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WERE ARMENIANS OPPRESSED AND SUBJECTED TO ATROCITIES
BY THE TURKS THROUGHOUT HISTORY
Armenian propagandists have
claimed that the Turks mistreated non-Muslims, and in particular
Armenians, throughout history in order to provide support
for their claims of "Genocide" against the Ottoman
Empire, since it would otherwise be difficult for them to
explain how the Turks, who had lived side by side with the
Armenians in peace for some 600 years, suddenly rose up to
massacre them all. The Armenians moreover, have tried to interpret
Turkish rule in terms of a constant struggle between Christianity
and Islam, thus to assure belief in whatever they say about
the Turks on the part of the modern Christian world.
The evidence of history overwhelmingly
denies these claims. We already have seen that the contemporary
Armenian historians themselves related how the Armenians of
Byzantium welcomed the Seljuk conquest with celebrations and
thanksgivings to God for having rescued them from Byzantine
oppression. The Seljuks gave protection to an Armenian Church,
which the Byzantines had been trying to destroy. They abolished
the oppressive taxes which the Byzantines had imposed on the
Armenian churches, monasteries and priests, and in fact exempted
such religious institutions from all taxes. The Armenian community
was left free to conduct its internal affairs in its own way,
including religious activities and-education, and there never
was any time at which Armenians or other non-Muslims were
compelled to convert to Islam. The Armenian spiritual leaders
in fact went to Seljuk Sultan Melikshah to thank him for this
protection. The Armenian historian Mathias of Edessa relates
that,
"Melikshah's heart is
full of affection and good will for Christians; he has treated
the sons of Jesus Christ very well, and he has given the Armenian
people affluence, peace, and happiness."
After the death of the Seljuk
Sultan Kilich Arslan, the same historian wrote,
"Kilich Arslan's death
has driven Christians into mourning since he was a charitable
person of high character. "
How well the Seljuk Turks
treated the Armenians is shown by the fact that some Armenian
noble families like the Tashirk family accepted Islam of their
own free will and joined the Turks in fighting Byzantium.
Turkish tradition and Muslim
law dictated that non-Muslims should be well treated in Turkish
and Muslim empires. The conquering Turks therefore made agreements
with their non-Muslim subjects by which the latter accepted
the status of zhimmi, agreeing to keep order and pay taxes
in return for protection of their rights and traditions. People
from different religions were treated with an unprecedented
tolerance which was reflected into the philosophies based
on good will and human values cherished by great philosophers
in this era such as Yunus Emre and Mevlana Celaleddin Rumi
who are well-known in the Islamic world with their benevolent
mottoes such as having the same view for all 72 different
nations" and "you will be welcome whoever you are,
and whatever you believe in". This was in stark contrast
to the terrible treatment which Christian rulers and conquerors
often have meted out to Christians of other sects, let alone
non-Christians .such as Muslims and Jews, as for example the
Byzantine persecution of the Armenian Gregorians, Venetian
persecution of the Greek Orthodox inhabitants of the Morea
and the Aegean islands, and Hungarian persecution of the Bogomils.
The establishment and expansion
of the Ottoman Empire, and in particular the destruction of
Byzantium following Fatih Mehmed's conquest of Istanbul in
1453 opened a new era of religious, political, social, economic
and cultural prosperity for the Armenians as well as the other
non-Muslim and Muslim peoples of the new state. The very first
Ottoman ruler, Osman Bey (1300 -1326), permitted the Armenians
to establish their first religious center in western Anatolia,
at Kutahya, to protect them from Byzantine oppression. This
center subsequently was moved, along with the Ottoman capital,
first to Bursa in 1326 and then to Istanbul in 1461, with
Fatih Mehmet issuing a ferman definitively establishing the
Armenian Patriarchate there under Patriarch Hovakim and his
successors. As a result, thousands of Armenians emigrated
to Istanbul from Iran, the Caucasus, eastern and central Anatolia,
the Balkans and the Crimea, not because of force or persecution,
but because the great Ottoman conqueror had made his empire
into a true center of Armenian life. The Armenian community
and church thus expanded and prospered as parts of the expansion
and prosperity of the Ottoman Empire.
The Gregorian Armenians of
the Ottoman Empire, like the other major religious groups,
were organized into millet communities under their own religious
leaders. Thus the ferman issued by Fatih Mehmet establishing
the Armenian Patriarchate of Istanbul specified that the Patriarch
was not only the religious leader of the Armenians, but also
their secular leader. The Armenians had the same rights as
Muslims, but they also had certain special privileges, most
important among which was exemption from military service.
Armenians and other non-Muslims generally paid the same taxes
as Muslims, with the exception of the Poll Tax (Harach or
Jizye), which was imposed on them in place of the state taxes
based particularly on Muslim religious law, the Alms Tax (Zakat)
and the Tithe (Ötür), from which non-Muslims were exempted.
The Armenian millet religious leaders themselves assessed
and collected the Poll Taxes from their followers and turned
the collections over to the Treasury officials of the state.
The Armenians were allowed
to establish religious foundations (vakif) to provide financial
support for their religious, cultural, educational and charity
activities, and when needed the Ottoman state treasury gave
additional financial assistance to the Armenian institutions
which carried out these activities as well as to the Armenian
Patriarchate itself. These Armenian foundations remain in
operation to the present day in the Turkish Republic, providing
substantial financial support to the operations of the Armenian
church.
By Ottoman law all Christian
subjects who were not Greek Orthodox were included in the
Armenian Gregorian millet. Thus the Paulicians and Yakubites
in Anatolia as well as the Bogomils and Gypsies in the Balkans
were counted as Armenians, leading to substantial disputes
in later times as to the total number of Armenians actually
living in the Empire.
The Armenian community expanded
and prospered as a result of the freedom granted by the sultans.
At the same time Armenians shared, and contributed to, the
Turkish-Ottoman culture and ways of life and government to
such an extent that they earned the particular trust and confidence
of the sultans over the centuries, gaining the attribute "the
loyal millet". Ottoman Armenians became extremely wealthy
bankers, merchants, and industrialists, while many at the
same time rose to high positions in governmental service.
In the 19th century, for example, twenty-nine Armenians achieved
the highest governmental rank of Pasha. There were twenty-two
Armenian ministers, including the Ministers of Foreign Affairs,
Finance, Trade and Post, with other Armenians making major
contributions to the departments concerned with agriculture,
economic development, and the census. There also were thirty-three
Armenian representatives appointed and elected to the Parliaments
formed after 1826, seven ambassadors, eleven consul-generals
and consuls, eleven university professors, and forty-one other
officials of high rank.
Over the centuries Armenians
also made major contributions to Ottoman Turkish art, culture
and music, producing many artists of first rank who are objects
of praise and sources of pride for Turks as well as Armenians
in Turkey. The first Armenian printing press was established
in the Ottoman Empire in the 16th century.
Thus the Armenians and Turks,
and all the various races of the Empire lived in peace and
mutual trust over the centuries, with no serious complaints
being made against the Ottoman system or administration which
made such a situation possible. It is true that, from time
to time, internal difficulties did arise within some of the
individual millets. Within the Armenian millet disputes arose
over the election of the patriarch between the "native"
Armenians, who had come to Istanbul from Anatolia and the
Crimea, and those called "eastern" or "foreign"
Armenians, who came from Iran and the Caucasus. These groups
often complained against each other to the Ottomans, trying
to gain governmental support for their own candidates and
interests, and at the same time complaining about the Ottomans
whenever the decisions went against them, despite the long-standing
Ottoman insistence on maintaining strict neutrality between
the groups. The gradual triumph of the "easterners"
led to the appointment of non-religious individuals as Patriarchs,
to corruption and misrule within the Armenian millet, and
to bloody clashes among conflicting political groups, against
which the Ottomans were forced to intervene to prevent the
Armenians from annihilating each other.
These internal disputes, as
well as the general decline of religious standards within
the Gregorian millet led many Armenians to accept the teachings
of foreign Catholic and Protestant missionaries sent into
the Empire during the 19th century, causing the creation of
separate millets for them later in the century. The Armenian
Gregorian leaders asked the Ottoman government to intervene
and prevent such conversions, but the Ottomans refrained from
doing so on the grounds that it was an internal problem which
had to be dealt with by the millet and not the state. Bloody
clashes followed, with the Gregorian patriarchs Chuhajian
and Tahtajian going so far to excommunicate and banish all
Armenian protestants. Later on, serious clashes also emerged
among the Armenian Catholics as to the nature of their relationship
with the Pope, with the latter excommunicating all those who
did not accept his supremacy, forcing the Ottomans finally
to intervene and reconcile the two Catholic groups in 1888.
The freedom granted and the
great tolerance shown by the Ottomans to non-Muslims was so
well known throughout Europe that the empire of the sultans
became a major place of refuge for those fleeing from religious
and political persecution. Starting with the thousands of
Jews who fled from persecution in Spain following its re-conquest
in 1492, Jews fled to the Ottoman Empire from the regular
pogroms to which they were subjected in Central and East Europe
and Russia. Catholics and Protestants likewise fled to the
Ottoman Empire, often entering the service of the sultans
and making major contributions to Ottoman military and governmental
life. Many of the political refugees from the reaction that
followed the 1848 revolutions in Europe also fled for protection
to the Ottoman Empire.
The claims that the Ottomans
misruled non-Muslims in general and the Armenians in particular
thus are disproved by history, as attested by major western
historians, from the Armenians Asoghik and Mathias to Voltaire,
Lamartine, Claude Farrére, Pierre Loti, Noguères Ilone Caetani,
Philip Marshall Brown, Michelet, Sir Charles Wilson, Politis,
Arnold, Bronsart, Roux, Grousset Edgar Granville Garnier,
Toynbee, Bernard Lewis, Shaw, Price, Lewis Thomas, Bombaci
and others, some of whom could certainly not be labelled as
pro-turkish. To cite but a few of them:
Voltaire:
"The great Turk is governing
in peace twenty nations from different religions. Turks have
taught to Christians how to be moderate in peace and gentle
in victory. "
Philip Marshall Brown
"Despite the great victory
they won, Turks have generously granted to the people in the
conquered regions the right to administer themselves according
to their own rules and traditions. "
Politis who was the Foreign
Minister in the Greek Government led by Prime Minister Venizelos:
"The rights and interests
of the Greeks in Turkey could not be better protected by any
other power but the Turks. "
J. W. Arnold:
"It is an undeniable
historic fact that the Turkish armies have never interfered
in the religious and cultural affairs in the areas they conquered.
"
German General Bronsart:
"Unless they are forced,
Turks are the world's most tolerant people towards those of
other religions. "
Even when Napoleon Bonaparte
sought to stir a revolt among the Armenian Catholics of Palestine
and Syria to support his invasion in 1798 -1799, his Ambassador
in Istanbul General Sebastiani replied that "The Armenians
are so content with their lives here that this is impossible."
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