Prove Hitler
wrong
Remember Ottoman
Turkey's
slaughter of
Armenian
Christians
| by Marvin
Olasky
Editor's
warning:
This article
contains graphic
material.
VAN, Turkey—As
Turkey moves
toward eventual
membership in
the European
Union, this
Muslim nation
should also come
to grips with a
terrible crime
that has gone
largely
unpunished.
Armenians, many
of them
Christian, lived
in this area of
what is now
eastern Turkey
for about 2,000
years. Despite
suffering
massacres in
1894 and 1895 at
the hands of the
Ottoman Turks,
they still
numbered well
over 1 million
in 1914. Ten
years later only
scattered
handfuls were
left.
Adolf Hitler
used what is now
called the
Armenian
holocaust as his
model for an
even greater
holocaust.
Ottoman Turks
developed
techniques later
used by the
Nazis, such as
piling 90 people
into a train car
with a capacity
of 36, and
leaving them
locked in for
days, terrified,
starving, and
often dead.
Hitler was even
more impressed
with how the
Turks got away
with genocide.
When Hitler on
Aug. 22, 1939,
explained that
his plans to
invade Poland
included the
formation of
death squads
that would
exterminate men,
women, and
children, he
asked, "Who,
after all,
speaks today of
the annihilation
of the
Armenians?"
In recent years
some have. Books
such as Peter
Balakian's The
Burning Tigris
(HarperCollins,
2003) tell of
the Armenian
tragedy in a way
that also helps
us to understand
radical Islam.
That's because
the key
incitement to
massacre came on
Nov. 14, 1914,
when Mustafa
Hayri Bey, the
Ottoman Empire's
leading Sunni
authority, urged
his followers to
commence a
jihad: One
pamphlet
declared, "He
who kills even
one unbeliever .
. . shall be
rewarded by
Allah."
The jihad
proclamation
received wide
dissemination.
When a priest
asked a Muslim
army officer how
he could
participate in
killing several
thousand
Armenian women,
Captain Shukri's
answer was
simple: It was
jihad time, and
after the
murders he could
"spread out my
prayer rug and
pray, giving
glory to Allah
and the Prophet
who made me
worthy of
personally
participating in
the holy jihad
in these days of
my old age."
The Ottoman Turk
government set
up and paid
special killing
squads. The
Ministry of the
Interior gave
instructions to
"exterminate all
males under 50,
priests and
teachers, leave
girls and
children to be
Islamized."
Historians and
journalists have
estimated that
Turks killed
800,000 to 1
million
Armenians in
1915 alone, and
an additional
200,000 to
500,000 over the
next seven
years.
Here in Van 89
years ago,
provincial
governor Jevdet
Bey gained the
nickname "the
horseshoe
master" because
he nailed
horseshoes to
the feet of
Armenians. Henry
Morgenthau, the
American
ambassador to
Turkey,
described in
1918 testimony
of torture he
had heard: "The
gendarmes would
nail hands and
feet to pieces
of
wood—evidently
in imitation of
the Crucifixion,
and then while
the sufferer
writhes in his
agony, they
would cry, 'Now
let your Christ
come help you.'"
Aurora
Mardiganian, the
only member of
her family to
survive, told of
killing squads
that planted
their swords in
the ground,
blade up, at
intervals of
several yards.
Killers on
horseback each
grabbed a girl,
rode their
horses at a
controlled
gallop, and
tried to throw
the girl so she
would be impaled
on a sword: "If
the killer
missed and the
girl was only
injured, she
would be scooped
up again until
she was impaled
on the
protruding
blade."
The silent film
Ravished
Armenia, based
on Aurora
Mardiganian's
account, caused
a U.S.
sensation—but
British
officials
demanded before
showtime in
London the
deletion of a
scene of
Armenian women
being crucified.
Miss Mardiganian
agreed that the
scene, which
showed the women
being crucified
on large crosses
with their long
hair covering
their nude
bodies, was
inauthentic.
The scene was
inaccurate, she
said, because
the crosses in
the film were
large, but in
reality they
were little and
pointed: "They
took the clothes
off the girls.
They made them
bend down. And
after raping
them, they made
them sit on the
pointed wood,
through . . ."
Americans, she
said, "can't
show such
terrible things"
(and I can't
write about them
in full detail).
After the World
War ended in
1918 several
Turks, including
"the horseshoe
master," were
executed for war
crimes. Hundreds
of perpetrators
went free, and
to this day
Turkish
textbooks cover
up the slaughter
of Armenians, as
they also cover
up the slaughter
of Greek
Christians in
western Turkey
during that same
era.
Prove Hitler
wrong.
Governments are
to wield the
sword to bring
justice, so
remember
Armenian and
other victims of
governments that
killed their own
people, and
thank God that
the United
States has
worked to
protect innocent
people in
Kosovo,
Afghanistan,
Iraq, and Sudan. |