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The Thirty-Year Genocide

Page 9

by Benny Morris

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  plotters, “fanatical and unprincipled men,” including Nuri Bey, the mayor.

  Jewett further reported that the vali had angrily declared, “I will outrage the

  mother of these giaours or they will outrage mine.” In other words, as Jewett put it, “I will crush and ruin these infidels or be ruined by them.” He also reported

  “a similar plot at Cesarea [Kayseri].” Back in Sivas, Jewett observed Turks

  walking the streets “heavi ly armed.” The garrison had received “new arms and

  ammunition,” and gendarmes were going about with “two belts full of car-

  tridges,” contrary to “the usual custom,” apparently of one cartridge belt.29

  Sason

  The injustice in Yozgat had largely been perpetrated by Turkish officials and

  soldiers; in Sason, in Bitlis vilayet, local tribes joined in. Together these Muslims perpetrated the first large- scale massacre of Anatolian Christians

  during the 1894–1896 period.

  According to Currie, Sason was “wild and mountainous,” “poor,” and “the

  worst- governed” in de pen dent district in the empire. The Armenians lived

  under the thumb of a Kurdish majority who “exercise a sort of feudal au-

  thority.” Armenian villa gers, “their vassals,” paid an annual tribute to the

  Kurds, above and beyond the taxes they owed, and often paid, to the govern-

  ment. Though oppressed, the local Armenians were a proud people, “fierce

  and warlike” and “hardly distinguishable from their Kurdish neighbours.”30

  An American missionary considered these Armenians “an exceptionally hardy,

  brave set.”31

  Armenian- Kurdish relations in the Sason area were often described as am-

  icable.32 After the massacre in Sason was over, a Kurdish chieftain lamented

  the loss of “love and perfect confidence” that had prevailed “for hundreds of

  years between us and the Christians.” In a petition to the great powers, he

  wrote of a kind of paternalistic bond. “Peace and safety existed among us, so

  that though each one of us owned a Christian, and every year exacted a fixed

  amount for protection afforded, yet we cared for them more than [for] our own

  children, and if they suffered oppression and injustice from any one, we would

  labor for them to the extent of sacrificing our very life for the love of them,

  and this cannot be denied.”33

  The Massacres of 1894–1896

  Armenians, however, did not see the situation as idyllic. One testified that

  Ottoman policy seemed geared toward “extermination, persecuting us in all

  sorts of ways and continually inciting neighboring Kurdish tribes against us.

  Taxes were arbitrarily raised to a most exorbitant rate and levied in a most

  tyrannical fashion.” He added, “Besides, we had to pay tribute (in kind) to

  some seven diff er ent Kurd ‘Ashirs,’ or chieftains . . . and at the same time

  were continually exposed to their plunder, rape and murder.”34 The levies

  worsened with the arrival of additional tribes from Persia and Kurdistan. In

  the early 1890s, some villages, including Talori (Dalvoreeg or Talvori) and its

  satellites, refused to pay the government taxes, arguing that they could not

  afford the multiple charges and that the government was failing to carry out

  the basic task of providing security against marauders. Local officials desig-

  nated this be hav ior subversive.35

  What ever the historical relations between Sason’s Armenians and the local

  tribes, during the two years leading up to the massacre, matters there had

  grown worse. Fearful of rebellion, troops and gendarmes had placed the area

  under a virtual “siege,” preventing “intercourse with neighboring towns.” An

  Armenian explained, “Our elders were constantly arrested, imprisoned and

  tortured and life was made generally unbearable— all under pretense of our

  being revolutionists.” In summer 1893, after a severe two- year famine and after paying tribute to two local tribes and taxes to the government, the situation

  became “insupportable” when Kurdish tribes from Diyarbekir, the Badikanli

  and Bekiranli, entered the town and demanded additional tribute. When the

  Armenians refused, the Kurds raided nearby villages.36 Armenians then

  mounted counter- raids.37 At Talori, villa gers fired at a nearby Kurdish encamp-

  ment; the Kurds responded by sacking the village and driving the villa gers to

  the nearby hills.38 The government sent reinforcements, ostensibly to pro-

  tect the villa gers, but proceeded to arrest and torture Armenian notables,

  charging them with sedition. The soldiers’ horses ate what little grain was

  available. In nearby Simal, Turks “hung Azo,” a local Armenian notable, “by

  the feet from the ceiling . . . and literally covered his body, face, forehead and tongue with cruciform scars made with a red- hot iron.” The villa gers told

  Tahsin Pasha, the vali, that they could pay no further taxes unless he pro-

  tected them from the Kurds. He instead demanded that they surrender their

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  weapons. They refused, “having no faith in the promises of the [Otto-

  mans].”39 Thus matters stood at the end of 1893.40

  As the state became more suspicious, it turned to arresting alleged rabble

  rousers who had c
ome to Sason. In 1894 officials detained two outsiders.

  One, Mihran Daghmatian, called on the villa gers to stand up for their rights

  and demand that Constantinople put an end to local misgovernment and

  Kurdish depredations. The other, Harmpartsoon Boagian, was a physician

  trained in Constantinople, Athens, and Geneva, who tried to teach Arme-

  nian villa gers “not to sell their daughters in marriage” and to stand up to the

  Kurds.

  But while outside agitators did play some role in Sason, con temporary re-

  ports suggest that the “desperate” villa gers were poorly armed and had not

  rebelled.41 Indeed, it is clear from the evidence that the massacres that took

  place in Sason in August– September 1894 came in response to Armenian re-

  sis tance to Turkish and Kurdish aggression; they were not a Turkish effort—

  even an overblown one—to stave off insurrection.42

  The immediate prelude to massacre came in July, when officials in nearby

  Muş, the seat of the district, were said to have “commissioned” a tribal leader,

  Sheikh Mehemet, to muster near Talori “large numbers” from the Diyarbekir

  region. A group of Kurds camped near Simal. Then, in August, the vali

  reportedly urged or ordered the tribesmen to attack.43 The orders likely origi-

  nated with Süreyya Bey, first secretary to Sultan Abdülhamid II, who sent

  explicit instructions to the army’s commander in chief to “neutralize all ban-

  dits by force, no quarter to be given.” This was interpreted by the Sason au-

  thorities as a license to kill.44 Ottoman Army correspondence clarifies that the

  orders were to kill the men and spare women and children.45 From Erzurum,

  Graves reported “I learn privately that the Ferik [lieutenant general], Edhem

  Pasha, while at Muş received tele grams from Zeki Pasha ordering the slaughter

  of Sason Armenians which he refused to obey. The execution of these orders

  then devolved upon [Col o nel] Tewfik Bey.” 46 Armenian witnesses testified

  that the Kurds were “saying among themselves” that they had received orders

  from the Ottoman authorities “to exterminate the Armenians.” 47

  In a post- massacre petition to the queen of England, thirty- nine local

  Kurdish chieftains, including leaders of the principal tribes engaged in the vio-

  lence, also blamed Turkish officials. The chieftains wrote that Turkish officials

  The Massacres of 1894–1896

  “deceived us with fallacious arguments, saying ‘The Christians are enemies

  of our religion. Do not allow their eyes to be opened. Give them no peace.

  Rob them of their property, seize and abduct their wives and daughters by

  force. Give false witness against them. For when they are left at ease they will

  ruin our land and religion.’ ” 48

  The assaults on the Armenian villa gers began on or around August 19

  and lasted three weeks. The precipitating incident occurred in Simal, where

  Bekiranli Kurds raided the herds, killing a shepherd and carry ing off a thou-

  sand head. Armenians gave chase and, after a firefight, retrieved the stolen

  animals. Two or three Kurds were killed. The Kurds brought the bodies to

  the authorities, apparently after mutilating them. The Kurds alleged that

  “the Armenians were up in arms and that there were foreigners among them

  instigating . . . revolt.” An Ottoman commander backed them up.49 In response,

  a missionary wrote, “The government secretly gave the Kurds carte blanche

  to do what they could to the Armenians.”50 The Kurds then demanded an

  indemnity in cash, which the Armenians said they could pay but only in

  kind. The Kurds refused, and attacked the next day.51

  The first targets were the small villages of Ghelie Genneman and Alliantz.

  After destroying these, the Kurds moved on to Simal, Senik, and their satel-

  lites. These were wealthy, tax- paying villages. Most of the inhabitants fled to Geligüzan or into the hills, where they joined other villa gers, who apparently

  had sought refuge there after local Kurds warned them of impending attacks

  on their homes.52

  At Geligüzan the Armenians beat back repeated Kurdish assaults. The

  Turks responded by sending in regulars and mountain guns from Diyarbekir,

  Van, Bitlis, and Erzurum to reinforce the Kurds. There may also have been

  several regiments of Hamidiye cavalry. Some reports say they bivouacked in

  Muş and never actually reached the killing fields, but instead ravaged nearby

  Armenian villages. Nominally Zeki Pasha, the muşir (general) of the 4th Army Corps, was giving the orders, though command in the field appears to have

  been exercised by Col o nels Ismail Bey and Tevfik Pasha. According to a

  British diplomat, a Major Salih, of the Muş Battalion, was a prominent par-

  ticipant in the massacre.53 In an effort to cover their traces, some government

  troops dressed as Kurds.54 The Kurds were “constantly in and out of [the sol-

  diers’] camp,” one Turkish soldier later testified.55

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  The resisting Armenians, women among them, eventually ran out of am-

  munition and fled to Mount Andok (Anduk Dağı) with Kurds and Turks on

  their heels.56 “That night the sky was red with the flames of our burning

  homes,” an Armenian fighter later recalled.57 Hundreds, perhaps as many as

  two thousand, made it up Mount Andok, firing and rolling boulders down

  the slopes at their pursuers. But Turkish and Kurdish firepower and resolution

  gradually prevailed.58 Within days, the Armenians collapsed. Some defenders

  were killed; some women, with their children, jumped to their deaths from

  the cliffs.59 Other Armenians managed to escape and hid for weeks in forests

  and scrublands. Kurdish and Turkish troops scoured the area for survivors,

  usually killing them on the spot. One survivor later described her ordeal:

  When the Kurds came on us, I . . . tried to escape with 3 other women

  (two being aunts of my husband) but, there being no time, we hastily

  hid ourselves amongst some thick bushes, where we were soon discov-

  ered by a band of 4 Kurds and 3 soldiers. We begged and implored for

  mercy. But they knocked us down with the butt- end of their guns and

  killed my three companions. Then a soldier snatched my three-

  months- old babe (a boy) from my arms and, in spite of tearful plead-

  ings, threw him against a rock, then pierced him with his fixed bayonet

  and threw him up in the air. The other soldiers then cut him up into

  pieces. They then all fell on me, swearing and kicking, and knocking

  me down with the butt- end of their guns. One of the Kurds then,

  finding me young, deci ded to take me with him. But I refused to follow

  him and become a Mohammedan. They threatened and tortured me

  and fi nally deci ded to kill me, but I was dressed in fine clothes, [so]

  they undressed me—so as not to soil them with my blood. When, in

  doing so, they discovered the gold coins in my head- dress and some

  thirty pounds in my belt, they immediately began to fight amongst them-

  selves. Taking advantage of this opportunity I flew away through the

  dense brushwood. They fired after me but missed me. I hid myself and

  remained there all day, all night and all next day— trembling from

 
fright, famished with hunger, and shivering from cold. . . . During the

  second night I ventured out and putting on some clothes which I got

  from the dead bodies of some women, I wandered through the forest

  The Massacres of 1894–1896

  in search of food and assistance. I then met an Armenian named

  Kaleh . . . and we managed to reach Khnoos.60

  Led by a priest, Der Hohanes Mardovan, about 400 men and women who

  had first fled to Mount Andok surrendered at Geligüzan in exchange for a

  guarantee of protection. They were “urged to accept Islam” but refused. On

  Col o nel Ismail’s orders, a soldier gouged out Mardovan’s eyes. The mutilated

  priest then begged for his own death— “Let me die,” he said— and was bayo-

  neted, according to both a survivor and a soldier who witnessed the scene.61

  In the days that followed the troops massacred many of the men who had re-

  turned to Geligüzan. Some reports speak of a single mass killing of about 40

  villa gers. Another describes hundreds systematically killed in batches of ten

  to twenty over a number of nights. All reports agree that the dead were dumped

  into one or more pre- dug trenches or pits and covered with earth.62

  A further massacre, by soldiers, appears to have taken place in the Ghelie

  San Ravine, five hours walk from Geligüzan. Hundreds of Armenians hid

  there.63 Some were burnt to death, others hacked to pieces, still others killed by shrapnel.64 Armenians, including women, were tied to horses and dragged

  through fields until they died. Houses crammed with people were set alight.

  Kurdish chieftains and Ottoman officers abducted women, raped them, and

  forced them to convert. Some were serially raped at the church in the nearby

  village of Galin, then murdered.65 Young boys were abducted into Muslim

  house holds.66 Occasionally, abductors sold the children. For instance, a chief

  of the Kurdish Rushkotli tribe sold a brother and sister, aged 9 and 11, for

  150 piasters.67 To avoid discovery, mothers suffocated crying children.68

  Fearing what would befall them if they were found, some Armenians jumped

  into a “raging” river and drowned. “The river is said to have been red with

  blood for three days,” a missionary reported.69 Several survivors went mad.70

  Priests were subjected to especially vile treatment. One was reportedly “strung

  to a beam and cut to pieces.” Another was chained by the neck, with two sol-

  diers pulling from opposite sides. In the end, bayonets were placed upright

  in the ground and the priest was thrown on them. All told, six or seven were

 

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