities
and replace them with Armenian emigrants.
Russia in fact was only using
the Armenians for its own ends. It had no real intention of
establishing Armenian independence, either within its own
dominions or in Ottoman territory. Almost as soon as the Russians
took over the Caucasus, they adopted a policy of Russifying
the Armenians as well as establishing their own control over
the Armenian Gregorian church in their territory. By virture
of the Polijenia Law of 1836, the powers and duties of the
Catholicos of Etchmiadzin were restricted, while his appointment
was to be made by the Czar. In 1882 all Armenian newspapers
and schools in the Russian Empire were closed, and in l903
the state took direct control of all the financial resources
of the Armenian Church as well as Armenian establishments
and schools. At the same time Russian Foreign Minister Lobanov-Rostowsky
adopted his famous goal of "An Armenia without Armenians",
a slogan which has been deliberately attributed to the Ottoman
administration by some Armenian propagandists and writers
in recent years. Whatever the reason, Russian oppression of
the Armenians was severe. The Armenian historian Vartanian
relates in his History of the Armenian Movement that "Ottoman
Armenia was completely free in its traditions, religion, culture
and language in comparison to Russian Armenia under the Czars."
Edgar Granville writes, "The Ottoman Empire was the Armenians'
only shelter against Russian oppression."
That Russian intentions were
to use the Armenians to annex Eastern Anatolia and not to
create an independent Armenia is shown by what happened during
World War I. In the secret agreements made among the Entente
powers to divide the Ottoman Empire, the territory which the
Russians had promised to the Armenians as an autonomous or
independent territory was summarily divided between Russia
and France without any mention of the Armenians, while the
Czar replied to the protests of the Catholicos of Etchmiadzin
only that "Russia has no Armenian problem." The
Armenian writer Borian thus concludes:
"Czarist Russia at no
time wanted to assure Armenian autonomy: For this reason one
must consider the Armenians who were working for Armenian
autonomy as no more than agents of the Czar to attach Eastern
Anatolia to Russia. "
The Russians thus have deceived
the Armenians for years; and as a result the Armenians have
been left with nothing more than an empty dream.
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