The Armenian Massacre 2.
The
outbreak of fighting in Nagorno Karabakh between the Armenians and
Azerbaijani’s, are embers of an age-old conflict between the Armenians who are traditionally
‘Christian’, and the Azerbaijani’s who are traditionally adhering to the Islamic
creed i.e. Muslims. The massacre and deportation of Turkey’s Armenian
population took place against a background of fighting between Turkish and
Russian forces, on the Caucasus front. It was described by some scholars, as
the first genocide of the 20th century.
This post will focus on
the events and socio-political, socio-cultural religious and ethnic differences
that shaped, the Armenian and Azerbaijani conflict, making both ethnic groups
the arch enemies that they are today.
Russia and Ottoman Turkey
were multinational empires. Where their borders met in the Caucasus Armenians
lived on both sides.
Armenian
Nationalism: The Christian Armenians and their Turkish
Muslim rulers in Turkey had a history of conflict stretching back centuries.
In the 1890’s Armenian nationalist agitation, served as a pretext for the Turks
to slaughter thousands of Armenians. In August 1914, the Turkish government
asked Armenian envoys gathered at Erzurum in eastern Turkey, to incite
rebellion against Russian hegemony in the Caucasus. The Armenian refused, when
Turkey entered World War I, the Caucasus and western Anatolia were turned into
war zones. During Turkey’s ill-fated offensive in the winter of 1915, Armenians
fought as conscripts in the Turkish and the Russian army. The Russian army also
contained Armenians fighting, for liberation from Turkish rule. Russia encouraged an Armenian revolt against
Turkey, likewise the Turks incentivized and fomented an uprising by Turkic
peoples and Muslim Kurds living in Russia. The Turkish army was roundly
defeated at the Caucasus front at Sarikamish between December 1914 and January
1915.
Ethnic
Tensions: The situation in eastern Anatolia was unstable,
ethnic tensions were acute. The majority of the population consisted of
Muslims, who were displaced from the Russian ruled the Caucasus in the 19th century and bitterly resented the Christian pro-Russian Armenians.
1. This
post will be continued, the continuation will highlight the Armenian Genocide.
2. It
will highlight the history of Azerbaijan and Armenia.
3. It
will highlight the 1990’s situation in Nagorno Karabakh and will touch on the current situation in Nagorno Karabakh.
This is
the continuation of the post: The Armenian Massacre.
Mass
Deportations: On 24 April as the allies were beginning
their landings at Gallipoli, the Interior Minister of Turkey Talaat Pasha,
ordered the arrest of about 250 members of the Armenian urban elite, living in
Constantinople. Turkey viewed the Armenians as an enemy within. More
mass arrest’s followed with hundreds more prominent Armenians being detained.
The Techir, deportation law authorized Turkish authorities, to engage in
the arrest and mass deportation, of Armenians from Anatolia. During the mass
deportations, more than 600,000 Armenians died, the deportations were executed
in a brutal and callused manner, resulting in a massive Armenian death toll. It
should be noted that the Turks were and still are Muslims, and Armenians then
and now are Christian. The typical clearance of an Armenian village by the
Turkish military began with the brutal slaughter of the male population, the
deportees were force-marched on the roads to Iraq and Syria. The deportees on
the roads usually consisted mainly of women young and old, as well as
children. The deportees were not given an opportunity, to prepare most went on
the forced marches, with the clothes on their backs and no food and water.
Underway the defenseless Armenians were attacked by their primary nemesis the
Kurds. Many Armenians from dehydration. For those who managed to reach the
dismal camps in Syria and Iraq, their fate was even worse, they often died a
slow and painful death, from starvation, disease, and the extremely harsh
circumstances they were living in.
By 1916, the Russians
under the command of General Nikolai Yudenich went on the offensive, capturing
in Anatolia (Turkey), capturing the fortress town of Erzurum and the port of
Trabzon in February of 1916, by then the area’s Armenian population had been
annihilated.
The war today being fought
by Armenia and Azerbaijan is as a direct result of the many unrequited
atrocities, perpetrated by both groups throughout, the years one against the
other.
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